Category Archives: Peace Corps

I was a Peace Corps volunteer in Nepal from 2002 to 2004.

Peace Corps/Nepal suspended

After two bombs exploded at the American Center in Kathmandu, throwing shrapnel here and there, Peace Corps decided to suspend its program in Nepal. This is the first time that Peace Corps has suspended its program in Nepal, which had run continuously for 42 years. That's thousands of PCVs having served in Nepal and returned home to tell others of their experiences. But, more importantly, what does this mean for our well loved staff of Peace Corps/Nepal?
Also posted in Kathmandu, Post-service | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments closed

A description of a service

Below is a copy of my Description of Service, or DOS. Every Peace Corps volunteer files a DOS at the end of service, whether it be an early termination or the conventional COS. This document remains with Peace Corps as it kept as the official record of my Peace Corps experience.
Also posted in Close of service, Service | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments closed

Last words from Birganj

It's early still, but the warmth of my bedroom wakes me not long after the sun has risen. I roll out of bed, walk over to the kitchen, and begin making coffee. I turn on my shortwave to the BBC and listen as I pour my coffee, stopping to rub the sleep out of my eyes. As I sip, I look through my window to the wreckage of the abandoned dry port of Nepal. I can hear someone singing in a temple through a loudspeaker. The sites and the sounds make this place beautiful.
Also posted in Birganj, Close of service, Service | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Comments closed

Peace Corps volunteer safety and security

The last thing that I wrote about safety and security got my Web site shut down by the Peace Corps Washington, DC, office. Perhaps it's just a coincident that my predictions (or rather, intelligence collected) about the security situation in the Rautahaut, Bara, and Parsa districts have come true, much to the frustration of the Peace Corps Kathmandu office. Not that it matters. The fact is that we PCVs are ourselves responsible for our safety. How can someone expect someone else to take care of them?
Also posted in Nepal, Peace Corps culture, Service | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments closed

What I did

Somehow we came up with idea over dinner. I had just arrived in Birtamod, Jhapa, to visit Andrew one last time before our lives as PCVs. I was going to stay for a night, maybe two, before heading back to Birganj. Anyhow, we were having dinner, and Andrew was talking about the school visits he would be making the next day: a short in-and-out trip to invite two English teachers to an upcoming training.
Also posted in Peace Corps culture, Teacher training, Terai | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments closed
  • Disclaimer

    The contents and opinions expressed in this blog, The Peace Corps Experience of Scott Allan Wallick, do not represent official positions, views, intentions, et cetera, of the United States Peace Corps nor the government of the United States.


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