I came to Jhapa on March 22, 2003, to meet Andrew and Liz before heading to a Peace Corps meeting in nearby Biratnagar.
With my school busying giving exams and not enough time in Birganj to begin working on future plans, I decided I’d take the long bus trip out east to see greener parts of [...]
Holi came and Holi went. I’ll be honest by saying I have no idea why this festival is celebrated or what greater significance the throwing and smearing of colored tikka powder is.
I don’t even understand why Holi is called Falgun Purnima on my calendar. I can say, though, that it was a lot of fun.
Basically, [...]
I’d like to mention something about the new group. I was in Kathmandu a week or so ago for the NELTA conference.
The conference ended on a Monday and I was planning to stick around for a couple days to arrange my plane tickets to the US and work out the details with Andrew on the [...]
I remember how my host family explained Maha Shivaratri to me a year ago when I was living in Gaidankot.
I asked how they would celebrate and they just shook her hand, grimaced, and non-verbally said, We don’t.
It’s a gesture that might mean alcoholic or tipsy in America. Basically, the hand is extended vertically and shaken, [...]
I was out doing the bidding of Peace Corps when I met Alfred. He’s the headsir of St. Xavier’s, a private school next door to Shripur, a government secondary school where I had been doing some scouting for a possible site for a volunteer.
St. Xavier’s facade suggested that it was an upper-tier school. Like its [...]
By Scott Wallick
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Also posted in Birganj, Peace Corps culture, Technical Training
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Tagged Bal Mandir School, Birganj, Goans, headmiss, headsir, SEDU, Shripur, site development, Tribal School
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