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The 1,000 or more workers and their families are individuals here.
Shanti’s greatest and most subtle gift to its people is the
opportunity to contribute through their own personality. The work
variety ranges from silk quilts fit to drape the bed of the royal
family, clothes of exceptional quality exported to the European
fashion-conscious consumer, decorative hand printed delicate papers,
gift cards and ornaments: Rekha, with tattoos marking her collarbones
from Southern Nepal, sharing the Maithili art of painting, Ram from
the hills bringing with him the ancient recipe of an organic fertiliser
and insecticide made from cow urine and the leaves of a native tree,
Laxmi, a young mother from Chitwan with the muscle-memory of weaving
straw still in her damaged fingers, Raju, a Newari silversmith melting
his forefathers’ patterns with western styles, Dhaka weavers
working to clickety-clack of their looms. Shanti finds a place,
a job fitting for each person, so that the products have got that
special flair to them naturally embodying experience, traditions
and know-how.
A walk with a beaming Krishna and Marianne through the eco-village
of Shanti in Buddhanilkantha reveals it doesn’t only grow
around people, but nature, too. The old mango tree, saved from felling,
now provides shade to the new house and fruit to the handicapped
children living in it. In the Shanti village, residents not only
build their own homes, but make the bricks. Besides this being cost-conscious,
it also gives the people pride in their work and home and thus the
will to preserve the village in its beauty. Shanti’s premium
artist, Jogendra traces age-old patterns on the walls filled with
white paint by women. "Only fruit trees are planted here,
we have to think about future generations," comments Marianne
as we walk down the path to the ironically named Malnutrition Kitchen,
where mothers are taught how to combine their crops into nutritious
meals, what to grow and how. "Malnutrition garden,"
says a sign under the kitchen, which was once a lawn … "We
cannot afford a lawn," says Marianne, and runs forward to
pick flowers for the office vase, Krishna finishing, "Every
patch of land is needed for vegetables. We have not bought green
vegetables for the last 16 months, with 586 people to feed twice
a day." Then, Marianne turns finishing her thought: "…
besides, lawn is boooring!" She shouts from the lilac sweet
pea bushes, her hands now full. "Why is it that Nepal, blessed
with three crops per annum and the richest soil in the world, has
starving people? It is lack of communication and planning,"
says Marianne as we unite again. By now we have reached the school,
and our talk naturally shifts to education. No costs are spared
to implant the Waldorf system of teaching here, an extremely open
and nature-based philosophy. French may not be compulsory, but learning
how to knit and grow vegetables is part of the curriculum. Shanti
is planning to introduce one week camps in its village school and
each camp will have a certain heritage of Nepal as its focus. The
first will be about the Maithili arts of southern Nepal, near Janakpur,
the second about the Sherpa region around Mount Everest. Every week,
the kids will learn about the arts, crafts, stories and songs of
a certain place, taught by one of Shanti’s artists coming
from that area! "We would like our children to be intelligent,
imaginative and spiritually strong farmers and craftsmen,"
explains Marianne. "As long as there are starving people and
the country needs to import white toilet paper from Taiwan and the
pink one from India, Nepal cannot become a cyber-country. Until
then, we need good farmers and craftsmen, as a foundation for further
development, not another engineer or IT-man who would most definitely
take this knowledge to the West."
"Many of the adults in Shanti are dependent, however, their
children have broader boundaries, so in them Shanti invests most,"
says Krishna. "We also don’t want to be a home for elderly
and we expect the children to take their parents from underneath
our wings one day, making room for new families." The 23rd
of each month is greeted with anxiousness as Marianne must pay the
monthly cheque of 25.000 Euros covering all costs. Only half of
that comes from regular contributors. "How do you do it?"
we ask over Shanti’s own organic ginger tea. "Hard work,"
she states."Will it ever be a self-funding project?"
"No." The scope doesn’t end with patients, children,
products, or trees: nothing is overlooked. Waste is a word cut out
from the vocabulary of Shanti, they can even thrive on it. Scraps
of fabric stitched to make the renowned silk quilts of Shanti, saplings
fertilised by ash from the kitchen, even human excrement will be
turned into bio-gas energy in the near future … Shanti has
also turned the human "waste" of society, the lepers,
into light, a natural power source. They, stripped of their humanity,
wrung out and thrown away like pieces of rag, have been lovingly
woven together to make up this splendid quilt of colour, love and
faith – Shanti.
Copyright ©: 2004 The Himalayan Times Publications.
All rights reserved.
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