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Welt am Sonntag
21 January 2007
New Home for Leprosy Sufferers
by Rolf H. Latusseck
A German lady helps the outcast in Nepal:
the project is exemplary in that it shows how medical and social
support can result in joint success in the fight against leprosy.
Marianne Grosspietsch has set up leprosy stations in the Nepalese
capital Kathmandu and at two other locations which are designed
to provide the sick people with a perspective in life. In addition
to medical care, schools, workshops for the disabled and ecological
farming provide the people with advanced education, work and an
income.
The patients are normally unable to return to their native villages
after receiving medical treatment. "Sad experience has shown
that a return is wishful thinking", said Marianne Grosspietsch.
"The mutilations resulting from the leprosy remain and the
sick are not taken back into healthy society. They are sent away
and often violently expelled. They do not dare to return to our
station because they are discriminated against on their way to us.
Their situation is often worse than before." This means that
many of them remained there and the leprosy stations grew into their
own villages.
It all started 30 years ago. This was when Marianne Grosspietsch
got to know the catastrophal situation in a Nepalese leprosy ghetto
in Kathmandu. In 1992, she founded the Shanti Leprahilfe Dortmund
e. V., charity and the first station to be erected in Kathmandu
was the Shanti Sewa Griha (Peace Service Station). It soon became
clear that medical care alone would not suffice to help the people.
The sick had to have their lives placed on a new footing and this
was what set Shanti apart from other leprosy projects. Shanti is
in the meantime home to 1600 men, women and children. Not all of
them suffer from leprosy; other people with physical impairments
are also accepted. It is often the case that the children are healthy
but their parents suffer from leprosy.
Everyone is given a chance. It starts in the crèche and continues
through the kindergarten and their own school, at which they learn
basic arithmetic and how to write, in addition to other subjects
which are also learned at our schools. "We then offer youths
who are good with their hands, work in our workshops and we enable
those with the best intellect advanced education, these then even
qualifying as doctors and chemists", said Marianne Grosspietsch.
A tailor's workshop, a silversmith and a doll's factory manufacture
products which are then sold in the Ganesh charity shop in Dortmund.
"In exceptional cases, we sell silk scarves in a hotel in Kathmandu
after the scarves have been woven using old Nepalese techniques",
said Mrs Grosspietsch. "For us, it is important that the people
earn their living themselves. This means that they are then normal
customers in the stores in the city and have a purchasing power
which no store owner can ignore. This means that we achieve a small
amount of integration."
The founder places great value on the retention of local traditions
whilst working in a modern manner. Waste water and biological waste
are fermented in a fermentation plant. The biogas which is obtained
as a result is used by the large kitchen for cooking and that which
remains after fermentation is used as natural manure for the fields.
Solar cookers which make use of the sunlight also help to save energy.
Self-sufficiency is the byword on the market garden and ecological
aspects govern the agriculture. Potatoes and European vegetables
grow on the fields. Papayas, mangos, oranges and peaches are plucked
from the fruit trees. That which is not required for their own use
is sold at the local market.
Carers instruct mothers of undernourished children are shown what
balanced nutrition is like. "We show the mothers how to grow
tomatoes in a plant-pot and are able to grow vegetables for their
children even in the smallest corner of land", said Marianne
Grosspietsch. "Women are especially a very important target
group for us. They are responsible for bringing up the children,
so that they are the people who pass the traditions on. In Nepal,
as in many other parts of the world, women in Nepal are very under-privileged."
Far-sightedness and flexibility, addressing and promoting the individual
skills of each them form the basis for the success of the Shanti-Leprahilfe.
The organisation will be 15 years old in the summer and some of
the children from the beginning are now adults. "A boy from
that time is now studying medicine and a second is to become a hotel
manager in Shanghai"; said Mrs Grosspietsch. "Both of
them wish to return and assist with the continued development after
completing their studies."
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