Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Remembering Shail Upadhya

The Man with the Colorful Suits
Remembering Shail Upadhya


Late Shail Upadhya.  Photo: GhettyImage
Last week I received a telephone call from Mridula Koirala, the representative of the Nepali Congress Party in North America. She told me that on Thursday, January 31st, our mutual friend Shail Upadhya had very suddenly died. Mridula was close to him and she is what we Nepalese would call his God Sister. As such, she would have the honor of draping his coffin with the Congress Party flag at his funeral, since he too was a member of the party. Knowing that I’m a photographer, she asked me to come and document the funeral with my camera. I agreed, and my wife Radhika and I along with Bansha Lal Tamang, Bhoj Raj Thokar and Ang Chhering Sherpa attended the funeral, which was held this past Sunday at Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel, on 81st and Madison ave., Manhattan.

Shail Upadhya was for many years an official at the United Nations, and after retiring, he devoted himself to designing suits and hats, a vocation he worked at right up to the 2012 Fashion Shows here in New York, which he attended to debut his “Fireworks Pants.” The pants were written up by Alec Wilkinson for the New Yorker on September 5th, 2012: “The pants are red, with displays of fireworks painted on them and there is only one pair,” Wilkinson wrote. “Upadhya, who is seventy-eight, designs single-edition, hand-painted clothes, mostly suits, which are only for himself.” 
The fashion photographer Bill Cunningham considered Shail one of the great stars of the street. Writing in Forbes magazine, (March 17th, 2011) Raquel Laneri nominated as her favorite of Cunningham’s chosen style gurus Shail Upadhya, “a retired U.N. official from Nepal who wears brightly colored jackets, plaid skirts, bold prints and loud newsboy hats — often all at the same time.”

I will never forget the first time I met Shail Upadhya. The meeting took place in Kathmandu forty years ago. I was working for Charles Henri Ford and living in the house he had there, which I now own. Charles and Shail had already been friends for years by 1973. They knew each other in New York. I’m not sure in what capacity he served at the United Nations, but he was a polished and important person. He too kept a house in Kathmandu, and while he was there, Charles invited him to lunch one day. Shail Upadhya arrived with a pretty young Korean girlfriend on his arm, and I prepared and served lunch in the garden. Shortly after, he invited us to his house in Bishalnagar for lunch. Charles and I went there, where he introduced us to his family. I could not have possibly have imagined on that day that the next year I would come to New York and that forty years in the future I would speak at the funeral of this personable diplomat sitting in the garden. I remember being invited with Charles to visit Shail at his house in Kathmandu, where he introduced us to his mother and brother. Once I was living in New York, whenever I ran into him he was very friendly. He would always ask,  “Are Ruth and Charles treating you well?” And I would always tell him, yes, they were. 

In 1975, Charles had an exhibition at the New York Cultural Center on Columbus Circle. Mario Amaya was the director, and Charles exhibited sculptures and wall hangings and all kinds of work that he had created in Kathmandu specifically for the show.  It was through Charles’s connection with Shail that the Nepalese Ambassador to the U.N. at the time, His Excellency Shailendra Kumar Upadhyaya, was not only invited but came to cut the ribbon opening the exhibition. Charles and I wore Nepalese dress for the occasion, which was a huge success. For years after, Charles would talk about how crowded the opening was. It was something that made him very happy. 

While he was at the U.N. in the 1970s, Shail often came to visit us at the Dakota and we would visit him at his place. He lived at number 20 Sutton Place. I remember being there for dinner and drinks, and he had a cook preparing the dinner. There was a young man staying there at the time who, Shail told us, was on his way to Texas for pilot training. Politicians often visited from Nepal, and while he was a member of the Congress Party, Shail very generously welcomed and accommodated in his home Nepalese politicians of every affiliation. 

Thanks to him, Charles and I got invitations to all kinds of events and functions at the U.N., such as the King’s birthday, which was a very fine dinner party. The U.N. doesn’t do events like that anymore, I don’t think, nor do we have a King anymore. Whether they stopped for security reasons or otherwise I don’t know, but I really had my share of privilege going to those functions at the U.N. I would take my camera, the way I used to take it everywhere, and someone I photographed at one of those functions was Kurt Waldheim, the Secretary General of the United Nations from 1972 to 1981. Of course, that was before he returned to Austria and all the dirt on him was discovered, resulting in the scandal which came to be known as “The Waldheim Affair.” Somewhere I still have that photograph.

In the 1980s, Charles and I would often run into Shail at gallery openings and receptions. He loved all those happenings and events just like we did. It was after he had retired, in the late ‘80s, that he started designing his own fashions. He would get reviewed in the New York Times for his suit designs using patch-work quilts, awning materials, and all sorts of other fabrics. Some people thought he must have been crazy. He was in London in the ‘60s with his Ambassador parents when the Beatles were just starting there. They must have had a big impact on him. When he started designing his attire, he made some clothes using a doodle that John Lennon did stamped all over the fabric. He made all kinds of crazy suits and hats, which he himself wore, and because of that he was nothing if not colorful. He had houses in Southampton and in Florida and I remember gossip from the ‘80s about all the different girlfriends he supposedly had, who would pop into his life to enjoy the luxury surrounding him and then leave. If that is true, I never got the impression that he minded, but rather that he was a man who completely enjoyed his freedom.  He did have one girlfriend who I think was very special to him, though, named Karen. I met her once, and she gave me her card. She was in real estate. She died of breast cancer five or six months ago, and at the time of his sudden death, Shail was still mourning hers. 

There is an online Nepali radio station in Queens which has been on the air a few years now, with an interview show called “Life Journey,” and once I followed him in being interviewed for that program. The radio interviewer asked us to tell the story of how we came to be in America. I talked my journey and he talked his. He couldn’t have had a more interesting life.

Shail and Charles remained good friends for the rest of Charles’s life, and after Charles died, whenever I saw Shail, we’d always stop and talk. I ran into him at the Rubin Museum one evening and he told me about being unhappy with the way some of his family in Nepal had treated him. I got the impression that he was not planning to leave them anything in his will, and from what I hear, a lady friend of his ended up being his heir.

A few months ago I called him to tell him I’d like to invite him over to our house in Queens for lunch or dinner one day soon, once we had gotten ourselves situated after we moved upstairs.  He said he would definitely like to come. But unfortunately, it didn’t happen. When Mridula told me that Shail passed away it was bit of a shock since he wasn’t particularly old. But I suspect that he neglected his health somewhat.  
Late Shail Upadhya's Brother and his family at his funeral. 
At his funeral I said to her, “I brought my camera.” And she said, “Use it.” So I took photographs of his friends delivering eloquent eulogies, people who had known him as far back as the ‘90s and the ‘80s, and then I went to the coffin. He was lying with his hands folded, and I photographed him and also his hands. Then I saw that on the floor beside the coffin was a pair of empty shoes. They must certainly have been his, I thought, and I photographed them as well. 

That’s when I noticed a young woman, gesturing at me to take no photos. I apologized and stopped. I thought perhaps she didn’t want photos of herself, so I took photos from another direction. Then she came and very firmly told me to stop taking photos and that Shail’s family members did not like my doing so. When I told her that I had been asked to take photos by Maridula Didi, she reluctantly said, “OK. Go ahead.” It put me in an uncomfortable position, one of looking like an interloper with a camera. So, although I had told Mridula that I didn’t intend to speak, I signaled to her that I would speak after all. And I went up to the podium and told the story that I’ve just told you here. 

Mridula Koirala draping Nepali Congress Party Flag over Shail's Coffin
Mridula draped the Nepali Congress Party flag over Shail’s coffin and I photographed her doing so and later emailed them to her. A couple of days later, I ran into her and told her about the objections I got to my taking the photographs. I suppose the objections bothered me somewhat. Funerals are sensitive when it comes to photos. On one hand, it’s a memorializing of a person, and on the other hand it’s an affront, depending on one’s opinion. It is the last chance you have to take a picture of a deceased person. Once the corpse is gone, the opportunity is gone forever. But like it or not, the picture is there to see later. I think in the long term, such photos are cherished. I felt the same quandary when Charles passed away. It was such a very sad moment, I remember. What about a picture? Should I take one? I weighed it in my mind and I thought if I don’t, I might regret it forever. I would not be taking it just for my gain, but for everybody to see. That’s the way I see it. I wasn’t trying to gain anything for myself in taking the photos of Shail. I took them as a record. That’s what it is, a final record, and I will make CD with the photographs s for anyone who might want them. 


When I spoke at the funeral, telling about meeting him that day in the garden forty years ago, I said that Shail Upadhya came to New York first, and the rest of us followed from Nepal. Now he’s gone on to find a new place, wherever it may be, and eventually all of us will follow him there too, from wherever we are here.

Rest in Peace
Shail Upadhya
(9 August, 1935 - 31 January 2013)

-Indra Tamang
 03/06/2013


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Copyright Indra Tamang, 2013, all rights reserved. 

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Remembering Late Mayor Koch

Remembering Late Mayor Koch
Mayor Ed Koch. Photo: www.coffeyphoto.com

For a long time, I would see Edward Koch whenever I went into Ruth Ford’s guest room in the Dakota. At some point, long ago, Ruth tore the cover off of the Daily News—or was it New York Magazine—with his face on it, and put it in a frame. I don’t remember her ever commenting on it or on him, but she wouldn’t have framed a picture of Mr. Koch if she hadn’t liked him. The picture stood on the TV in the room that Ruth called her guest room, although there were almost never any guests. The only person in the room was Ed Koch. After Ruth passed away in 2009 and her apartment was cleaned out, I noticed the picture but I didn’t save it. Now I wish I had.

I wasn’t expecting Ed Koch to die when he did, as I’m sure he wasn’t either. But I was aware of his recent health troubles and when I heard the world ‘pneumonia,’ I had a bad feeling. I don’t think anyone sees death coming whether they’re young or old. I saw that with both Charles and Ruth. Ruth was always sure that she would be feeling better in the coming days, when in fact she was only getting older and closer to dying. 

The death of Ed Koch on February 1st made me think back on that period of time in the city when he was everywhere. Abraham Beame was mayor of New York when I first came in 1974, and I was so busy absorbing all that was going on around me that I have no memories of him at all. Ed Koch, on the other hand, is another story. I was very much aware of him once he became mayor in 1977 and forever after. His outspoken feistiness (“How’m I doing?”) was impossible to ignore. But I was also aware him for more personal reasons. 

One of the first people I met soon after coming to New York was Henry Geldzahler. At the time he held a very important position as curator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and there is nobody I can think of who had more influence in the art world at the time than Henry. He was someone Charles and I saw frequently. He often came for lunch or dinner at the Dakota and I would do the cooking. On one of those visits, Henry gave me a gift of a white Stetson cowboy hat, which I still have. He was a very funny and intelligent man who looked much older than his years, partly because of his size and his beard, but also the way he carried himself. When I photographed him with his parents at the Met one evening, I thought that he looked older than his father. 
Charles Henri Ford with Henry Geldzahler at Geldzahler's home. South Hampton,NY. 1991.

Someone else I saw a lot of right from the beginning was Ira Cohen, who I first met in Kathmandu before I came to New York. Ira was another very colorful person to say the least, with his beard and his poetry and long flowing robes, always smoking a lot of pot and talking. He was a regular visitor to the Dakota for a long time.

When Ed Koch became mayor, one of the first things he did was appoint Henry Geldzahler to the position of Commissioner of Cultural Affairs for New York City. And then there was Ira, who always seemed very pleased to announce the fact that Mayor Koch was his first cousin and that they were both born in the Bronx.

Charles and I didn’t see much of Henry Geldzahler during the five years he spent in the Koch administration, but we picked up with him again after he had left his post. I remember visiting him at his house in Southampton, which was full of photographs and paintings, by Andy Warhol and many others, of Henry himself. Andy had produced a ninety-minute film with nothing in it but Henry smoking a cigar. I liked Henry and always enjoyed our visits. I remember a particular lunch that I made one day in Shelter Island, where Charles and I had rented a house. Henry came and I served a salad. He liked the dressing and asked what it was. I thought about what I’d put in it, and I said, “Vinegar, mustard, fresh garlic and—Honey?”
And Henry said, “Yes, Dear?” 
After Henry’s death in 1994 from cancer, he was quoted in the New York Times (August 17th, 1994), comparing his job as cultural commissioner in the Koch administration to being "commissioner of wheat in Kansas." He said, “Culture is our best crop. It nourishes and excites.” I don’t think the mayor could have chosen a better person for that job than Henry. 
After Koch’s death, the media was flooded with opinions about him. Every big newspaper in the world, it seemed, published an obituary for our former mayor. The New York Times called him “A 3-Term Mayor as Brash, Shrewd and Colorful as the City He Led.” The LA Times described him as “A one-man cheerleading squad who personified the witty and feisty New Yorker.” I read articles and blogs full of belated answers to his famous question, “How’m I doing?” And like most prominent politicians, the controversies from his years as mayor remained after his death. Should he have revealed the details of his personal life? Could he have done better when he was the mayor? The people writing about him seemed to either like him very much or loathe him, with not much in between. But nobody says he was boring, that’s for sure. Ed Koch spoke his mind, but unlike other mayors I can think of, he never came off like a dictator.

With all of the present conversations going on about what Ed Koch did and didn’t do as mayor, I think that ultimately most people only grew fonder of him over time. I personally did. There’s always more to story than we can know, and in a city of millions of people like New York, there was no way he was going to please everybody.  In the end, I really believe that the positive overcomes the negative.

Watching his televised funeral, I listened to Bill Clinton saying how worried Mr. Koch was about Hillary during her recent hospitalization and blood clot scare. It felt strange to imagine that just a short time ago, he was just as vital as ever. Ed Koch was never far from the public eye, always arguing at round table discussions, speaking his mind without reservation the way he always had, whether the topic was political or one of his movie reviews. And his vitality made him seem ageless. He was a real New Yorker who truly and genuinely loved New York, and that was a big part of his appeal. He is now laid to rest in the cemetery plot he bought for himself. He took his personal life with him unrevealed, to the disappointment of some and with the approval of others. He made his exit with grace and died a gentleman, and he will be missed.

Photo: nydailynews.com
Edward I. Koch
1924-2013
May He Rest in Peace

-Indra Tamang
 02/19/2013

P.S. If you have any comments, please feel free to post it in the comment box below. 

Copyright Indra Tamang, 2013, all rights reserved.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

February 10th is always for Charles Henri Ford



February 10th is always for Charles Henri Ford
Charles with his friends at Tea party hosted by him and Inrda. 1979, Dakota, NYC.

Today is Charles’s birthday (Feb 10th, 1908- Sept 27, 2002), and if he were here, he would be 105 years old. One of my tasks these days is cataloging boxes of his papers. To celebrate his birthday, I decided to open a file and randomly pull one page to see what might be on it.  The sheet I pulled was a typed page, and this is what I read:

CHARLES HENRI FORD INTERVIEWED BY TAYLOR MEAD

TM: “Is the Dakota full of ghosts?”
CHF: “In the Dakota ghosts may stand by invisible at noon but I’ve never seen any at night.”

TM: “What is your most satisfying achievement?”
CHF: “At an early age I aspired to generate poetry. Now I have the satisfaction of being the daddy of my favorite haiku.”


Wherever Charles is—and perhaps he’ll be standing by invisible at noon—I want to wish him the happiest birthday yet. 

-Indra Tamang
 Feb 10th, 2013


Copyright Indra Tamang, 2013, all rights reserved. 

Saturday, January 12, 2013

In Memory of Bhim Bahadur Tamang

In Memory of Bhim Bahadur Tamang

Late Bhim Bahadur Tamang. Photo Credit: www.nepalmanch.com
 Like so many others, I was saddened to learn that Bhim Bahadur Tamang had passed away on December 1st, 2012, at the age of 78. He was truly a man of purity and altruism, often praised for his goodness, and long considered a saintly, Ghandi-like figure in Nepalese politics. As a leader of the Nepali Congress Party, he was never swayed by any of the temptations that all too often threaten political fairness. Many politicians become personally rich through politics, but not him.  And his humanitarian credentials were impeccable.

He was born in 1933 AD in the poor village of Jhule in the Dolkha district of Nepal. After his mother died while he was still a young child, his father took him to Darjeeling, India, where he got a good education. When he was grown, he returned to his village, sent by his father to reclaim their ancestral property. He was troubled by the widespread poverty he saw in Jhule, so he decided to remain there and do what he could to help make things better for the people. Education was top on his list of priorities, and he began tutoring the village children. In no time, he had earned popularity as ‘Master Bhim Bahadur’ in and around the village. He built two schools and traveled as far as Kalimpong, Darjeeling to procure textbooks for his students. 
Late Bhim Bahadur Tamang speaking at reception on his honor  held by Tamang Society of America. 

After first calling him Master, or Teacher, the people of his village started calling him Mantri when he became Minister of Law. And finally, in later years, he was called Thulo Manchhe, or “Big Man,” because of the immeasurable good he was able to do.

Late Bhim Bahadur Tamang at reception held by TSA.
His political career began in 1949, and as a politician he was jailed many times because of his efforts for democracy. After one jail sentence, he was released to find that his wife had run away to marry someone else. But rather than getting angry, he gave her his blessings. All throughout his many years in politics, he displayed a rare set of ethics that he never compromised. He never took bribes. He never gave in to requests for nepotism or other favors without merit. He was completely unselfish and cared very much for the wellbeing of all Nepalese people. He gave his entire life for his people and took nothing for himself. About fifteen years ago or so, for example, when all members of Parliament in Nepal were given a new jeep, he did not accept one. And according to popular legend, the day that he was relieved of his duty as Minister of Law, he did not even have enough  bus fare to get home.

Bhim Bahadur never bought a house of his own, but stayed at his  sister’s house whenever he was in Kathmandu. During the last fifteen years of his life, he lived in a small room given to him by the NC leader Radhe Shyam Adhikari in Thapa Gaun, where he owned nothing beyond the barest of necessities. Whenever he visited his native village, his sister-in-law Dhankumari cooked for him and gave him a place to sleep in her very humble house. This she did for forty years, and when she learned the news of his death, the 63-year-old Dhankumari was shocked beyond belief. 
Late Bhim Bahadur Tamang with me and my cousin Shanta Thokar

It is unusual for one person to be considered irreplaceable by so many others, but Bhim Bahadur was such a person. My cousins Shanta Babu and Bhoj Raj Thokar comes from a village close to Bhim Bahadur’s, and they always considered him truly a father figure in the best possible way. “There was nobody like him..”, my cousin said to me, “..and there never will be again.”

Late Bhim Bahadur Tamang at Reception held by TSA.

Four years ago, in 2008, I had the opportunity to meet Bhim Bahadur Tamang while I was president of Tamang Society of America. Something related to his work in government brought him to Washington DC and to New York, and our community hosted a reception for him during that visit. After the reception, I invited him to my home for dinner, and he accepted. I found him to be a very likable, very humble and frank man, and we passed a most enjoyable evening together that I will never forget. During his stay in New York, longtime Congress Party member and supporter as well as TSA's advisor Bansha Lal Moktan generously accommodated Late Bhim Bahadur Tamang. The outpouring of gratitude and reverence towards Bhim Bahadur Tamang from the many Congress Party members and admirers here in New York was very moving. The people who helped make it possible are simply too numerous to name here, but I'm sure they know who they are and I believe everyone can take some comfort in having been a part of making such a fine leader feel so warmly welcome in a city far from home. 

Late Bhim Bahadur Tamang with my family and cousin Shanta Thokar.
Our Tamang Society of America had a plaque made in his honor after his visit to New York and we sent it to him in Nepal. In the weeks since his passing, there have been numerous memorials for him in Nepalese communities all across the United States, including four in New York alone.

Late Bhim Bahadur Tamang with general members of TSA
What comes to mind immediately when I think about this unique, one-of-a-kind man is the legacy he’s left of having refused to succumb to greed or corruption. And considering that this year, the worldwide anti-corruption group Transparency International listed Nepal among the most corrupt countries in the world, Bhim Bahadur Tamang’s lessons of honesty and respectability are of infinite value. In one of the last interviews he gave before his death, he suggested that the Congress would be well served to leave behind their power mongering frame of mind. I can only hope that there are young would-be politicians in Nepal today who have heard his words and will do their best to follow in his footsteps.

Bhim Bahadur Tamang was given a national funeral service where honorable PM Baburam Bhattarai was present. Nepali congress party President Sushil Koirala honored him with a party flag. He had no home to call his own but every Nepalese citizen had him, as a leader and protector, and he will always be remembered. He is survived by one son and one daughter. 


May He Rest in Peace.
1933-2012


p.s. If you have any comments, please feel free to post it in the comment box below. 

-Indra Tamang
 01/12/2013

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Young Nepali woman, Pushpa Basnet, named CNN Hero of the Year, 2012

Young Nepali woman, Pushpa Basnet, named CNN Hero of the Year, 2012.

CNN Hero of the Year 2012, Pushpa Basnet. 
I always take notice of news from Nepal, and I’m always amazed by certain people who manage to do so much to help others with only their wit and resolve. This particular young woman, Pushpa Basnet, visited a prison when she was 21 years old as part of her studies. She was shocked by the sight of so many children living there with their parents who were serving jail time. The children hadn’t done anything wrong, and life was passing them by. She was not able to go away and forget about them, particularly after a little baby in the prison clung to her shawl and smiled at her.

She went through great trouble to raise enough money to start a daycare and was granted permission to take children out of prison during the daytime in order to give them some education and experience with the real, free world outside. She is now 28 years old, wise beyond her years, and she has changed the lives of hundreds of children for the better. I am happy that she was named Hero of the Year by CNN. Nobody deserves it more than she does.


For more information on this story please go to link below:

If anyone is interested to help or make donation to Pushpa's organization, please follow the link below.

-Indra Tamang
 12/19/12

Early Childhood Development Center

I've just found out that’s me.

12/12/12
The First Nepali Photographer in the United States: I’ve just found out that’s me.

Photo by: Ang Kami Sherpa

 On December 2nd, 2012, I was one of ten people who received an award, for an achievement, by the US Nepal Media Center. The event took place at the Himalayan Yak Restaurant in Jackson Heights, Queens. My award, which was presented to me by Pradeep Thapa Magar, Editor-in-Chief of USNepalOnline.com, was for being the first Nepali photographer in the United States. Until now, I had no idea that I was the first one. I felt humbled to be receiving such an honor.

Out of curiosity, I went looking on the Internet, where I didn’t find anyone else listed as the first Nepali photographer in America. But I did find the man with the distinction of being the first Nepali photographer in Nepal. His name was Dambar Shamsher, and he lived between 1858 and 1922. He apparently learned photography in the 1870s from photographers who had been sent from the firm Bourne and Shepherd in India to photograph Nepal. As for me, I learned photography 100 years later, in the 1970s, from the American artist and writer Charles Henri Ford. 

As some of you know, I was born in the village of Phakhel, Makawanpur District in Nepal, in 1953. While I was working at the Panorama Hotel in Kathmandu in 1972, I met Charles Henri Ford while serving him breakfast in the hotel dining room.  Charles ended up spending several years in Kathmandu and he offered me a job, which I accepted. He taught me a great many things, and through his influence I discovered that I had an appreciation for art and photography. When Charles decided to return to New York in 1974, he brought me along. 

Certificate of Honor I received as First Nepali Photographer in US by US Nepal Media Center
It was Charles who gave me my first camera and encouraged me to take photographs. I loved taking pictures, and my camera became my constant companion whenever I attended a cultural event or an interesting party. The 1970s was a very interesting and exciting period in New York, and I photographed many artists, writers, musicians and actors, people I was privileged to meet, thanks to Charles and the fact that he was someone who knew all of the most influential members of the art world in the United States.  

When I traveled to other countries while working with Charles, I took many photographs in those places as well. And it was my great joy to collaborate with him on book projects and collages, which we made together using his poetry and my photographs. I was always very happy when other people seemed to enjoy looking at the photographs I took.

During the years when I was most active with my camera, I never could have imagined in a thousand years that one day I would be receiving an honor such as this. I made photographs purely for the fun and enjoyment of doing it, and over the years my collection grew and grew. Charles’s death in 2002 was a big loss for me personally and for the art world at large, and I continue to act as the steward of all of his work, which galleries regularly want to exhibit. 

Speaking few words after receiving the honor as 1st Nepalese Photographer in US. Photo by: Ang Kami Sherpa
In 2011, there was an exhibit of some of the work that Charles and I made together at the Turtle Point Press gallery/office. I had sent Pradeep Thapa an invitation to the opening and he attended. That evening, he conducted an interview with me, about my work, for the Nepalese media. I certainly never expected him to consider me for an award, but this acknowledgement of my work by the Nepalese community is a great privilege for me. And it has also inspired me to start taking my camera along with me once again.

Many thanks!

Indra Tamang


Please click the link below to view Photographs taken by me:

Group Picture, 5th Anniversary celebration of US Nepal Online. Photo by Ang Kami Sherpa

Monday, October 22, 2012

To Honor a Great Lady - Mrs. Dil Shova Shrestha

TO HONOR A GREAT LADY
On the Privilege of meeting Dil Shova Shreshtha
Mrs. Dil Shova Shrestha speaking at Himalayan Yak. Oct 14th 2012. Photo by Ashok Pant

On October 14th, I had the good fortune to meet Dil Shova Shreshtha when she spoke at the Himalayan Yak restaurant in Jackson Heights. An extraordinary woman whom I had read several articles about, Mrs. Shrestha was there to receive a commendation from the large Nepalese community in New York, arranged by Dr. Tara Niraula,  who is a prominent educationist and scholar. Although it was a short notice (I was notified just the day before), hundreds of people from all the many different Nepalese communities arrived to hear her speak and have a chance to meet her. 

Mrs. Dil Shova Shrestha greeted by Dr. Tara Niraula Photo by Ashok Pant
I had read about her selfless cause, her “Aama ko Ghar” (Mother’s House) in Nepal, and about how her daughter, who now lives in Chicago, has been sending $300 a month to help her care for so many abandoned women and children in Nepal. I expected Mrs. Shrestha to be a very impressive woman, but when I heard her speak in person, she surpassed my expectations with her warmth and kindness and humility.

I found it so heartwarming to hear her, and at her telling of her story everyone in the room was in tears, including she herself. She said that her father was an inspiration to her, and told us how in the village where she was born, if a house had no smoke rising from their chimney, her father would tell her and her siblings to go check the house and see if the people inside were alright. 

She told us how she came to find her calling, which started when her husband ran off to married someone else along with 500,000 rupees they had saved for their daughter’s marriage. He left Mrs. Shrestha and her daughter broke and devastated. They were both so heartbroken they decided to take their own lives. They prayed together and then they swallowed poison. But like something out of a storybook, the only thing the poison did was put them both into a deep sleep. When they awoke, her daughter said,  “Mama, maybe we didn’t take enough.” They made another pact and prepared a bigger dose of poison, and then sat down again to pray. While praying, the daughter sensed a supernatural voice, she believes god spoke to her and said, essentially, “You are not ready to come with me. Your work is yet to be done. There are many who are much more miserable than you two, and they need help. Go out and help them. “

Mrs. Shrestha’s daughter said, “Mama, I will help you. I will do the son’s duty,” by which she meant earning money and helping in every way she could. They started raising money by making and selling candles, packets of masala spices, and sewing.  Mrs. Shrestha had at least the house that had been given to her by her parents, and with the little money they had coming in, she and her daughter decided to take in five helpless elderly ladies who had been abandoned by their husbands or by society. One in particular, rescued from deplorable conditions, was left unable to care for herself in a room full of feces and lice, uncared for by her own sons and daughter-in-laws who lived in the same house. This lady’s fingernails had not been clipped in two years.  On bringing her into their own house, Mrs. Shrestha and her daughter bathed, clothed and fed the lady, who, along with the other old women, had her dignity restored. 

Group picture with Mrs. Dil Shova Shrestha at Himalayan Yak Restaurant, Jackson Heights
Photo By Ashok Pant
The original plan may have been to take in five women, but soon there were many dozens, and countless more followed. Mrs. Shrestha told us about one of the women, afflicted with cerebral palsy, who had lived on the streets. This woman had been raped by so many men that whenever she sees a man now, she is completely terrified. I had the impression while listening to her stories, that many of the women she’s rescued are probably experiencing the first happiness, or at least the first feelings of peace and security, of their lives.

Mrs. Shrestha has done it all on a shoestring budget and been compared to Mother Teresa with good reason. Whenever one of her charges dies, she and the others in her house forfeit vegetables for a month in order to pay for a proper funeral, called a dakbaadi, which involves washing the body and lighting a funeral pyre with a torch. Usually this is a rite performed by a son, or by a sort of hired son if there isn’t one, and it costs money. Sometimes, because of lack of funds, Mrs. Shrestha performs the funeral rituals personally, making herself a sort of honorary son for the deceased. Had these people not been rescued, but died on the street, they would never receive so dignified funeral as she gives them. Knowing that they will receive this when they die, along with the great care she provides them while they’re still alive and with her, allows these people a tremendous feeling of comfort and safety.

Sometimes, Mrs. Shrestha said, she gets calls from hospitals and nursing homes who can’t take care of someone, and she always accepts whoever it is. There are no paperworks involved or referrals needed for anyone who comes to her. They come from all walks of life and they are all welcome. While she started with very meager funds, in recent years she has begin  to receive  donations from all over the world. Many local people started donating bags of tea and sugar, rice and other necessities, and recently the Nepalese government promised her some land on which she plans to build a much bigger home to house all of her extended adopted family. 
Me with Mrs. Dil Shova Shrestha and Mr. Aditya Maharjan.
Photo by Ashok Pant

I was lucky to be among the people giving Mrs. Shrestha a khata, or scarf and a Namaste, and it felt very good to be face to face with this courageous and gentle woman. If any of you, my friends, would like to make a donation to her cause, you can find ways to do that by following these links. Any amount, no matter how small, will be greatly appreciated. 
Mrs. Dil Shova Shrestha with Mr. Subash Lama and Mr. Bansha Lal Tamang along with others.
Photo By Ashok Pant
For Information or Donation contact:
Old Age Management/ Social Welfare Trust
Soaltee Mode, Ravi BHawan, House no. 183
Udayabasti Marg, Kathmandu-13
Phone: 977-1-4274730/ 4670165
Cell: 9841-702176
Email: rajyagopali@hotmail.com / aamakoghar01@gmail.com


Brief look at "Aama ko Ghar"

Indra Tamang
Oct 22, 2012