great compassion boarding school lo-manthang
Transcription
great compassion boarding school lo-manthang
1 GREAT COMPASSION BOARDING SCHOOL LO-MANTHANG (MUSTANG) NEPAL Complete renovation of a flat roof in soil/straw of a school for 75 children in Lo-Manthang Due to the impact of global warming OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 2 I. Introduction : quick reading of the project The GCBS (Great Compassion Boarding School) has two bases in Nepal : one in Pokhara, second city of the country after Kathmandu, and the other in LoManthang, in Mustang, a district in the north of Nepal, bordering with Tibet. Upper Mustang is a Himalayan region with a particularly arid climate. Its altitude varies between 2900 and 6000 meters high. This region used to receive monsoon rains only in rare occurrences, when the monsoon was strong enough to cross the natural barrier of the Annapurna range. This has been so for centuries, and for centuries, the inhabitants of these regions built their roofs with local natural material adapted to the climate. Over the last two decades, things have gradually changed due to global warming. During the last decade in particular, the monsoon reached Mustang on a regular basis, with more intense and more frequent rains. Traditional roofs, ill adapted to these new conditions, do not protect walls as they should anymore, and many buildings are damaged, or even partly threatened. In the GCBS, the roof is damaged in many places, causing infiltrations, and the building risks suffering irreversible damage if no solution is found. After a visit on the spot with some experts during the summer 2014, OME asbl has committed to raise the necessary funds in order to make a durable repair. Our willingness is to preserve the unique and traditional character of the building by putting in place a durable and ecological solution. OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 3 II. Elements of geography Mustang is one of Nepal’s 75 districts. It is located in the north-east of the country and borders Tibet (China). Its territory spreads over some 80 km from north to south and 45 km in its biggest width for an area of 1200 km2. Due to its altitude it can be classified as a subarctic zone from 3.600 to 4.100 m. Mustang is a formerly independent kingdom which is an integral part of the Nepalese territory since 1951. The capital of the kingdom is the village of LoManthang, and the capital of the administrative district of Mustang is situated in Jomoson (or Jomsom). Upper Mustang starts in Jomoson and is a region of high Himalayan plateaus. Upper Mustang is a particularly difficult to reach region. Jomoson is the last accessible communication hub and last small airport before engaging in the valley of the Kali Gandaki towards the capital Lo-Manthang. Upper Mustang has hardly any means of communication apart from trails and a road that is under construction, and it still takes 5 to 8 days of walk to reach the capital. Situated behind a mountainous barrier, Mustang was traditionally isolated from the Indian monsoon. It is a largely arid region, with normal annual rainfall from 250 to 400 mm. Due to this drought and despite the average altitude (around 4000m), snowfalls are scarce. OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 4 The Kali Gandaki river takes its source on the territory of Mustang at an altitude of 5000m and spreads its valley, dividing its territory in a north-east/south-west direction towards the Nepalese Terai. This valley used to be a commercial route between India and Tibet, in particular for salt. A part of the Kali Gandaki valley, the Thak Khola, is the deepest canyon in the world. In the south, on the Nepalese side, two access ways, and among them the deep canyon separating the Dhaulagiri (8172m) from the Annapurna (8078m). In the north, towards Tibet, the lowest pass is 4270m high, two months by walk away from Lhassa. In the east and west, the mountainous ranges make it impossible to go through… (Wikipedia). III. Climate change Due to its extreme geographic situation, Mustang is a victim of global climate change. One of the most striking examples is the village of Sam Dzong. This village situated at 3800m above sea level used to get its water from one of the glaciers which overhang the village. Through a simple but efficient irrigation system, the villagers lived for centuries out of agriculture and cattle breeding. Due to global warming, the glacier has significantly reduced. Sam Dzong does not have access to water anymore and cannot survive. These phenomena are particularly well described and shown in the movie from Manuel Bauer, a Swiss photographer who fell in love with Mustang and who is deeply interested by the impact of climate change in this region of the world. ( http://www.compass-film.de/index.php/projets.html - use the password qwerty). On the same subject, the 5 reports of the G.I.E.C. illustrate well the ongoing changes. They are available here : http://www.ipcc.ch/home_languages_main_french.shtml Thanks to the action of Lama Ngawang Kunga Bista, a monk who is very committed in Mustang (see further) and to the many funds collected notably in Switserland (http://samdzong.org/ ), the village has been re-built down on the riverside, on a land given by the king. Two other villages are presently threatened in a similar way. OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 5 Another obvious sign of a changing climatic pattern: the monsoon, coming from India, reached Mustang only occasionally and lightly. Nowadays, it crosses more and more regularly the Himalayan barriers. Year after year, rains are stronger and more frequent in Lo-Manthang. It damages traditional buildings which have not been built in a way to withstand such a climate. This is the case for the Great Compassion Boarding School, as explained further on. IV. Lama NGAWANG and the GCBS Lama Ngawang Kunga Bista is a monk born in Mustang on 20 October 1971. As is often the tradition in Tibetan culture, his parents decided to entrust their son to the monastery in order to give him an education. In this time, the monastery in Lo-Manthang has no school and at the age of 8, the young Ngawang is sent to a monastery in India in order to receive the education corresponding to his lineage. The climate is totally different from Lo-Manthang: he goes from 3000m and an arid climate to a much lower altitude, with high temperatures and a very wet climate. Separated from his parents, whom he will not see any more until the age of 18, the young Ngawang will live this part of his life as a traumatic experience. He wants to go back to Mustang and will do anything he can to avoid sending other young people from Mustang to live through this ordeal. He uses some money given to him by his mother, who comes and visits him for his 18th birthday to leave the monastery and go back to Lo-Manthang. OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 6 Upon his return in Lo-Manthang, he goes back to his first monastery (Choede) and decides to open a school. His superior supports and encourages him in this initiative. Shortly after, he realises that the homework is rarely done because there is no follow-up at home. He understands that unless you educate women, this situation is not likely to change, because mothers are alone at home during the agricultural season and are unable to help their sons. He then asks the permission to his hierarchy to welcome girls in the monastic school he opened, but the superior refuses. In the meantime, the young monk became a lama and began studying English. He got in touch with the first tourists and trekkers visiting Mustang after its opening in 1992. He then decided to ask for help, and this is how he was invited several times to Germany, then to Switzerland, where he builds sand mandalas and collects funds. A foundation is created in Switzerland, the “Himalaya’s Children Foundation”, thanks to which Lama Ngawang builds his own school in 2000: the “Great Compassion Boarding School”. Out of the monastery, this school can welcome girls. The boarding school welcomes children from the poorest families from all over Mustang and offers a comprehensive, official education, completed by teaching of Tibetan language and courses of Buddhist philosophy, thereby contributing to the transmission of their ancestral culture. Only condition to be admitted: the parents must be financially incapable to pay for the studies of their child as is the case in a traditional school. Today, the GCBS has two implantations (Pokhara and Lo-Manthang) to follow the seasonal migration of the population. Indeed, from October to end of March, the population goes down to the cities of Pokhara or even Kathmandu to escape from a harsh winter. The school welcomes nearly 240 children, among whom a majority of girls, and some thirty of them have now reached college. The latter are about to be hosted in a newly built hostel and entirely financed through the Swiss foundation. The cost of schooling for the children is financed through a significant network of private sponsors, mainly in Switzerland, but also in Austria, Germany, Italy and Belgium. There are even a few sponsors in Japan. OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 7 GCBS Lo-Manthang, view of the playground and the classes GCBS Lo-Manthang, view of the playground and the dining hall OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 8 OME not-for-profit organisation is nowadays responsible of a network of 14 sponsors. It is also going to establish soon a computer room for college students in the newly built hostel. Lama Ngawang has a vision which is at the same time very comprehensive and sustainable for Mustang. He has become a highly appreciated figure thanks to his very committed action in favour of education and health. More recently, he has thrown himself with conviction in ecological projects, notably by leading the plantation of several thousand trees and by managing the move of the village of Sam Dzong. Entrance of the school of Lo-Manthang OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 9 Implantation of Pokhara V. OME asbl Ouvertures et Mieux-Etre asbl is a not-for-profit association born from the encounter of three worlds: (1) Buddhism, (2) personal development and wellbeing, and (3) education and training in underserved settings, and most notably in languages. The association wishes to favour, through its different activities, the opening to one-self and to others, as well as the resulting well-being. Openings Open to one-self, discover one-self, accept one-self is of course the first decisive step. The activities proposed by OME asbl tend to favour this knowledge and this opening: workshops, seminars, conferences, meditation, consultations in psychoastrology. It is obviously as important to open to others. All our activities go in that direction, in particular our language courses, seminar or linguistic travels abroad. OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 10 Better being We live a hectic era, very destabilizing for many people. Powerful energies are at work and many find it hard to follow, to question themselves and to find serenity, joy and balance. All this is however possible, against all appearances and the beliefs that hamper or agitate us. This is what OME asbl tries hard to mitigate through its activities, by trying to make well-being available to all. In summary, and as a motto: opening to oneself, to others in order to feel better while serving a wider aim… The statutes of the association have foreseen since its creation that the benefit of its activities would be directed to support projects, both at national and international levels. These projects should preferably have a humanitarian or an educational aim. In Belgium, the association finances a system of self-learning (e-learning) aimed at underprivileged schools (schools for underprivileged students) in the region of Brussels as well as Dutch classes for students recently arrived in Belgium. In Nepal, the association has developed activities in two sectors: education and access to health care. In education, OME finances the rent of the hostel for the students of GCBS who have begun college. This support will be transferred in 2015 to the running costs of the new hostel which is currently being finalised. Additionally, the association coordinates a network of sponsors who finance the schooling of GCBS pupils. The extension of this activity during 2013 and 2014 has motivated the submission of a request for acknowledgement to the Ministry of Finance to obtain a tax deduction for the sponsorship of these children. On the medical side, the association sends money to finance the medical transfer of people from Mustang who cannot pay the travel to the closest hospitals or health centres. OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 11 VI. The roof of the GCBS in Lo-Manthang and climate change As mentioned above in point III., due to changing climatic patterns over the last years, Lo-Manthang is increasingly affected by the monsoon from India, and the rainfall is more and more intense. The techniques used to build the roofs are traditional and take into account the fact that climate in Mustang has always been arid. The roofs are made of beams of local wood (poplar) and split branches, with straw and clay sealing off the mixture. All this used to resist well the sporadic and light rain such as the traditional climate would experience. This picture allows visualising the technique used for the roof Side view of the layers constituting a traditional roof (clay/soil, straw and vegetal material, wood) OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 12 Rare poplar plants. A durable solution will avoid an excessive use of this wood Since the rain intensified, the roof has been regularly attacked and damaged in several parts, in such a way that the walls are now threatened. During the summer of 2014, a delegation of OME asbl travelled to Lo-Manthang and could realise the extent of the damage, taking several pictures: OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 13 Flat roof covered with soil and sur-elevated due to a temporary repair with plastic Damaged parts before opening OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 14 Opening of the roof showing a plastic in poor state and rotten straw General view of the northern side of the roof with temporary iron sheeting OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 15 Detail of temporary corrugated iron sheeting OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 16 Detail of the southern part of the roof (sur-elevated with corrugated sheeting blocked with adobe bricks) Same with view to the north OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 17 Detailed view Temporary repair in corrugated iron sheeting to preserve the building OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 18 VII. Implementation of a solution During the same travel, different possible solutions were examined with Lama Ngawang. One of them would consist of generalising the use of iron sheeting as was made temporarily in the parts most affected by the last monsoon. This solution is of course cheaper but it is less respectful of the traditional architecture and above all, very noisy, which is ill adapted to a school environment. This solution is therefore discarded. Rebuild the roof in the same traditional way is also excluded, because it would only represent a two-year respite, at best. A third solution is put forward by a member of the group, expert in durable building. It would consist in removing the upper layer of clay/soil and fix underneath a thin, light and very resistant material. It is a rubber sheet of the Tridex brand. Its resistance is perfectly adapted to the conditions observed on the spot. Scheme of the proposed solution Above the poplar logs and the layer of poplar branches traditionally used, a layer of barley straw is covered by another layer of filtered soil so as to remove any cutting or sharp piece. On this basis, an EPDM Tridex layer is disposed to make the OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 19 roof fully waterproof. Above this, a layer of DrainotechG20 plays the role of water drainer and brings rainwater to the 15 collectors spread on the whole length of the roof to evacuate it. Above this Drainotech, a layer of soil/clay is disposed as on traditional roofs, which can be used to grow vegetables, or simply as vegetal layer. It has to be underlined that this solution, which is an absolute first in this region, could be spread throughout Mustang both for collective buildings and individual houses. An extension of the mission is already envisaged to establish a contact with authorities with the aim of including this concept in training curriculum. Indeed, a well-trained team will be able to extend this implementation to other buildings. A person in charge will be trained to make sure that the implementation of this kind of rubber layer can be perpetuated with the aim to save old architectural archetypes. A link between this person in charge and the expert will be ensured to transport the material on the spot. A control of the quality of the implementation will be put in writing. VIII. Budget First of all, it is to be underlined that the works on the new roof will not imply labour costs, since the local manpower will be provided by the school itself. However, the transport of the materials up to Lo-Manthang will represent a significant amount. The least costly is by boat. However slow, this is the preferred transport mode for budgetary reasons. The operation is planned for May 2015, during the dry season. The budget can be broken down in the following budget items: - Purchase of the material. This will take place in Belgium, because this material is only produced in Europe. - Transport For budgetary reasons, the transport will be by boat. This solution takes longer but is much cheaper. OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 20 - Coordination by and travel of the expert The expert/coordinator is the person who accompanied us during the summer 2014 and assessed the damage during our visit. On the next page, you will find a breakdown of the different budget items and the consolidated budget. OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 21 Detail of the budget : 1. Purchase of the material - Cutting of Tridex epdm 1,00mm : 7,00m x 9,5 m. Price for 15 pieces + 1 roll 1m x 20m. Special price 5 pieces 11.692,80 Special price 1 roll 508,08 - Water collector EU-EPDM diametre 90mm – 600mm x 17 280,47 - Tridex KS87 – 600ml x 36 537,02 - Mastic pump 18,68 - Drainotech – 950 m2 4,05€ x 950 3.847,50 Item Total 16.884,55 2. Transport (provision) Item Total 4000,00 3. Expert transport and coordination of the work - Transport expert A/R - Tax for stay in Mustang - Daily costs Item Total 800,00 850,00 500,00 2.150,00 GENERAL TOTAL PROJECT 23.034,55 OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 22 Financing In order to finance this project, OME foresees launching a call for funding towards different charities and its members and sympathisers. The producers of the materials that will be used have already brought a significant contribution through the special prices they grant, which allows the budget to remain below €20 000. During the spring and fall 2015, two big fundraising actions will take place: - A big concert during which songs of Jacques Brel will be performed - A projection of the movie “Drought in Mustang” followed by a conference/debate and a Nepalese meal During these events, a shop will sell several Nepalese items. If necessary, other events will be organised. IX. Planning and implementation The planning of the works is as follows : - February 2015 April 2015 Mid-May 2015 Mid-May to mid-June sending of the materials by boat last coordination meeting with the school departure of the OME expert implementation of the works OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 23 X. Annexes OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES 24 OME asbl – Rue de la Sapinière, 35 – 1170 BRUXELLES