Back to news
8 Sep 2015 | News

A Paramount Rural Experience

2 mins Read

70% Complete

Traveling to the remote far western district of Darchula for the first time put me in a state of pandemonium as rumours of people not having enough to eat there consumed my mind. In spite of my concerns, I mustered up my strength and participated in the socio-economic survey in three wards of Khar VDC, Darchula. During the flight and two days of driving, I pondered if the rumours were indeed true. I even stocked up my bag with two-week supply of chocolates, just in case. However, upon reaching Darchula, I was relieved to find good local foods with remarkably friendly people.

As we started the survey, the most common questions we encountered were about the earthquake and if our houses and families in Kathmandu were safe. I couldn’t comprehend the Doteli language as spoken by the majority of women, and could only understand two words — earthquake and Kathmandu.

Most household members had gone to Byans and Satganga to collect Yarsagumba as it was peak season to pick the fungus. Yarsagumba collection was one of the main sources of income for people through seasonal migration. The risks associated do not outweigh the potential economic benefit so some houses were deserted with the entire family gone for the harvest.  Children took part in collection as there was a traditional belief that children were lucky — their young eyes were believed to spot the Yarsagumba fungus tip more easily than their older family members.

My quest of conducting household surveys took me to the house of a Dalit who represented the lowest strata of social classification in Nepal. He offered me jaggery and some local wild berries called as ‘Ganeulo’. It tasted really good and his children were happy to offer me more. The Dalit family was happy that I had eaten what they had offered me, unlike some of the conservative elite castes of the locality who considered them untouchables. There is still caste-based discrimination in the area, particularly among the older generation.

The biggest problem I faced was the lack of proper sanitation. The people in the villages were courteous and always offered me food and drink (lassi). I accepted their hospitality despite the presence of houseflies swarming over the food. Adjusting to the situation was one of my biggest learning experiences in field work.

Many of the men in the villages were either in India or Gulf countries for better employment opportunities. I could differentiate between rich and poor households by having a glance at their rooftop. Homes with satellite dishes were the ones with disposable income. I was also told about poor and schedules castes groups, who in desperation, stole stones intended to control the stream flood to construct toilets. Another example of the grim economic condition of marginalized people.

Overall, it was an eye opening experience for me as I witnessed and experienced rural Nepalese livelihood. I walked for hours along the slopes of the mountains, and in the end, I returned as a fully determined girl. Lastly, I made a promise to work relentlessly in the community development sector of Nepal.

Stay current

Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.

Sign Up

Related Contents

Continue exploring this topic

30 Sep 2016 News
HKH Researchers Convene “Writeshop” to Bring HIMAP Assessment to Reality

More than 50 researchers from institutions around the world convened in Dhulikhel, Nepal, this week to make a major push ...

19 Jun 2018 Cryosphere
Institutional Recognition for Promoting Women in Glaciology Research in the HKH

Since its inception in 2011, the Cryosphere Initiative at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) has made a ...

8 Feb 2016 News
HIMAP: A Monitoring and Assessment Programme to Sustain the Hindu Kush Himalayan Region as a Global Asset

From 26-28 January 2016, the first writers’ workshop for the coordinating lead authors of the Hindu Kush Himalayan Monitoring and ...

14 Aug 2017 Climate change
Living in the Shadow of Climate Change

These days, readers frequently come across headlines spelling of the approaching doom and gloom of climate change. In South Asia, ...

Tourism beyond borders: Stakeholders discuss opportunities for cross-border tourism at the Fifth Asian Rural Tourism Festival

As the Government of Nepal launches its Visit Nepal 2020 campaign, communities in eastern Nepal will have an additional appeal ...

12 Jan 2015 News
International Mountain Day 2014 Celebrations in ICIMOD’s Member Countries

China On the occasion of International Mountain Day 2014, the Chinese Committee on International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (CNICIMOD) organized ...

9 Sep 2016 HICAP
HICAP China Synthesis Writeshop

Aspects related to climate change and other drivers of change in the Salween and Mekong basins and in the Tibetan ...

30 Sep 2016 News
HKH Researchers Convene “Writeshop” to Bring HIMAP Assessment to Reality

More than 50 researchers from institutions around the world convened in Dhulikhel, Nepal, this week to make a major push ...