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Home > Find a Project > Nepal > Women and Girls > Free and Educate 300 Bonded Nepali Girls

Free and Educate 300 Bonded Nepali Girls

Summary

This project rescues 300 young Nepali girls from bonded servitude and provides them with six years of education - which will enable them to graduate from the 10th grade (high school equivalent). progress reportread updates from the field


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More Information About this Project

Project Needs and Beneficiaries

Nepali girls, some as young as six, are being sold by their families into bonded servitude. The families don't want to sell their daughters, but they can't afford to live without the $50 they receive for their daughters' labor. NYOF rescues these girls, gives the families a goat which is worth $50, and provides the girls with their education for six years. This includes all school supplies, uniforms, books, and a kerosene lamp to study at night.

Activities

NYOF will rescue Nepali girls from being sold bonded servitude, and provide them with a complete education through 10th grade. Education is the way to break the cycle of poverty. Average annual income is $200. First girls in families to be educated.

Funding Information

Total Funding Received to Date: $1,525
Remaining Goal to be Funded: $103,475
Total Funding Goal: $105,000

Additional Documentation

This project has provided additional documentation in a Microsoft Word file (projdoc.doc).

Resources

Why this Project is Important

Potential Long Term Impact

This project will rescue 300 Nepali girls from bonded servitudue. NYOF will educate these girls through 10th grade. They will be the first girls in their families to receive a complete education. This is the tool needed to break the cycle of poverty.

Project Message

Nothing rekindles hope in the human condition more than witnessing the transformation of a child.
- Olga Murray, NYOF's Founder and Board President

Who is Running This Project

Contact

Olga Murray,
President and Founder of NYOF
3030 Bridgeway
Suite 123
Sausalito, CA 94965
United States
415.331.8585
Email:

Project Sponsor

Marketplace 2005

Organization

Nepalese Youth Opportunity Foundation (NYOF)
3030 Bridgeway, Suite 123
Sausalito, California 94965
United States
(415) 331-8585
http://www.nyof.org

Learn more about Nepalese Youth Opportunity Foundation (NYOF) and the project team.


Nepalese Youth Opportunity Foundation (NYOF)'s Current Projects on GlobalGiving

Sending Children to School in Remote Villages
Sending Children to School in Remote Villages
Rescuing Young Girls From Bonded Labor in Nepal
Rescuing Young Girls From Bonded Labor in Nepal
Rescue Children Suffering From Severe Malnutrition
Rescue Children Suffering From Severe Malnutrition

Where this Project is Located

Country

This project is located in Nepal and can also be found under Women and Girls.

For more information about Nepal, read the Human Development Report on Nepal or the Wikipedia entry for Nepal.

When this Project was Updated

Last Updated

This project was last updated on June 25, 2008.

Date Added to GlobalGiving

This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on April 21, 2008.

Latest Update from the Field

The Rescue of Sushila, a Former Indentured Servant

By Olga Murray - President and Founder, June 25, 2008 05:10 PM

NYOF has had an interesting spring. In April, PBS aired a documentary on the program NOW about our project to free young girls from indentured servitude in west Nepal. They sent over an observant and savvy crew from New York, which did an excellent job in explaining and describing the terrible practice of indenturing young girls as servants. I know that many of you saw the program (if you did not, you can find it at http://www.pbs.org/now/shows/414/video.html). I thought you might be interested in some “behind-the-scenes” events during the filming. The program included the story of Sushila, an 11 year old girl we rescued on camera from her job as a bonded servant, but what went on behind the scenes was just as interesting.

Sushila had been indentured by her father to work as a servant for a family in Kathmandu. Neither she nor her father received any compensation for her services, but the indenturing family promised to provide room and board and send her to school; to their credit, they did so. The PBS crew went to Sushila’s home village, where they met the woman who was her employer. She had come to fetch Sushila to return to work for a third year. The employer could have been assigned the role by central casting, so perfectly did she fit it. She vehemently denied that she employed a child servant and went sashaying off down the road, angry at the suggestion. Of course, she returned later, packed up Sushila, and brought her to resume work in Kathmandu.

We contacted Sushila’s father and asked if he would allow her to return home, in exchange for which NYOF would provide the family with a piglet or a goat, which they could sell at the end of the year for a profit. In addition, we offered to give her a scholarship to attend school, as we do to for every rescued girl. He agreed, and took the 10 hour bus ride into Kathmandu, where Raju, a member of our staff, met him. Raju had called the employer in advance to tell her about the purpose of their impending visit. But when they arrived at the home where Sushila was working, the employer was not at home. This is where one of the two best scenes in the program occurs – Sushila was called out of the house, saw her father, and was puzzled at first by his presence. But when she learned why he was there, she broke into one of the brightest smiles that ever graced a screen.

The employer arrived a few minutes later, accompanied by a posse of relatives, and a royal row ensued between Raju and the employer and her relatives. Only a few seconds of the argument is in the film. They objected to the cameras, and demanded to know why Raju was picking on them, since Nepal is full of child laborers. Raju replied that we had not singled them out, that we had rescued 3500 girls in Sushila’s position, and that they must know child labor is illegal in Nepal. He demanded that she be allowed to go home with her father.

The dispute lasted more than an hour, during which tears coursed down Sushila’s face as the adults around her squabbled about her fate. “You see,” said the posse, “she is crying because she loves it here and doesn’t want to leave.” Her father said not a word – he is a poor, uneducated man, and in some aspects Nepal is still a feudal society. It would be unthinkable for him to argue with these rich and educated people, not even in defense of his daughter.

Sushila was finally allowed to depart with her father and Raju. On their way to the bus station to return to their village, they stopped for a bite to eat, and Raju said Sushila could not stop smiling. Then came the other priceless scene: Sushila is on the bus with her father, and when she is asked what she will do now, she says “I’m going to go to school, and I will play, and do work in my own home.” In that order! There’s a child who knows what’s important in her life!

Sushila’s story is far from the worst among the children who are bonded away. Many of these little girls are severely abused, since their working conditions are entirely at the discretion of their employers and no one checks to see how they are treated. At least, Sushila was allowed to attend school – a privilege which few of the bonded girls enjoy.

We are on a crusade to rescue all these children and eradicate the bonding custom in Nepal. If you would like to help, what better time to do it than now – as a Mother’s Day gift. For $100, you can bring a girl home to live with her family, buy a piglet or a baby goat to compensate them, pay her school expenses for a year and support our terrific awareness program to turn the community against the well-established bonding practice -all in your mother’s name. We will tell her about your gift if you give us her address.

If you would like a copy of the program on DVD, we will send one to you free of charge.


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