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Nepal Radio Program Lets People Tell of Core Beliefs and Motivation

FrontLines - May 2009

By Sven Lindholm


Photo by Antenna Foundation Nepal
Chameli Waiba

KATHMANDU, Nepal—“I believe in the alphabet because it has the power to change life. I realized the power concealed in the alphabet on the very first day I joined the adult literacy class. For the first time, I was introduced to letters that stood for my name.”

These words opened an essay by Chameli Waiba of Bajrabarahi in the Makawanpur district of Nepal. Waiba is one of 26 Nepalese who shared core beliefs and philosophies with audiences countrywide as part of a series entitled Mero Jindagi, or My Life.

In recent years, Nepal ousted its monarchy, ended a Maoist rebellion, and formed a new government through the Comprehensive Peace Agreement in late 2006—all of which politicized religious, caste, and ethnic groups. Antenna Foundation Nepal, through a USAID grant, began broadcasting a radio and television documentary series based on the U.S. National Public Radio program, This I Believe. The project was initially suggested by U.S. Ambassador to Nepal Nancy Powell.

This I Believe has its roots in a 1950s U.S. radio broadcast of the same name. Hosted by journalist Edward R. Murrow, the program ran during the start of the Cold War and at a time of major social change within the United States. It said its aim was “to point to the common meeting grounds of beliefs, which is the essence of brotherhood and the floor of our civilization.”

The first of 26 essays and documentaries in Mero Jindagi began Dec. 3. The essay by Waiba, 36, has been translated by Antenna Foundation Nepal and was broadcast on National Public Radio’s This I Believe segment in the United States Feb. 15.

In her essay, Waiba compared her life to a nearby lake, stagnant before she enrolled in adult literacy classes. However, she said as a result of the classes: “My new knowledge of words boosted my confidence and courage, I made a resolution… I and my sisters and brothers should be given education as much as we would like.”

Through this resolution, she helped get a bridge built in her hometown so children could attend the village school on the other side of the river, which is impassable during monsoon season.

“Now I cannot express my satisfaction seeing children running to school over that bridge. It is a bridge of iron, a bridge of letters, a bridge of community,” Waiba wrote. “Nothing is achieved without the cooperation of all.”

She also helped start microsaving women’s groups and said she would like to run permanent literacy classes for women and open a library.

“All this is the result of my knowing the alphabet, even though I learned it late,” said Waiba, describing the impact literacy classes have had on her life. “Letters have immense power. They have magic. The greatest thing in the world is the alphabet. That is my belief.”

Waiba’s essay can be accessed at www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=100677646. Go to www.thisibelieve.org to learn more about the U.S. program.

 


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