The gates of one of Nepal's top private
schools swing open and 20 children who hope to be the doctors, lawyers and
scientists of tomorrow spill out into a smart Kathmandu suburb.
But
while their classmates come from the country's wealthiest elite, these children
were rescued seven years ago, dirty and sick, from a cowshed on the edge of the
capital.
"I
want to be a pilot when I leave school. I'd like to study science at
university, maybe in France," says Rita Bhandari, 14, who is in the top
two percent of her year group at the prestigious Gyanodaya Bal Batika School.
Like
her 19 friends, Rita was handed to traffickers in impoverished western Nepal by
her family in the hope of giving her a life away from the brutal civil war then
sweeping through the countryside.
The
children's journey from the remote district of Humla saw them end up on the
unforgiving streets of Kathmandu, where children are sold as sex slaves or
forced into back-breaking labour in brick factories and mills.
Their
salvation came when they were discovered by Irish businessman Gene Lane-Spollen
and his wife, Maura, who were visiting Nepal and heard about a group of
children living in a cattle shed.
"It
was a cold March day and there was no sign of the children because it was
dark," said retired Coca-Cola executive, Gene, 64, who is based with his
wife in France.
"We
went upstairs on a ladder and there was no light, no windows upstairs at all. When
your eyes got used to the dark you could see something and then we realised the
barn was full of kids.
"There
was one big string across the room with all the clothes chucked over it and
there was nothing else – not even any straw on the floor."
Gene and
Maura took all 20 children – who were then aged between three and nine – and
set up a charity to house and educate them, enrolling the group in a local
school to teach them to read and speak English and Nepali rather than their
tribal language.
"Over
the course of the next couple of years we found the children were developing a
real sense of ambition or competitiveness among themselves, even though they
lived as a big family," Gene said.
The
couple return frequently to monitor the pupils' progress after appointing
carers to instill a regime of study and discipline that has seen the youngsters
catching and then even overtaking their more affluent classmates.
Rita's
success is all the more remarkable given her start in life, losing her father
in the 1996-2006 Maoist civil war and having to leave her mother and younger
brother and sister behind when she was sent to Kathmandu.
"Gene
is like our godfather," she told AFP. "He changed my life."
Most of
the students have never been back to Humla and they get to ring home just once
every other month, but many talk about returning one day.
"I
will go back to my village and I will try to develop it. I want to help other
people by establishing a school," said Basanta Budhathoki, 15.
Chand
Rai, who runs the home with his wife Menuka, says he feels "blessed"
to be the group's surrogate father.
"My
family is here. It's not work, it's living here with them," he said.
Rai
said the children were not treated differently by their more affluent
classmates at school as they have earned respect by being good at sport and
lessons.
But he
admitted problems occasionally arise when they see their richer friends
enjoying cinema trips and other privileges.
The
children rise at 6:00 am for prayers before their chores, and study for an hour
before school. They are allowed an hour to unwind after classes but then it's
back to the books.
"If
there is an exam the senior boys will study until 10:00pm or 11:00pm,"
said Rai.
It is
the strict routine which sets the home apart from other care centres in
Kathmandu, where children are left to their own devices and often end up back
on the streets.
But it
is not cheap: accommodation and schooling costs for the group costs around 2.8
million rupees (US$35,000) a year, with Gene and Maura covering most of the
expense and donors making up the rest.
"If
they have good food, good medicine, good management and a good school, there's
nothing to stop them," said Gene. "They can be whatever they
want."
AFP
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