Thursday, 20 June 2019


Strong and Resilient: Nepali Recovered from the shock of Earthquake Immediate

In Jorsalle, a tiny town located along Dudh Koshi River in Everest region before Namchebazar, we were waiting for our lunch to be served. Suddenly, we experienced a tremor of earthquake. We screamed. We ran away to possible safer places. Some mothers appeared in the yard carrying baby in their laps. Alas! tremble was not that strong. It was for very short moment and 5.1 Richter scale only.
My South African clients exclaimed to me, Oh ! You also run away? Are you afraid of this tremor?
I replied, can’t we be frightened? Should we pretend as if we are fearless or show we are heroic?
We, Nepali, were recovering gradually from the great shock of 2015 April’s Gorkha earthquake that measured close to 8 Richter scale. Even in 2019, we were getting aftershocks quite regularly though of smaller scales, and less destructive.
In April 25, 2014 Nepal’s part of the earth was under huge jolt. The total death toll was 9000 and more than 22,000 were injured. At the Base Camp site of Mt. Everest, 21 climbers and their supporters were buried due to avalanche from the mount Pumori. Similarly, the deadliest of all was the Langtang valley avalanche in which entire village was buried with death/missing toll almost unknown, and unrecorded. The aftershocks continued to shake the parts of Nepal for one complete year in quick intervals, and in longer intervals then after until 2019. During this period, our earth shook, our body shook, our buildings where we were in shook, our heart shook, and everything shook what we had.
Should not we be afraid just because we are Nepali? I think, yes we can.
But, the resilient power of Nepali is noteworthy. It does not mean whether we are frightened or not. It is the matter of how we recover, and start our life soon.
During the earthquake (April 25, 2015), I was heading towards Gokyo Lake, in Gokyo Valley of Everest region. We were six in a group. Three South African clients: Neels, Zetty, and Nicolette from Pretoria, myself, and two support staffs. We were in a narrow uphill cliff walking slowly.  Immediate after the earthquake we experienced, we came across with rain of stone pieces chopped off from the cliff towards us, towards our head. Some were as big as forty-fifty kilograms. We were lucky enough ourselves. None of us were injured.
You may be interested to read account of what happened and how was the situation with us here.
On the way back we checked in to the same lodge where we slept the night before earthquake i.e. on 24th of April. All the expensive property was destroyed and heavily damaged. Family was in the tent. Old lady owner kindly requested us to rest a while and have a cup of tea/coffee. They had begun their life already. As we walked on, all the villagers were already in a normal life to our utter surprise. Deaths of people were less in the region, so it might have been different than other parts of the country where many families lost their loved ones. But, still surprising to see the normal life back in less than a week.
Sociologist and social worker Katrin Tinihermsen has mentioned in her newspaper article published in The Himalayan Times on June 22, 2015 issue that “In the case of Nepal, the number of individuals who transformed their feelings into action towards the wellbeing of others was and is enormous… They went to their neighbors, communities, from the city of Kathmandu to remote places, places where they have probably never been before.” In the process the feeling of togetherness, help, hope was shown.
When I visited South Africa later same year of earthquake, Neels was saying to me that you people from Nepal are so strong and resilient. You all coped with such a huge disaster in a way that not people from other countries would have been done. If this had happened in South Africa itself, thousands of people would have been in psychiatrists, psychologists.
What could have made Nepali people so strong and resilient ?
Neels guessed. Mountain life.
A young girl of twelve-thirteen years walks/walked to famous Hillary School (established by sir Edmund Hillary) everyday from Namchebazar. It normally takes us 3 to 4 hours to reach the school during our acclimatization walk day. Isn’t it surprising?
A porter walks with us to Tengboche from Namchebazar together with normally 100 to 120 Kg (220 – 265 lbs) in his back. Doesn’t this fact bring goosebumps on you? 
Probably, the nature of living and life makes Nepali strong and resilient.