The only full timer out of the 200,000 Nepalis in the US to work for Nepal's democracy and social justice movements in 2005-06.
Showing posts with label Che Guevara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Che Guevara. Show all posts
Saturday, April 17, 2021
Sunday, November 06, 2011
Baburam Compared To Barack
Haaretz: The audacity of hope in Nepal
It is hard to think of two cultures more dissimilar than those of America and Nepal. The first glorifies an individual's ability to change in order to get ahead and overcome the many obstacles in his path. Therefore there is no story more beloved than a "Cinderella" tale: Against all the odds, thanks only to their abilities, a poor person breaks through and achieves amazing things. Nepalese culture, however, sanctifies the individual's ability to accept and come to terms with the way things are in a way that will not damage the purity of his soul. You're in distress? Don't fight it; learn to live with it. Change will come only in the inner realm of the soul.
While the Americans glorify deeds, the Nepalis believe in miracles. Acceptable behavior is also entirely different: If the American is extroverted, the Nepali is introverted. If the American extravagantly shares all his troubles and achievements, the Nepali hides them. In many senses, these two cultures operate in parallel universes.
"There, in the university's fine library, I encountered a small book about a person I had never heard of before," Bhattarai said, "and it shook up my life. This was the biography of Che Guevara, and after I read it I swore to do everything in my power to help my people live in real economic and social freedom."
The hopes attached to him compete only with those pinned on his colleague on the other side of the globe, United States President Barack Obama. It is with good reason he is called "the Nepali Obama" here. Like Obama, Bhattarai is a rare combination of a man of the book and a man of deeds. And like Obama, he too attributes importance to symbolic measures. When he was elected, he preferred to do without an official car and instead continued to travel in a locally made car, without air-conditioning.
...... the idea of a "first lady" is also foreign to Nepalese culture.
...... nearly 60 percent of Nepalese people live below the poverty line.
Traditional agriculture is still the main source of employment for more than 80 percent of the citizens and added to this is the difficulty in recruiting foreign investment because of the small size of the economy, the geographic remoteness, the absence of infrastructures within the country and the considerable exposure to natural disasters.
Related articles
- Why Baburam Bhattarai is Better Still? (backstreeetboy.wordpress.com)
- Myriad challenges facing new Nepal PM Baburam Bhattarai - BBC News (news.google.com)
- Ahmadinejad in Nepal! (backstreeetboy.wordpress.com)
- Chairman Kiran and Prime Minister Bhattarai (backstreeetboy.wordpress.com)
- Prime Minister Baburam in India: Agreements Signed and Some Photos Clicked (com.np)
- Another week of disappointing news from the Subcontinent. (aminaelahi.com)
- Nepal PM makes new peace pledge (bbc.co.uk)
- Everything You Wanted to Know about Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai (and his Mustang Car) (com.np)
- Baburam Bhattarai, Nepal Maoists Deputy Chief, Sworn In As Prime Minister (huffingtonpost.com)
- Nepal parliament elects Maoist prime minister (redantliberationarmy.wordpress.com)
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