
Much will need to be done to rebuild Nepal and听the focus now must be the international aid effort. To donate go to:听.
Much will need to be done to rebuild Nepal and听the focus now must be the international aid effort. To donate go to:听.
I hope we can help get the Nepalese and the Tibetans... food, water and whatever they need as soon as possible.
Dr Lobsang Yongdan
When the first earthquake struck Kathmandu close to midday on April 25 Dr Lobsang Yongdan was in a small hotel getting ready to head out into the city and find some food.
A scholar working on Tibetan historical texts Yongdan had been in Tibet visiting relatives following the successful completion of his PhD in the Department of Social Anthropology.
Following his visit to relatives听Yongdan had then travelled from Lhasa to Nepal鈥檚 capital by road on his way back to the UK because he wanted to see the Nepalese countryside up close and knew Kathmandu was a good place to buy classical texts and dictionaries.
Sitting in the safety of the Mond Building in Cambridge just a few days after leaving the capital he says: 鈥 探花直播Nepalese will need our help. I saw villages on hillsides during my 24 hour car journey to Kathmandu. I do not know what condition they are in now. 探花直播villages are remote and in the mountains so I can imagine the landslides affecting whole villages and wiping out the roads.鈥
Yongdan's听scholarship reflects the strong听links between the 探花直播 of Cambridge,听Nepal and Tibet. They encompass many disciplines including听archaeology, biological and social anthropology (for example the听听project and the work of the听MIASU).听 探花直播 students have also volunteered听as English language teachers in rural Nepal through charities.听.
Arriving in Kathmandu Yongdan had bought a Tibetan-English dictionary and a few classical texts and was ready to 鈥渄o the tourist thing鈥, taking in some of the city鈥檚 famous sites such as the Boudhanath, a place of great significance to Buddhists and a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Such sites reflect the connections between Nepal and Tibet, says Yongdan: 鈥 探花直播links between Nepal and Tibet are strong. Many craftsman who helped build the Tibetan temples and monasteries came from Nepal.鈥
But as he prepared to take in the sights the earthquake struck.
鈥淲hen the earthquake came I was lucky as I was on the ground floor of my hotel so it was easy to run outside. But there were many large flower pots on the balconies of the surrounding building which were all falling down. I was very lucky not to be hit as these pots were falling from the fifth and sixth floors. A large one just missed me by a few centimetres,鈥 says Yongdan.
By this time many other guests were flooding from the building into the courtyard. 鈥淢any were crying. There was shock and a lot of distress. 探花直播first earthquake was over in just one minute I think 鈥 but there were many aftershocks.鈥
It is those aftershocks which took a huge psychological toll, says Yongdan, adding: 鈥淓veryone reacted very strongly to the aftershocks. 探花直播first, big quake, was all about fast reactions, but the later shocks created much more fear and anxiety. Even a heavy footfall, or airplane flying overhead, would cause feelings of panic. I was there for just two days; those still out there, feeling aftershocks over a longer period, will have suffered much more and the trauma could be very great.鈥
Yongdan remained in the courtyard for some time, eyeing the cracks in the building warily, conscious that they had no food or water. Knowing he was due to fly from the capital that very day Yongdan risked entering the hotel to retrieve his wallet and passport. Eventually he was able to walk into the city and buy some water and a biscuit. It was then he got his first glimpse of the powerful and tragic effects of the earthquake. 鈥淭here was a wall, about 10 feet high, which traders used to do their business from. It had collapsed and it was here I saw the first people who had died.鈥
Back at the hotel Yongdan and his group moved to an open field nearby and spent a fearful night as the aftershocks continued.
鈥淒uring the night we had two big aftershocks at about 4am and 6am, I think. We could not sleep as all night we could see the buildings shaking. Sometimes the shocks came like a wave, sometimes quickly like a train going along the tracks.鈥
Yongdan realised that food and water would be a huge problem and that should take his flight, if possible. 探花直播next day Yongdan, accompanied by an US woman in her 60s, went looking for a car to take them to the airport. 鈥淚t would be a long way to walk. People were in the centre of the road, staying away from the buildings, finding a car seemed impossible. To our surprise we eventually saw one single taxi driving around. He charged us fifteen times the normal price but we got to the airport,鈥 says Yongdan.
On the way to the airport the full extent of the devastation hit Yongdan. Buildings had collapsed or were heavily damaged. 鈥淲hen we got to the airport there was a truck which was delivering water to people who had gathered in a nearby field - but there were thousands of people in the field and a long queue.鈥
鈥 探花直播airport was crowded and everything was being done manually. Only those who had tickets were being allowed to fly at this stage. People were shouting. We stood in line for three hours waiting to hear if we would fly out or not. Once through we were in an open field and I felt much safer. We waited almost five hours and saw the Indian Air Force flying in with supplies.鈥
It was only when Yongdan was in the air that he relaxed enough to sense how lucky he was 鈥 and only once in Abu Dhabi that he felt anything close to the full impact. 鈥淚 suddenly realised what I had been through and that I had nearly died. I called my family. I have never heard my father cry before but both of them were very emotional.鈥
It was at Abu Dhabi that the news of his having reached safety finally reached colleagues in Cambridge.
Dr Hildegard Diemberger, Director of MIASU, says: 鈥淚 was hugely relieved when I was woken up at 1am by a text message from New York telling me they had heard Yongdan was safe. When he arrived at Pembroke his luggage had been left 听somewhere between Kathmandu and Abu Dhabi and he just had the clothes he was standing in.鈥
Safe in Cambridge, staying in a student room at Pembroke College, Yongdan says his thoughts are with those left behind. 鈥淚 had to leave,鈥 he says, 鈥淚 thought whether I could help there and then but without knowing much about the place and the people I would have been another burden. I thought that mobilising competent international help would have been more useful and I hope we can help get the Nepalese and the Tibetans affected by the earthquake food, water and whatever they need as soon as possible. We keep hearing heart-breaking messages of people, including young children, now exposed to rain, lacking water, food and trying to cope with loss and fear鈥
探花直播problem will not just be food and water, says Diemberger: 鈥淪ewage will now be an issue as will disease. 探花直播way some buildings are constructed means the earthquake has had a devastating effect.鈥
Once the initial battle for survival is over and food and water supplies have been secured other priorities will surface.
鈥淲e must look to the international relief effort first and then in the long term we can look to charities and action to support communities and help rebuild and ensure the rich heritage of Nepal is protected. But first they will have to get through the monsoon season. It will be a difficult process. Once the reconstruction process is underway there will be an enormous amount to do. Many of the sites affected are UNESCO World Heritage Sites so the hope is they will not be rebuilt too quickly and destroy what little is left. I am also thinking about the multitude of temples and monasteries scattered across the region. They house precious ancient manuscripts and prints, which are likely to have become exposed to the rain and are at risk of being lost forever鈥 says Diemberger.
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More information:
- For more information on the Nepal relief听effort and how to offer support go to: .
- Yongdan听is a scholar who straddles the ancient and modern worlds. Initially educated in the Buddhist monastery of听Kumbum听(Qinghai听Province, PRC), he possesses a rare talent for languages being fluent in Classical Tibetan, the Tibetan dialect of听Amdo, Chinese and English. His PhD at Cambridge was on a remarkable Tibetan text, the听Dzam听gling听rgyas听bshad听(DGRB), which translates as 探花直播Detailed Description of the World. He is currently working on an听AHRC听project hosted at听MIASU听to create a database of the earliest printed texts in Tibetan culture and the biographies of the Tibetan masters involved in the production of woodblock prints since the听12th听century.
探花直播text in this work is licensed under a . For image use please see separate credits above.