A few months ago I had an
email from Katherine Hughes-Fraitekh, Co-Founder and Director of Solidarity 2020 and
Beyond about an event that was going to take place in Kathmandu,
Nepal. As a long-standing member of the Solidarity network, the intended event
was something that I would take highly. By then, I didn’t know if I could get
the time to join such a great initiative in person. After some negotiations
with relevant people in the UK, I not only confirmed my attendance, but also
asked how I could be of use during my days in a country surrounded by the
Himalayan mountains, including Mount Everest, which is the highest of Himalayas
and also the highest on earth.
After lots of virtual
meetings, debates and meticulous planning, the time to fly to Kathmandu,
capital of Nepal was nearing. 80 participants from about 45 countries had
confirmed their attendance. A welcome group formed by one for the veteran civic
leaders in Nepal, our brother Ram Bhandari, was finalising its preparations to
welcome its esteemed guests. Session leaders, facilitators and convenors had
started to finalise their preparations. The Solidarity 2020 and Beyond team
bringing the many dots together. ‘Story of us’ in action!
For me, in addition to
preparing for the sessions I was going to facilitate and lead, doing research
about Nepal was important. The people, culture, food, places to visit and folks
to build relationships with. In doing so, I Knew the time difference between
the UK and Nepal is 5:45 hours. Nepal is ahead. Unique time difference! I also
knew Nepal was never colonised and that it is a landlocked country fully
surrounded by India and China. Yet it has it unique nature.
As folks from around the
world started to update us about their journeys and at times challenges
departing from airports, we got even more excited to hear the stories in person
and meet fellow comrades. Many had paid sacrifices to be at the event. Some had
travelled on camels; others on buses, trains and all sorts of treacherous
journeys to get to the nearest airports. Courage is what it takes to reach the
intended destination. Kudos to all who did it🙌🏿
As soon as we all gathered in
Kathmandu, the city of wooden temple, we were accorded kind welcome, and the
business kicked off. Sharing and learning! Many great sessions through out the
5 days together. Great organising; great leadership development and commitment
to share. At times debates and constructive alternatives. We also took time to
celebrate the work we have done together. Recognise colleagues, visit places
and enjoy cultural food and music. Among the most exceptional moments was the
dinner at local traditional restaurant called Bhojan Griha, where we
were served with mouth watering food, traditional drinks and uplifting and
enjoyable music. Below is a short video about this great event.
The best of #Nepal
— 𝘽𝙚𝙠𝙚𝙡𝙚 𝙒𝙤𝙮𝙚𝙘𝙝𝙖 (@BekeleWoyecha) March 18, 2023
As we gather in Kathmandu, Nepal for #S2020BNepal conference, there is a lot to enjoy & appreciate in this very welcoming country.
Community Organisers, Human rights defenders, activists & civic leaders who have come from 45 countries are being entertained by… pic.twitter.com/VtmteZWi06
We also had some amazing
moments in between. One of the most heart warming moments was led by people
with sight loss and visual impairment.
The best of #Nepal
— 𝘽𝙚𝙠𝙚𝙡𝙚 𝙒𝙤𝙮𝙚𝙘𝙝𝙖 (@BekeleWoyecha) March 18, 2023
As we gather in Kathmandu, Nepal for #S2020BNepal conference, there is a lot to enjoy & appreciate in this very welcoming country.
Community Organisers, Human rights defenders, activists & civic leaders who have come from 45 countries are being entertained by… pic.twitter.com/VtmteZWi06
Also another wonderful
opportunity to visit Monkey Temple, which is utterly gorgeous and worth
visiting when one is Nepal.
Following 5 days of many
workshops, talks, discussions, public actions and deliberations, we had the
Kathmandu 2023 Declaration, which was endorsed by all the participants. And
yes, it was then the turn of Arnab Chakraborty and his team to take us to the
last event of the conference. An opportunity to celebrate togetherness. An
opportunity to reaffirm our solidarity and commit to work together as children
of the world.
Special thanks to Katherine
and the amazing team for working round the clock to see this through. Thanks
also to individuals and organisations who sponsored this great initiative.
Thanks to all who made it to Kathmandu from around the world. Together we will
make our world a better place to live in. God willing we will meet again. As
our friend Sungu Oyoo often says, “it is Africa’s time.” I endorse it and hope
to see our next solidarity convening in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Till then we
will keep our watchful eyes open and deliver our best as organised global
citizens.
After all, we are the world!
We're the world!
— 𝘽𝙚𝙠𝙚𝙡𝙚 𝙒𝙤𝙮𝙚𝙘𝙝𝙖 (@BekeleWoyecha) March 21, 2023
Community Organizers, activists, human right defenders, scholars & civic leaders from across 45 countries together in Kathmandu, Nepal for a conference organised by @solidarity20203
Great to be with folks with vision that is big & far reaching.
#S2020BNepal pic.twitter.com/CRlAnrR4C5