PICS: RUBEENA MAHATO |
In the suburbs of Coimbatore at Sulur, the first thing that one notices in
the impressively walled Michael Job Centre is the sheer enormity of the complex.
There is a school, a post graduate level college and an orphanage in the
sprawling premises housing some 500 girls that the organization claims are
abandoned or orphaned children of Christian martyrs. The last thing one would
expect to find there are young girls from the remote Nepali district of Humla.
But there they are, all 23 of them with Christian names living for the past nine
years here as orphans despite having parents back home.
They were rescued from the centre last week at the initiative of the Esther
Benjamins Memorial Foundation (EBMF), Nepal, ChildLine India and the Child
Welfare Committee (CWC) at the state of Tamil Nadu.
EBMF got into action when the families of four girls from Humla requested
them to find their missing daughters. The parents of the girls had sent them
along with their brothers in the care of Dal Bahadur Phadera, a local
politician.
Many families in Humla had paid Phadera Rs 5-20,000 to get their children out
of war-ravaged villages at the time and educate them in boarding schools in
Kathmandu. The boys are still in the institution run by Phadera, but the girls,
between 3 to 7 years old, were taken away nine years ago. Their families never
heard from them.
When rescued, many girls didn't remember their parents' names or where they
came from. They have been given Christian names and identities.
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as children of Christian martyrs in Nepal murdered by Maoists. The Centre runs
on the donations given by Christians from all over the world for 'orphans'.
In one of the pages of the website was where we first saw pictures of Anna
Bella, Daniela, Persius and Jael (Christian names given by the centre, original
names withheld). Their mother and brother had made a three days journey from
Humla to join us in Kathmandu for the trip to Coimbatore in India's southern
tip. Persius and Jael's mother Shangmo Lama had never been in a car before.
After a long and tiring journey to Coimbatore, a frail Shangmo smiled for the
first time when we stepped inside the gate of the Centre to get back her
daughters. She had waited nine years for this moment.
first, the principal of the centre flatly denied having any Nepali children at
the centre. But she was forced to accept having illegally kept the girls as
orphans when the photos of the children and the mother were shown (pictured,
right).
Outside, a very Nepali looking girl's face stopped me. After few exchanges in
English, I asked if she was Nepali. The girl's face brightened up. Lynsy then
gave me her Nepali name, informed there were now 23 of them left in the centre
and that they have not forgotten to speak Nepali. Soon the news spread of the
team from Nepal and Nepali girls surrounded the principal's office.
There was noisy chatter and a sense of jubilation in the office. Some of the
girls were seven years old and all had parents and families back home and hadn't
heard from them in all these years.
It was an emotional scene when Shangmo met her girls, who at first failed to
recognise their mother. But her brother's daughter Daniela instantly recognised
her aunt.
PP Job, the centre's founder has denied having known that the children had
families in Nepal. The self-styled Christian preacher has alleged that the
children were brought to him by Phadera and that the center has only provided
good education and living to these underprivileged children.
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bring children, orphaned or not from Nepal to India, and house them in an
institution here. It is a clear case of trafficking," Nandita Rao, Childline's
lawyer told Nepali Times.
The Centre is now under investigation by the social welfare department in
Tamil Nadu and has been given 15 days to furnish details and prove that it was
not involved in child trafficking. On Monday, 500 activists from different Hindu
organisations staged a protest outside the orphanage accusing it of
proselytizing.
"Poor countries are turning into a missionary haven for religious zealots and
this has led to a new form of trafficking," says Philip Holmes of Esther
Benjamins Memorial Foundation. The girls are now on their way home by train via
Gorakhpur.
The girls had kept the memory of their home country alive for nearly a
decade, and were full of pride as they sang the Nepali national anthem for the
rescue party from Nepal. They had memorized the words from the mobile ring tone
of a Nepali visiting the center.
Said an ecstatic Sabita Bogati: "I want to go home. I would not mind walking
all the way to Nepal."
POST SCRIPT: EBMF is now preparing to file charges against Phadera for
trafficking. In India, child rights organisations have taken up the issue and
are now planning to bring PP Job and his accomplices to book. Efforts to
repatriate children trafficked from Tibet and Bhutan who were also kept in the
centre are now underway. But even if the children are reunited, their lost
years, separation from parents and loss of identity will never be returned.
Read also:
The missing half, KAPILDEV KHANAL in NUWAKOT
After
decades of trafficking, there are no young women left in northern
Nuwakot
See also:
Circus slave, CLARE HARVEY
"I
thought the circus was glamorous. How wrong I was."
Juggling with young lives, PRANAYA SJB
RANA in MAHARASTRA, INDIA
Nepali child slaves face a brighter future after
rescue from Indian circus abuse