BCN asks US diplomat to ease visa processing

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The Bhutanese Community in the Netherlands (BCN) has raised the issue of family separation and difficulties in getting visas by the resettled Bhutanese to visit their ailing parents and relatives in the United States of America.

It mentioned the issued during a meeting with US Diplomat Lisa Kierans at Hague based US Embassy on May 21, a press statement issued said.

The BCN delegation with US diplomat Lisa Kierans at Hague based US Embassy (Picture : BCN)

“Our team was very warmly welcomed at the embassy premise by the diplomat who also holds the post of Deputy for Political Affairs, Office of the Political and Economic Affairs at the United States Embassy in The Hague, Netherlands,” said BCN President DP Mainali.

He further said, “After expressing deep gratitude and appreciations to the US government for continuously assisting Bhutanese refugees and consistently resettling more than 50,000 Bhutanese refugees as of now, the team strongly put forward the instances where resettled Bhutanese in the Netherlands were repeatedly denied US visas even when they wanted to visit their ailing parents resettled in USA.”

The BNC team appealed the US authorities to treat the cases of resettled Bhutanese as special, as resettled Bhutanese have enough bases where they could prove that they won’t stay back in USA but return back to the Netherlands once they visit their families there.

“US visa regulation law is uniformly implemented all over the world and resettled Bhutanese cannot be taken as special cases”, the statement quoted Kierans as saying.

“One needs to demonstrates that they have solid evidences like that of properties, jobs, business or studies that could compel them to return back to the Netherlands, but just words and prayers cannot be taken as the basis of evidences,” she added.

The statement also mentioned that she even shared her own experiences when she was a visa officer during her posting at Brazil and United Kingdom.

“It is easy to deny visa in three minutes rather than to listen long story and later deny visas to the visa applicants,” she explained to the BNC team.

That was in response to BCN concern that Bhutanese applicants complain for instantly rejecting visa by the visa officials even without allowing them to explain their cases.

Kierans informed BCN team to ask the relatives in USA to mobilize supports from local politician and gets their congressman to write straight to US consulate in Amsterdam, according to the statement.

“That way the visa officer will think twice before rejecting visa in three minutes and has high chances to get visas,” added she.

She further asked Bhutanese to work hard like that of Indian in their respective resettled countries and prove their efficiencies by starting business, joining politics and becoming parliamentarian and other things that could earn reputations.

“This way the US will always be ready to issue visas as and when they want to visit US and thus newly resettled Bhutanese could also be listened and taken their visa application seriously.”

Meanwhile, Kieran expressed her deep sympathy and respect towards such Bhutanese but expressed her inability to help them get visa  as it is the matter of US law of the land.

“She took note of our issue seriously and will transmit the information and our concerns to the concerned visa officials in the Embassy’s visa section in Amsterdam,” added President Mainali.

The BCN team during an hour and half talks with the US Diplomat also showed a power point presentation on the genesis of Bhutanese refugee problem and their struggle for human rights and democracy in Bhutan since 1990.

Most of 350 Bhutanese who were resettled in the Netherlands have their family separated and were resettled elsewhere specially in United States of America.

According to Dutch immigration law one has to continuously stay in the country legally for five years with a diploma of Dutch integration course to acquire a Dutch citizenship.

“With a Dutch passport one can travel without visas in all resettling countries. Resettled Bhutanese here are issued a refugee travel document by which they could travel all over the world except Bhutan provided visas are issued by the concerned countries,” Mainali said further.

He also lamented that numerous attempts by many resettled Bhutanese to acquire visa to visit their parents and other families in US were denied visas on the ground that they won’t return back.  “Resettled Bhutanese in The Netherlands whose parents were resettled in USA and are ailing have to live a life full of anxiety and stress.”

The BCN delegation team that called on the US diplomat included Ram BK Chhetri, D.P. Mainali, Hem Rizal, Bhanu Gurung and Binita Gurung.

(With input from our correspondent in the Hague)

Lankan columnist misinterprets Bhutan’s ethnic cleansing

Rohan Samarajiva, a noted columnist for the Lanka Business, has given wrong interpretation to Bhutan’s state-sponsored ethnic cleansing that took place in late 1980s and early 1990s.

In one of his articles published by the Lanka Business Online Monday, Samarajiva mentioned that thousands of Bhutanese citizens had to return to Nepal from southern Bhutan when they failed to provide enough documentation regarding their residence and property ownership in the country.

In his comparison between Bhutan and Sri Lanka, the columnist said, “Many in southern Bhutan could not provide documentation to establish the required length of residence and property ownership and had to return to Nepal. This resulted in refugee camps that held 107,000 people at the peak.”

Samarajiva, who recently completed his trip to Bhutan and probably had opportunity to meet senior government officials, is associated with dozens of national and international organizations and forums. He is founding Chair and CEO of LIRNEasia. His curriculum vitae readily available in the web have revealed that he also edits various six academic journals.

His clarification
In an E-mail response from Colombo to the Bhutan News Service, Samarajiva claimed that “authorities” gave the statement he mentioned in his article. However, he didn’t name who those authorities are.

Rohan Samarajiva (courtesy : Samarajiva’s twitter page)

“The sentence is based on widely available information and is the stated reason given by the authorities,” he stated adding, “As can be seen from the content of the article, my interest and expertise is in economic matters. I doubt if anyone will cite me as an authority on internal political issues of Bhutan or Nepal.”

Samarajiva, who claims himself as an ICT policy and regulation think tank active across 12 emerging Asian economies, however, accepted that the issue might be debatable (among Bhutanese refugees).

“It was not my intention to either initiate or aggravate a debate.  The article was published for a Sri Lankan audience.  I am surprised it has aroused interest in Nepal,” added he.

In another instance, Samarajiva, who has typically appreciated the Bhutanese model of democracy and Gross National Happiness, also claimed that citizens (hinting to the southern Bhutanese) were penalized when they declined to obey the national dress code.

Seniors criticize
Dr Bhampa Rai, who chairs the Bhutanese Refugee Representative Repatriation Committee, termed Samarajiva’s version of Lhotshampas’ evection from Bhutan as “ridiculous and bogus”.

Talking to the Bhutan News Service over phone, he threw a request to the columnist to read books and reports on the Bhutanese refugee issues.

He questioned, “How can a Ph.D. fellow from our neighboring country attempt to give injustice to over 100,000 of Bhutanese citizens by wrongly interpreting the crux of Bhutanese refugee problem?”

Meanwhile, RP Subba from Virginia of the United States commented that the writer seems to have been a little over impressed by Bhutan’s spiraling economic growth.

“He is lamenting that that his own government has let them down,” he said, “The writer’s figure, which he quotes that 107,000 people who could not provide documentation to establish the required length of residence and property ownership and had to return to Nepal is wrong.”

We must correct him, Subba said, “How can he be so objective when the Joint Verification Team of Nepal and Bhutan has produced a different result?”

Another senior member of the community from Canada, Tika Adhikari, told Bhutan News Service that the matter was a vivid example of Bhutan’s fabricating tactics while trying to project a wrong image for creating confusion.

“He should have consulted the UNHCR, Nepalese leaders, and others who are knowledgeable on this issues. It is not just a question of registry of land or people but we were former Bhutanese citizens,” he commented. “Does he know that Bhutan stripped peoples’ citizenship by its ad hoc actions?”

Chairperson of the Bhutanese Welfare Association in the United Kingdom, Durga Giri, doubted if the columnist was actually knowing that family members of the same household are both inside the country and in the refugee camps in Nepal.

“Had it been only because of documentation issue as claimed by him, rest of the family members inside the country would have been easily evicted long back,” expressed Giri.

Vidhyapati Mishra from Nepal contributed to this report

PDP reelects OL as its President

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The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) concluded its second national convention Monday in the capital electing Opposition Leader, Tshering Tobgay, for the second term as its new President.

OL Tshering Tobgay
Tshering Tobgay

A noted blogger in the country, Tobgay is reported to have secured 131 votes out of 134 votes cast.

Talking to reporters after the election, newly elected President Tobgay said that the former party president Sangye Ngedup would no longer be connected to the party. However, he didn’t elaborate if his general membership was also scrapped.

Ngedup had resigned from his post in 2008 when his party suffered a fatal defeat. He had said, “The  PDP has lost the first democratic elections mainly because of me. I must own up to it and therefore resign as the party president.”

According to BBS, the convention formally endorsed Yogesh Tamang as the interim General Secretary and Sonam Wangyal as the youth co-ordinator.

Some of the party leaders who attended the second convention expressed their hope that the PDP would win the elections in 2013, or if it fails, at least 15 seats would be secured.

The convention also decided to make another request at the Election Commission to accept its logo, earlier rejected by the commission.

President Tobgay is a Member of Parliament representing Sombaykha Constitutency in Haa.

High Court stops issuing marriage certificates

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Citing lack of proper guidelines, the High Court of Bhutan stopped issuing marriage certificates for couples if one partner is non-Bhutanese from last week.

The High Court of Bhutan

The Court officials, who refused to elaborate how they used to legalize such nuptials in the past, however, told media-persons that they expected a solution about the complexity within this year.

The Bhutan News Service has learnt that dozens of couples, who were called to collect their certificates, returned empty-handed last week following the Court’s decision to give a temporary pause for issuing marriage certificates.

The government-mouth piece reported Sunday that over 200 couples, mostly with Indian women married to Bhutanese, have been victimized from the decision.

Some of the comment posts that appeared in a few websites following the decision accused the Prime Minister Jigmi Y Thinley’s government of playing another tactics to bar Nepali-speaking citizens from exercising their basic rights including rights to citizenship, education, travel and employment.

They claimed that majority of couples, who have been denied of marriage certificates, are Lhotshampas.

Narrow escape as tree crashes school building

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Dozens of students of Tri-Ratna Secondary School of Beldangi-II refugee camp had a narrow escape when a large tree came crashing down the school building during high winds Thursday afternoon, confirmed the camp management authority.

File photo: Students of Tri-Ratna Secondary School

Fortunately, the mishap occurred 10 minutes after all students left the school premises, according to the school Principal Mon Bahadur Chhetri.

The tree damaged two classrooms, the damage being estimated to be around NRs 3,00,000, Camp Secretary Dhan Bir Subba informed.

“There was no human casualty and we are lucky for that. The mishap has occurred since the government authority has not heard our request to manage old trees around the camp settlement area,” said Secretary Subba.

Managed by the Caritas Nepal, the school has over 1500 students in grades nine and ten.

Asylum seekers start filling out registration forms

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Different kinds of exiled Bhutanese, who have been longing for their official registration, have started filling out forms from Tuesday for their verification. However, no timeframe has been announced yet regarding resumption of stalled Joint Verification Team (JVT).

Samples of Bhutanese refugee identity cards

Over 500 forms were distributed from Beldangi-II on the first day, according to an official of the Refugee Coordination Unit (RCU) at Chandragadhi, Jhapa.

It is said that the asylum seekers will get a time of 30 days to submit their details for verification.

“Once asylum seekers complete filling up the forms, the district administration will submit a detailed report to the Ministry of Home Affairs. Then, the actual registration process will resume,” said Assistant Chief District Officer of Jhapa, Yogendra Dulal.

Meanwhile, BNS has learnt from a highly placed source that non-Bhutanese women (Indian and Nepalese) married to Bhutanese would not be included in the registration at least for this time.

According to a group that has been advocating for refugee status, over 3,000 exiled Bhutanese and non-Bhutanese women are deprived of their official recognition in the UN-monitored refugee camps of Jhapa and Morang.

Adelaide community marks 4th anniversary

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The Bhutanese community in Adelaide celebrated their fourth anniversary which marked the fourth year of resettlement in South Australia.

An artist performs a solo dance at the anniversary event (Picture courtesy : Jogen Gazmere)

The function was organised by Bhutanese Australian Association of South Australia (BAASA) in Fremont Park in Elizabeth of South Australia that showcased the different cultural dances and songs. In the past, the annual day used to be organised in closed doors with high level dignitaries. Not a single invitation was sent to dignitaries this year, making it purely a day for Bhutanese to enjoy together, claimed the organizer.

The event this time was a Sakela Special, a festival of the Rai community which falls on May every year. The Rai community presented special Saketa dances. Participants were also explained about historical significance of the Sakela. Sangini, the peculiar traditional Nepali dance, by Bhutanese senior ladies was another attraction of the event. There were some dances and songs performed by the Bhutanese youths.

Football teams, Adelaide Dragons team A & B fed the people with the delicious momos, samosasand some other Nepali dishes which was part of their fund raising initiatives to participate in the interstate football carnival scheduled for July this year in Brisbane, Queensland. The football teams also received donations from the participations.

Participants of the Sakela dance

Separate stall was set up by management committee of Bhutanese-Nepali Ethnic School calling on the audiences and community members and other local residents to do gold coin donation. Bhutanese in South Australia have started teaching Nepali language to children on a voluntary basis in Salisbury every Saturday since March 2012.

A team from the Yuba Sansar, a Bhutanese radio program aired from Radio Adelaide, remained dominant throughout the event. Presented in their own attire of ‘YUBA SANSAR’ printed T-shirt, the radio team hosted a raffle for fund raising. Four awards – 12-Megapixel digital camera with 2GB SD card, DVD player, MP3 player and 4 GB flash drive – were given to the raffle winners at the end of the event. The Yuba Sansar team also sold T-shirts that printed their logo. Two members of the team – Lok Safal and Neeru Khapangi – hosted the function.

Three emerging singers of the Bhutanese community – Subash Dhungana, Tek Dahal and Shova Biswa thrilled audiences with their melodious voice while several dancers in traditional dresses became attraction for the audience – both Bhutanese and non-Bhutanese.

Senior women of the community perform Sangini dance

Fun games like ‘cock fight’ and ‘save the hat’ invited cheers from the audience. The winders were given Pentium IV computers, sponsored by Australian Refugee Association (ARA).

The event that began with choirs of Australian National Anthem ended with the vote of thanks by the New BAASA Chairperson, Suren Ghaley.

This is first event organised by new BAASA executives, since they took over the responsibility in April first week.

यो वर्षको झकास पुरस्कार भारतीय साहित्यकार राईलाई

साहित्यप्रेमी भूटानी युवाहरूबाट गठित झकास समूहले वार्षिक रूपमा प्रदान गर्दै आएको यो वर्षको ‘झकास अन्तराष्ट्रिय पुरस्कार’ भारतीय साहित्यकार विमल राईलाई प्रदान गरेको छ ।

पुरस्कार ग्रहर्ण गर्दै साहित्यकार राई (सौजन्य: प्रकाश आङ्दाम्बे)

पुरस्कार गत आइतबार झापाको दमकमा आयोजना गरिएको एउटा कार्यक्रममाझ साहित्यकार गणेश रसिक, संगीतकार मणीकमल क्षेत्री र गीतकार एलपी जोसीबाट संयुक्त रूपमा साहित्यकार राईलाई प्रदान गरिएको हो ।

ताम्रपत्र र १६ हजार रूपैयाँको सो पुरस्कार सन्  २०१० बाट झकास समूहले प्रदान गर्दै आएको छ । उक्त पुरस्कारबाट साहित्यकारहरू याम थुलुङ र प्रकाश आङ्दाम्वे क्रमश सन् २०१० र २०११ मा सम्मानित भइसकेका छन् ।

“तपाईहरूको माया मात्र भए पुग्छ, मलाई नगद रकमको कुनै आवश्यकता छैन,” भन्दै राईले आफूले पाएको १६ हजार रूपैयाँ सृजनशील कामका लागि झकास समूहलाई नै फिर्ता गरेका थिए ।

Young hearts promote Bhutanese identity in Seattle

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A group of resettled students at Foster High School in Seattle of Washington have formed a club to teach their teachers and school administrators about the Bhutanese identity.

Participants at the introductory program

“We have formed a club named ‘Bhutanese Students’ Club’ to teach our teachers and administrators about our identity. It is crucial because they don’t know who we are,” Tek Kafle told the Bhutan News Service.

“The mission is to teach our teachers, and motivate our students to progress in future. We were motivated to open this club in memory of our friends and family who have limited leadership skills,” added Kafle.

According him, the club has a mentor at school to ensure the goal set by the club.

Meanwhile, the club held an introduction program on May 10 inviting teachers and administrators from the school to learn about the Bhutanese culture and identity.

“We dressed up in our national dress, served national foods and entertained them by performing various music,” he added. “We talked about our background, culture, and type of education system we had during our past, and made a comparison about the new system that we are presently adopting in the US.”

The Club’s executive members are Shiva Diyali (President), Bhagi Biswa (Vice President), Bal Diyali and Tek Kafle (Secretaries), Gopal Rai and Kausila Budathoki (Treasurers).

Forgotten in the land of GNH?

“Tsig zi tenpey lopen la, lama daktu ma zin na, Khi ye kewa ngabja lang.”

“If you do not consider a teacher, even if he teaches only four sentences, as a lama, you will be born as a dog for the next five hundred lives.”

This is the land of Bhutan. At least that was Bhutan when I was a little girl. This was one of the very first Dzongkha (national language) quotes that I had dedicatedly memorized with a fervent belief and I did not spare any opportunity to cite it if any of my classmates attempted to speak a word against a teacher. And it was not just I; every student had a favorite quote. Words of wisdom darted back and forth amongst us, the aspiring Bhutanese philosophers. Locked in our own little world in the Himalayas, we were ourselves Plato, Seneca, Descartes and Locke, all living under the same roof of our school.  Little did we know that Bhutan was awakening from her medieval slumber; and with every yawn, these little philosophers retreated, their principles threatened by the complexities of modern times.   Modern Bhutan soon debuted in the ballroom of the world with a new philosophical song of Gross National Happiness. The states with their guardian angel, the United Nations, stood mesmerized by the grandeur of Bhutanese thoughts. A land that discounted gross domestic product in favor of national happiness! Even the United States of America expressed sighs heavy with nostalgia and envy – pursuit of happiness? Bhutan introduced Gross National Happiness as good governance, sustainable socio-economic development, cultural preservation, and environmental conservation – the four pillars that put materialistic progress into shame and doubt. The greatest of the democracies and republics gasped in adoration.  Donors oohed and funders aahed. The song continued. The four pillars fleshed out into nine domains, i.e. psychological well being, health, use of time, community vitality, education, culture, ecological diversity, governance, and standard of living. The only low note to the song was how to measure this subjective and abstract concept of happiness. Then came the knights in shining armor to the rescue of this beautiful maiden nation. Yes, scientists, from the western world with their ivy-league prestige, came forward stating that happiness could be measured. Thus, the nine domains conveniently gave birth to a total of 33 indicators. For example, the telltale signs of psychological well being are life satisfaction, positive emotions, negative emotions and level of spirituality. Likewise, each domain is allocated their own indicators. Now, like the solitary reaper’s song (William Wordsworth), you do not have to understand it to be magically falling in love with it. You will fall in love with the philosophy of Gross National Happiness even if you are not sure to whom the happiness belongs – it is such a happy philosophy. But if you really want to understand it, you can. Like any other program, measurable goals have been planned, objectives have been outlined and concrete results are recorded. The indicators give an index, which is said to be the exact measurement of happiness. Happiness in Bhutan lies in the shelves of the Gross National Happiness Commission’s offices and the archives in libraries of Bhutan Studies Center. Happiness in Bhutan also lies in the everyday Bhutanese news and stories. You are the auditor, you are the monitor – you can choose where to look.

Headlines such as “200 households, 100 jerry cans, one trickle for a spring,” “Like fields, a diet deprived of greens,” “Hospital short of 29 drugs,” “6,129 tail away from Govt. Schools,” “Cuts like a knife”, “Half those held are minors” frequent Bhutanese media, indicating something amiss in the actuality of Bhutanese progress. As in the story of the emperor’s new clothes, are all the states and the United Nations singing along with the beautiful song of gross national happiness? Are the developed states so sick and tired of their own materialistic abundance that they now long for more simplistic lives? They choose to hold onto Bhutan as a compensation for what they miss. Exotic and euphoric!  But do they not hear the cries of women in the land of snow and waterfalls fighting for a jar of water? Do they not see that the Himalayan lush is not providing enough food for the Bhutanese children? Do they not know that while they have selection of brand names, Bhutanese patients do not have basic drugs? Do they not calculate that 6,129 out of 10,190 students in the nation will not even go to preparatory college? But still they continue to applaud and encourage. Gross National Happiness! And Bhutan, gleaming in pride, spends more money and time in developing more intricate methods to doctrine Gross National Happiness. I am sure that His Majesty, the Fourth King of Bhutan, developed the four guiding pillars for the people, but not for the government to dogmatize it. The laws of the land should be guided by this benevolent principle and proper caution should be taken so that the principle is not forced into becoming law. Imposed happiness cannot bring happiness. Romanticized happiness will wear off when the embers of romance are burnt out.

And who will keep the romance kindled? No, not the likes of the 6,129 whose faith in their future has dimmed because neither their test scores meet the required minimum to continue their education in government schools nor their bank balance is bountiful to get into private institutions. Let us say that 100% college admission, 100% employment, running taps in every Bhutanese homes, might be a far fetched dream for a newly developing country, but we can begin with what is achievable. Cultural preservation. At least the government seems to have realized that cultural preservation is not enforcing mundane practice like hairstyle uniformity or shying away from modern technology like they did in the 1980s. However, the recognition of cultural values is fast disappearing. Culture is time relative and will change, but values define culture. We do not walk forward with both feet forward – the one in back propels the front. Bhutan in a hurry to modernize has forgotten to recognize the past. If the future torchbearers of this philosophy are not taught to look back to the roots, Bhutan’s tomorrows will be devoid of heritage and moral foundation. But if the romance can be kept continually glowing, it can be sanctified to eternal bliss. For this, a good practice by the government of Bhutan would be encouraging, instead of mere preaching of this profound philosophy.

In this light, I put forward a proposal. In doing so, I will go back to the quote that I have in the beginning of my paper. Teacher (guru) meant everything for my parents too; so much so that I remained nameless for months after my birth until my parents could arrange a travel to Kathmandu, Nepal to visit my father’s lama, His Eminence Dudjom Yeshey Dorji. I carry the privilege of being their first born and receiving the highest form of Buddhist blessing, my name from my Guru of my guru, my father, Lopen Jampel Dorji (Lopen means teacher).

Lopen Jampel Dorji (as he was reverently referred), my apa (father) passed away when I was hardly ten years old. He was the first Dzongkha lecturer at Sherubtse, the first college of Bhutan and then the only college.  Many of us who studied in Bhutan know that Dzongkha instructors’ roles do not end in the classrooms. They are beacon of Bhutanese culture and tradition and it is through them that the students understand the core meaning of being Bhutanese. As the first ever Dzongkha lecturer of the country, my apa shouldered these responsibilities until his last breath.  He died young, leaving behind his widow with four children. That was thirty years ago.  He is long dead, long forgotten.

Yet who can console the pangs of emptiness that haunt me every single day? How can someone be forgotten so easily? That someone who was a teacher! The pioneer of Dzongkha language! That teacher in the land of Bhutan! The sustainer of Bhutanese values!  I am in denial that the land of Gross National Happiness has forgotten its first teacher. How can I accept that the nation who claims that its cornerstones are built upon the promises for promotion of development, cultural values, good environment and good governance has forgotten the very first promoter of these core values? I try telling myself that my apa cannot be forgotten. He will not be forgotten. His students are now ministers who lead the nation, parliamentarians who author government policies and diplomats who champion national progress through Gross National Happiness.  It is Bhutanese culture to recognize and respect their teachers.  Without missing a day, I check The Kuensel online. With a childlike expectation, I wait to see a headline with my apa’s name. How many new colleges and schools have been built since he passed away in 1981? How many new buildings in Sherubtse where he taught? It would not take much to name a school after my apa. I comfort myself that my apa’s students are honorable students of a respectable teacher. They are engaged in the process of nation-building, but they surely must remember their old Sherubtsean days. Father William Mackey (a Canadian Jesuit who arrived in Bhutan in the early 1960s) earned a name, “The Son of the Nation” after receiving the Druk Thugsey (soul-son of Bhutan) award for his contribution in education. I remember Father Mackey coming to our house (we lived in a teacher’s quarter in Sherubtse College) almost every evening to discuss matters with my apa. How could a foreigner accomplish such great feat without a support from a local? The significance of endorsement needs no explanation in the world we live now. If Father Mackey brought western education to Bhutan, my apa nurtured acceptance in the Bhutanese minds. If Sherubtse was a blossoming center of Bhutanese education, my apa was the gardener who day and night without complaints saw to it that no hail, no snow damaged the tender buds. If my judgment is vague because it was so long ago and I was very young, Lyonpo Sonam Tobgay (Supreme Court’s Chief Justice), Lyonpo Minjur Dorji (Home Minister), Lyonpo Zangley Dukpa (Health Minister), and other veterans of the nation should definitely be able to correct me. I have clear memories of them sharing close relationship with my apa and they would definitely have clearer vision than I do.

Father Mackey must have appreciated my apa’s influence in his success. His wish was to be buried in Sherubtse where my apa was cremated. Sadly for both these sons, there is no tombstone in Sherubtse that mark their lives. Father Mackey never got his wish granted, and as for my apa, they build a hostel over his cremation ground immediately after a year, and therefore annihilating whatever little consideration he had received. Even then, in the mind of an eleven year old, I wished that they had left that sacred ground untouched. I would rather have had a tree planted in the place than a concrete building.  Thirty years have passed, but it is not too late to honor my apa. My request is supported by the principles of Gross National Happiness. This is not materialistic happiness. This is the value I want to pass on to the future generation. This is cultural preservation.  This is Gross National Happiness!

If it sounds selfish for a daughter to be proposing recognition, I am selfish. If seeking recognition for what my apa deserves is emotional attachment, I am emotional. If it is foolish to care for matters that have died with time, I accept to be called one. If my expressing concern for my motherland is considered intrusive, I would rather be one. I would rather not remain silent than suffer in the silence. For a good end, I would rather be a harsh critic than a passive onlooker. If you feel the slightest offense in reading my well-wished thoughts, you need to read again. In the bitterness lies the kernel of truth. There is no denying that I am my father’s daughter, there is no denying that I am my father’s student, there is no denying my Bhutanese blood: the truth is painted in my name. I will always remain a daughter of the land where emotions rule – the land where gross national happiness overshadows gross domestic product!

(Based in Georgia, Atlanta, the writer can be reached at [email protected])