Author Archive
The rickshaw driver by Robic Upadhyaya
20 September 2020
THE RICKSHAW DRIVER: Gopal Bishwakarma, 65, used to make a decent living from driving his rickshaw around the narrow streets and alleys of Kathmandu. Foreigners and Nepalis would take a tour around the city. He tried doing other things for a while—he sold vegetables and even worked as a porter but they were not for […]
Sorrow of the returned by Madhuri Mahato
18 September 2020
SORROW OF THE RETURNED: Mojmil Miya Hawari, 37, left his hometown Birgunj for Saudi Arabia, with the hope of making a living for his family. He worked as a tea boy in an insurance company, but it closed down when the pandemic hit. He had not been paid for three months, and the company refused […]
Apple of his eye by Krishnamaya Upadhayay
17 September 2020
APPLE OF HIS EYE: Lokdarshan Shrestha, 63-year, is an apple farmer and he is excited about apple harvest this year. “Other farmers are worried that their apples will rot as they won’t sell, but I am not worried,” says Shrestha, “My apples will sell, I am confident.” Shrestha has a family of nine including seven […]
Intro to Storytelling – Oct 2020 (online edition)
01 - 15 October 2020
Stories help us understand each other and the many worlds that we live in. Who is doing the storytelling? This determines which worlds are made visible to us. This intensive two-week workshop is designed for photographers who have a basic understanding of digital photography and now want to take their skills to the next […]
No end to pain by Rakesh Prasad Chaudhary
16 September 2020
NO END TO PAIN: It was September 2015 and Jaleshwar was tense. People in town had taken to the streets demanding a more Madhesi inclusive constitution as the lawmakers in Kathmandu were trying to pass it. Rajwati Paswan, 35 was out on the streets with the protestors, “Women wanted a constitution that did not trample […]
Terrace tuition by Sabrina Dnagol
15 September 2020
TERRACE TUITION: Mahima Bishwakarma, 19, used to teach at a secondary school, but had to stop due to the pandemic. She had other plans for her future. Bishwakarma had been accepted to study culinary arts at a school in Germany and was to leave in August, but those plans also had to be put on […]
Daily worries by Kishor Maharjan
14 September 2020
DAILY WORRIES: In Martadi, near the town’s bus park stands a rusty tin box where Tulsi Giri, 31, has been selling petrol for the last three years. There are no designated petrol pumps in Bajura, so Giri’s husband started the shop five years ago, and she took over when he got a job as a […]
Rebuilding Hope by Robic Upadhayay
13 September 2020
REBUILDING HOPE: Patan Durbar Square may be deserted during the pandemic, but the reconstruction of the Bhimsen Temple hasn’t stopped. Damaged by the 2015 earthquake, the work is in full swing with 23 labourers, including eight women who work inside the fenced premises. Menuka Maharjan, 42, is assisting some of the masons and carpenters. Originally […]
THE INVISIBLE ENEMY by Sabrina Dangol
11 September 2020
THE INVISIBLE ENEMY: At the entrance of Masa: Galli, Kathmandu, a security guard stands with a thermal gun in one hand and a bottle of sanitizer spray in another. Ram Basnet*, 29, is from Jajarkot. He moved to Kathmandu seven years ago to take the civil service exam. After a fourth unsuccessful attempt at passing […]
Sculpting and saving by Sikuma Rai
10 September 2020
SCULPTING AND SAVING by Sikuma Rai Keshar Tamang, 33, is cooped up in a small corner in his rented room in Lalitpur hammering away. He nails, cleans, files to make foot-high Bajrapan and Bajrakila Buddha copper sculptures. These statues are exported to Tibet but the last few months of the pandemic have been hard for […]