12 Buddhist Organizations
Working in Nepal
April 27,
2015 by
Justin Whitaker
Patheos
Devastation
continues in Nepal where the death toll from Saturday’s quake is
now over 4000.
That number is expected to rise as aftershocks rock already damaged
buildings (a friend in Kathmandu reported another one less than an
hour ago as of 11 a.m. MST) and information comes in from the many
remote villages affected by the quake. “Some of the initial
surveys that we’re hearing of from the zones closer to the
epicenter talk about total or near total destruction,” said Jeremy
Konyndyk, director of the Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance for
the U.S. Agency for International Development (via CNN). Sure to
further complicate aid and recovery efforts, heavy rains are
predicted for parts of the area affected by the
earthquake. Helicopters, of which Nepal has few, are needed to
reach many of the villages most heavily damaged by the quake. More
than four million people are in the affected zone.
Want to help?
Read this
first.
On Saturday
I noted several major
aid organizations who are actively aiding victims of the Nepal
earthquake. Buddhists, who account for around 10% of
Nepal’s population, are likewise mobilizing locally and around the
world to support aid efforts. Here are a few Buddhist aid
organizations you can learn more about and support:
FIRST, two
funds have come to my attention where an individual or organization
will MATCH donations for a limited time (see below). These
are:
<!--[if !supportLists]-->1.
<!--[endif]-->The White
Feather Foundation: Donate here
and Julian Lennon will match your donations through the month of
May.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->2.
<!--[endif]-->International Medical
Corps donations here will be matched by Facebook, up to
$2 million.
Now the twelve
Buddhist organizations (further additions will go in the
comments):
<!--[if !supportLists]-->1.
<!--[endif]-->Karuna
Shechen (Sanskrit: compassion and Tibetan:
monastery): Founded by the famous French monk
Matthieu Ricard, this organization has been on the ground since
2000 and is prepared to deliver a variety of services to those in
need in the area: “All donations received over the next 30 days
will be directed towards our relief efforts to help earthquake
victims in Nepal. Established in Kathmandu through the Shechen
clinic, its mobile medical clinics and camps, Karuna-Shechen has a
team of professionals on the ground that is trained and ready to
help the victims of this disaster. Our team is
already working to assess the situation and long-term needs to
help the local population in the aftermath of this
tragedy.” Donate
here
<!--[if !supportLists]-->2.
<!--[endif]-->Tzu
Chi (literally “Compassionate
Relief”): a major,
and possibly the world’s
largest, international Buddhist aid organization.
From Taiwan, they write: “Following
the devastating Nepal Earthquake, Tzu Chi’s Disaster Survey and
Medical Team will set off to the disaster area on April 27, 2015.
In addition to providing emergency medical relief, we will, at this
first stage, assess the relief items and subsequent assistance
needed by the disaster area. Hopefully, we can convey the care and
love from the global community to the disaster area in the shortest
time possible.” Read about their efforts
here and Donate
here
<!--[if !supportLists]-->3.
<!--[endif]-->CEBA, the Canadian Engaged Buddhism
Association: At their fundraising page they write:
“Ven. Metteyya
and Metta Family of volunteers are assembling a relief team to help
organizations and teams on the ground in Kathmandu already. In
Lumbini, our monks and nuns will be doing alms rounds (requesting
donations) from the communities there and our other Metta family
volunteers are working with other monasteries and temples to
collect blankets, medical and first aid supplies, food and water to
transport up to Kathmandu for our Metta Family team in
Kathmandu to direct the work. On Thursday April 29, Ven. Metteyya
is heading back to his homeland to continue with Metta Family’s aid
and with what funds we can raise will purchase food, water,
blankets medicine etc. and send these truckloads to Kathmandu.
Trevor from Calgary will be leaving for Nepal on Friday to continue
to help with these efforts.In addition to the
aid above, our strategy is going to focus on assisting groups being
left out large scale aid such as displaced families of victims at
hospitals and aiding help desks set up at hospitals. We also see
that we can partner with a few monasteries and youth groups in
Kathmandu to make outpost shelters.” Donate
here [American friends can donate
to Anatta World
Health and Education Outreach (CEBA’s sister
organization in NJ, can provide tax receipts)]
<!--[if !supportLists]-->4.
<!--[endif]-->Lama Phakchok Rinpoche and
the Chokgyur
Lingpa Foundation. Phakchok Rinpoche
writes: “We are contacting everyone to start a
fundraising campaign to support those in need. The immediate
concern is of course first aid relief, however, after an earthquake
there are not only the immediate needs of those injured, there are
also concerns of food, water, shelter and months of
re-construction. A team of professionals and volunteers is being
formed now and they will inform us what is needed specifically. In
the meantime, we can begin by raising funds now! Let’s put our
compassion into action.” Donate
here
<!--[if !supportLists]-->5.
<!--[endif]-->Chokyi Nyima
Rinpoche at Ka-Nying Shedrub
Ling provides this update: “Due to the
many aftershocks, all our monks, nuns, and university students are
forced to sleep outside in spite of heavy rains during the night.
There is no electricity and the water is becoming scarce. Our main
monastery, Ka-Nying Shedrub Ling, is still standing but the
buildings have suffered severe damage… In all
the affected areas of Nepal and her neighbouring countries there
are many projects that need help and our monasteries are keen to
assist in search and rescue efforts, rebuilding homes, and
assisting those in need. For this we now ask for your help. Please
consider making a donation to Shedrub Development
Fund.” Donate
here
<!--[if !supportLists]-->6.
<!--[endif]-->Dhammadharini: an organisation
based in California which helps nuns will be collecting
donations for the nuns and people in Nepal. They have an
established connection with Ven
Dhammavijaya and Ven Molini, who founded the Dhamma Moli Project to
prevent trafficking of girls in Nepal. All are okay there, but
building damage and other relief efforts are sure to require
support, which can be offered at the Dhammadharini support
foundation (tax deductible), or
directly (not tax deductible) via Friends of Dhamma
Moli.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->7.
<!--[endif]-->Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana
Tradition (FPMT): “Donations to this fund will be
used to provide for the immediate and long-term needs of Kopan
Monastery and Nunnery and other local FPMT centers resulting from
the devastation caused by the Nepal earthquake. These needs
include food and shelter for more than 800 monks and nuns as well
as structural repairs and renovations to buildings at the Monastery
and Nunnery that are no longer safe to occupy as a result of the
earthquake.In addition, the fund will be used
to offer immediate relief and support to other areas in the
Himalayan region such as the village of Thame (Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s
birthplace) where there has been an incredible amount of
destruction. If sufficient funds are raised, grants may also
be provided to other carefully vetted organizations providing
earthquake relief efforts.” Donate
here
<!--[if !supportLists]-->8.
<!--[endif]-->ROKPA International: Rokpa means
“friend” or “help” in Tibetan; this organization has worked for 35
years to help people on the margins of society in and beyond Nepal
including a home for children there. Writing of the earthquake,
ROKPA co-founder Lea Wyler writes: “Just to let you know that our
children are ok. All of them were in our dining room saying prayers
before lunch when it happened so having had training of what to do
, they all ran outside. Since then they have been sitting on your
new land opposite the Children’s Home and even cooked there. They
will sleep there too as it is not safe to go back in. BJ, ROKPA
child, now manager there, has been amazing and immediately after
managed to let me see them and greet them through skype. But mostly
the contact is cut off. We don’t have any news of some of the
older children who were outside and if relatives and
friends. I have been getting messages and queries from all
over the world. Thank you for your compassion. Many have asked
me what they can do now to help: I think at this moment the
best you can do is raise funds for us…” Donate
here
<!--[if !supportLists]-->9.
<!--[endif]-->Tsoknyi Nepal Nuns: Tsoknyi Rinpoche
writes, “I would like to start by helping the village of
Chobar, which suffered a lot of damage. I want to help Chobar
village first, as its people are physically closest to us. Then we
can help other places, we can spread out to surrounding areas. If
you want to assist in this way, please send any support funds to
Tsoknyi Nepal Nuns foundation [http://www.tsoknyinepalnuns.org/donate]
or to your Pundarika organization or supporting organization in
your respective countries. The funds will be distributed in
appropriate ways. Please specify that the donation is for Nepal
Earthquake Emergency Relief.”
The next three are not (to my knowledge)
explicitly Buddhist in affiliation or mission, but are associated
with Buddhist principles and/or
individuals:
<!--[if !supportLists]-->10.<!--[endif]-->The Seva
Foundation: an international organization dedicated to
preserving and restoring sight. They have teams on the ground in
Nepal and will be devoting efforts to disaster
relief. Donate
here
<!--[if !supportLists]-->11.<!--[endif]-->Citta
(which is Pali and Sanskrit for “heart/mind”): “Citta has
developed a holistic and adaptable method we refer to as the HEED
model (Health, Education and Economic Development). We connect with
these communities, taking into account the lack of access to proper
healthcare and educational opportunities as well as weak or
nonexistent economic development that can lead a community into a
never-ending downward spiral. Citta works to remedy the specific
needs of a community, to produce an environment of equanimity and
stability and one that provides opportunities and a sense of
initiative and pride in its inhabitants.” Donate
here
<!--[if !supportLists]-->12.<!--[endif]-->The South Asia
Institute, Heidelberg, has established a “Nepal
Earthquake Relief Fund Heidelberg.” They write, “Based on our
longtime experience in Nepal, we want to provide both instant help
and help with a long-‐term
perspective. Since the earthquake, there have been numerous
aftershocks, and
even another earthquake just a few hours ago. People across the
country, in the cities and the countryside, lack medical help,
there are talks about contaminated groundwater in wells, and the
human and cultural aftermaths only surface now, and will over the
next weeks and months. Increasingly, some help and expertise
reaches the sites of disaster. Since the 1960s, the South
Asia Institute has several research activities spread across
different disciplines and themes, among which are earthquakes,
urbanization, ritual and textual studies, and history. Our branch
office, established in 1987, is based in Sanepa, Patan, a part of
Kathmandu, and run by Nadine Plachta, M.A. She is one guarantee for
the funds to arrive safely. All our contacts are
personal. Donate
here
And
one more ….
Buddhist Global
Relief, which was founded by Ven Bhikkhu Bodhi, has
an emergency disaster fund. BGR has just announced
that they have donated
$10,000 to aid organizations on the ground and offer
suggestions for others wishing to help out.
Most
Buddhists in Nepal are Vajrayana/Tibetan Buddhist practitioners.
For them the mantra Om Mani Padme Hum will be used in
times of disaster like this, as it calls upon the Bodhisattva
of Compassion, Chenrezig (Skt. Avalokiteshvara). Another source of
support is Padmasambhava, aka Guru Rinpoche. This prayer comes
from Tsoknyi Rinpoche, writing from
Nepal:
THE PRAYER
TO GURU RINPOCHE TO SPONTANEOUSLY FULFILL ALL WISHES AND CLEAR AWAY
OBSTACLES ON THE PATH
Dusum
Sangye Guru Rinpoche Ngodrub Kundag
Dewa Chenpo Shab Barchey Kunsel Dudul Dragpo Tsal
Solwa Debso Jingyi Labtu Sol Chinang Sangwey Barchey
Shiwa Dang Sampa Lhungyi Drubpar Jingyi
Lob
Guru
Rinpoche, Buddha of the three times, Lord of all siddhis who is the
one of great bliss, Dispeller of all obstacles, wrathful tamer of
Mara, We supplicate you; please grant your blessings. Grant your
blessings that outer, inner and secret obstacles be pacified And
that our intentions be spontaneously accomplished.
And as
Nepal is home of several smaller Theravadin communities and
practitioners, from Ayya Tathaaloka Bhikkhuni, A Pali
Buddhist Compassion Chant:
Dukkha pata ca
nidukkha
Bhaya
pata ca nibhaya
Soka
pata ca nisoka
Hontu
sabbe pi panino.
May those in suffering be free from suffering
May those
in fear be free from fear
May those
in sorrow be free from sorrow
And so too
may all be.