NEW HOPE INDIA SUPPORTER UPDATE – JUNE 2024

Greetings!

We’re at the end of a very hot summer with record heat (you don’t feel the heat when you see the mangoes ripening – Kothavalasa children’s thinking!).

The last three months have simply been ‘busy’, implementing projects and seriously checking on the senior students’ studies, as many have now finished important exam levels that will guide their futures.

It was not ‘all work and no play’ though. In the middle of an extremely hot summer we had two ‘cool’ days and – with exams over – they all ‘pushed’ to go to the zoo. It’s been several years since they all went. Bhavana, ‘a little girl then’, did not go but she has now been for the first time, as has U Sai. Both were amazed to see how tall a giraffe really is. They had a picnic lunch in the shade and returned exhausted physically and mentally, but happy!

Thank you for all who are caring for our work – our goal is to work for change. Write to newhopeindia@live.com or visit New Hope Australia’s website or Facebook page, links at the bottom of the page.

Eliazar T Rose
Director, New Hope India

 



CARE AND EDUCATION DEVELOPMENT

We are now waiting for more final exam results for our senior girls. Two are interested in Nursing careers but exam marks and competition for the entrance exam is very difficult.

The GOOD NEWS is that Nandini has done very well in learning the difficult work of being an Ophthalmic Technician, to the point of being able to examine and prescribe glasses for vision. She was able to ‘work-learn’ at the renowned LV Prasad Eye Institute, with whom we have connections and has just passed an entrance exam to be able to study in nearby Vizianagaram for a B.Sc – Ophthalmology Degree. It’s a three-year course and will mean a Government job. Those who hold this position in the Health Department of the State go into villages and to urban town areas managing free eye examinations for people.

It is difficult to write about how well these ‘girls’ – now young people – have come to this point of education without us remembering where they came from, backgrounds that are sadly almost too difficult to comprehend.


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Raju and Venkatesh (below) have been at different agriculture colleges for their fifth-year colleges, for two years.

The focus is on agricultural orientated subjects. They are both now going for two months of tutoring/coaching to sit for an entrance exam to study B.Sc – Agriculture with a scholarship.

 




DONATE TO SUPPORT OUR AGRICULTURE STUDENTS

 

Our two Rainbow senior boys, Rudropathy and Prasanto (left), both did very well – 773 and 729 marks.

They are now trying to decide their Vocational Training options. Both are interested in Diesel Mechanic training but it is difficult to get into. At the same time, both are interested in computers! We are giving them the options!

 



NAMASTE HOUSE – CHALLENGED YOUNG PEOPLE

It all sounds like Kothavalasa is full of activity – AND IT IS – but don’t think that Muniguda is quiet!

I have been in Muniguda on and off for the past three months – still unhappy that it is so hard to find experienced people to work in the field nowadays. Muniguda is still a small town – and our District Centre, Rayagada, has grown and takes most young people who have finished basic upper high school studies. We are fortunate that we have good childcare women for our Namaste House seniors.  

We have been given funds for new wheelchairs and protective footwear. The footwear is a must now as when they go out, with their disabilities, many have been hurting their feet. Added to the reality that even though they are watched carefully, they do wander out in the summer sun and the ground is simply hot – too hot to walk on without footwear.


Several months ago, the Government Medical Department asked us to bring all the Namaste House ‘children’ in for medical check-ups – something they should be doing annually and from our Centre (the situation that has been rectified for next time)!

Many who have visited Muniguda will have met Sakuntala who started as one of the first three Health Workers in 1996! She is now Shire Vice Chairperson and ensures that ‘her’ Namaste House family are given attention when needed

THEY ALL VOTED

We had just formed New Hope and with the words ‘Leprosy’ and ‘Rural’ – but on my first visit to Muniguda checking as to why there were so many leprosy-affected persons in that area, I saw a girl crippled with Polio crawling across a muddy road after a sudden rain storm.

That is when we became what we call a ‘horizontal’ working organization. Not a ‘single’ subject, single object work. This helps explain how incredibly happy all our Trustees are with the reality of seeing senior girls VOTE. At that time 1985, not one of the wives of our Trustees voted. It was a ‘thing’ across India – women didn’t vote and yet we had a woman Prime Minister – India!
 
This month has been a rather mixed one. Seniors have sat final exams and 90 per cent have done extremely well, and only one needs to sit for one subject to pass. I can say that the exams were very challenging as agreed by our senior Teacher here who tutors students with us.   

This was a major time of activity. The joy however was something different. Our senior girls (18-plus) all had the Voters Cards, and all voted at the State Election. It’s a dream come true for the Trustees and especially Ruth. The girls had political discussions and no one asked what they favoured in what party and policy. It was like a very real individual vote of their choice. The long-term effect of them voting is the big picture. 

When Ruth and I married there was no concept of a woman – a wife – voting. It was a very, very male thing. When we moved to Muniguda it was one of the first and important things – Ruth received a Voters Identity, and this meant that the three then-senior Health Workers also received Voters cards. The three of them were the first Tribal women to vote in Muniguda/Rayagada District. The Voter Card became a key to them having an identity to join in a Self Help Savings Group promoted by New Hope, and the women were able to open bank accounts in their name. It was a bit hard for the Bank Manager to accept the concept of women in the bank depositing small amounts!

LOVE BUNDLES

This year we are truly indebted to so many, especially Friends of New Hope Broome, for the support to give Love Bundles to people living in leprosy colonies.

Post covid we have seen several widowed, poverty-line women with one or two children come to several of the colonies. Rejected when they became widowed – a throwback to superstition sadly – I sometimes think of it as a ‘Widow’s Mite’ situation.

Together with funds from so many supporters in Australia, we reached out to more colonies than ever. A number of colonies are close to us now – what is an expanding town (whereas when we started in these colonies they were on the far extreme outskirts of any town). Business people are giving more meals in several places – but the concept of giving what you all know as a Love Bundle is not in business people’s minds. The act is good – giving a meal – but the intention is often for their own ‘giving’ sense and that is different to giving because the recipients, aged leprosy persons, need it regularly not haphazardly! 

Much of the Love Bundle distribution was done for many years by the late Nana Sahib who was ‘righthand’ to Maggie Sister when she was here volunteering. This work is now done by his widow, Teba Bhag, and son Anil. For Broome people, giving at Jhan Jhur Colony is a little special as this was the main workplace for Maggie Sister. What we call Hiracud Colony, together with Jhan Jhur, is now on our website for giving meals. It has become a priority due to the more aged and disabled people in colonies.

Thank you for your time, if you have any questions please write to newhopeindia@live.com.

Sincerely,

Eliazar T Rose




This man was in Jhan Jhur when Maggie Sister started her first leprosy colony visits. Anil (above and above left with Ramu) is the son of our late Para-medical Worker Nana Sahib, who accompanied Maggie on her visits. Anil (and Ramu) have taken responsibility for all the Sambalpur District Colonies where we give medical and social care. 

FEB 2024


BACK TO HOME

NEW HOPE INDIASUPPORTER UPDATE – FEBRUARY 2024

New Hope Rural Leprosy Trust – working for change, reaching out with care and education.

For me as the Director and speaking for the New Hope Trustees and Staff, the Facebook picture alongside from Deanne, Friends of New Hope Australia’s Secretary, says it all.This India – Australia friendship will have been sustained for 20 years in October. It cannot be measured in individual achievements but by the simple fact that it reaches out and has impacts that are at times truly unimaginable – even for me. The words ‘leprosy’, ‘education’ and ‘disability’ are part of New Hope Trustee’s own life experiences. Eliazar T RoseDirector, New Hope India

CARE AND EDUCATION DEVELOPMENT

We are so thankful to all who through sponsorship make care and education of the children and young people with us possible.
Raju (right) who came to us as a baby with impaired vision, is now at college. Sunitha with a background that cannot be expressed in truth – it’s all behind her now, her goal is to study Nursing at college.

The journey of life for all of these young people did not start with a smooth path. Beverley Selten, Friends of New Hope Australia’s Chairperson (pictured left with Sunitha) learnt this again on her last visit.

NAMASTE HOUSE, MUNIGUDA

Namaste House is home for our challenged young people.The old photo above was like the symbol of Namaste House. The children, when first seen by our late Maggie sister, devastated her. The house and children were one of her first fund raisers.Funds were raised for corrective surgery in Visakhapatnam. Then through a Rotarian friend, funds were raised for the first ever vaccination storage facility in Odisha – a solar powered freezer for polio vaccines – as was the need in those days. We had long eradicated it prior to India being ‘Polio Free’.During all of this we also accepted – out of sheer compassion – children with serious challenges. So challenged that many families literally just abandoned them.

Limma 

Limma came to us as a ‘nothing boy’, abandoned – in real terms – and was given to us as a ‘burden’. Yet he adjusted, slowly coping with his situation. The woman who really ‘made him’, his Care Person, gave up her own family time for many years.

Chikki

Some might say Chikki exists in her own self but in real terms she has far more ‘going on’ than the casual observer sees. Recently, her long time sponsor sent some gifts (thank you Michael). From being with her we understood she comprehended.

UPGRADED WATER SYSTEM

New Hope suffered at many different levels during and as a result of Covid, as well as two extremely hot summers. Our green projects simply deteriorated and staffing was a serious problem.At the bottom of it all was the stress of not having our water system in order as it had previously been. However now, through a generous donor, we have come to a point where we will be back to being far more self-sufficient short and long term. Tony Selten (pictured below), a regular long time visitor (with his wife Beverley) put it all in order. We will never face the water storage issues and impact of a lack of workers with the irrigation system Tony has installed. Tony involved all of the senior boys and there is no doubt that they learnt – from hands on work – skills that will stay with them. Simple skills to make minor repairs is really not embedded in our society. Few families or homes have basic tools for minor repairs. The concept of ‘handy person’ is not there but our seniors now have seen and learnt so much.



LIFE-CHANGING BICYCLES

Since our last newsletter, we have been able to gift three bicycles to senior students. These bikes improve student’s and other’s day to day life. The ‘Milk Boy’ bike is used by whoever takes our morning surplus milk to the nearby Milk Depot.

Side note: a well known New Hope child to all visitors, Vasu was accepted into a mini village Vet Course by the recognised Visakaka Dairy Institute (and despite having a speech impediment, he passed fifth year high school).Vamsi lives and cares for his aged Gran, who is blind and, at 85 years (or so), ‘too old’ to have cataract eye surgery. He saves three hours and Rs150 a day in getting to College.

Ram works in the early morning grazing neighbours goats, before walking or hitching rides to junior College. He now rides a bike to and from home, where he lives with his Grandmother.This care for young people at home is the responsibility of Ramu, our in the city in charge.To all who gave funds for bicycles – thank you.

NURSING TRAINING – THE BEGINNING

When New Hope made the move from Jeevan Jyothi Home in Vizianagaram to Kothavalasa there was a separate room for a group of 10th Class students. In those days, circa 2008, 10th Class was almost the ultimate level of education due to the social and financial situation of many families. Our 10th Class had many students who were from leprosy colony backgrounds.

If I say that today it is difficult to get girls into Nursing with a scholarship at a Government District Hospital – it’s nothing compared to back when we started. The girls needed much more than just a good mark – with exams and tests that were hard to imagine.
Two women, Maggie Sister from Australia and Elizabeth Toon from the United Kingdom, gave and raised funds many times to ensure that funds were made available for senior girls wishing to become nurses.
Now, motivated by many factors including recent fundraising events such as the Christmas markets in Broome (see below), we are marking funds for Nursing Scholarships. These funds will ensure we are ready for the always hoped for ‘accepted for nursing’ letter. When a senior girl gets this letter, New Hope have (like all selected for the year by the Government) 24 hours to be ready, including with fees, uniforms and certified certificates.
In 2023 we have been so fortunate to have two seniors admitted. There are now three nurses in training, including Parvithra who is doing a Primary Health Care course; Renuka who has now completed and is waiting appointment; and Babi who completed her course and is engaged in employment. Babi is also enrolled for higher Nursing skills (Bachelor of Nursing). All require financial assistance.
The situation has changed a lot as of 2024 but it is still not an easy admission. More girls are educated in reality and so the number of applicants increase, maybe four fold.
Would you like to give towards supporting nursing scholarships? Contact newhopeindia@live.com


BROOME SIP AND SHOP CHRISTMAS MARKETS

Funds raised by the Broome Sip and Shop Christmas Markets in its second year allowed New Hope to supply many more Love Bundles to those with great need. Love Bundles not only meet the immediate needs of people but show love. As the event was so successful, New Hope has been able to implement the Maggie Sister Nursing Fund for our young women pursing nursing careers. Thank you Broome!Maggie lived in Broome for many years and it’s a tribute to her and her community that this fund be set up in her name. Maggie’s work with New Hope, in leprosy colonies, with children disabled by polio and others, earnt her an OAM. Her dream and vision was for senior girls to have an opportunity to become nurses. The many thanks include Lisa and Craig Spicer for their organization of the event, and Ian McConnell for donating an artwork for use in fundraising.



Christmas Newsletter 2023


BACK TO HOME

WHAT IS A LOVE BUNDLE?

Love Bundles are care packages provided to New Hope India aged leprosy patients. When you purchase a Love Bundle you receive a card to pass on as a gift to others. You can buy a Love Bundle on behalf of your family or as a gift for a friend to share the New Hope message.
Feel good by doing good this Christmas!
To buy a Love Bundle or find out more, visit the website here.
Or if you’re in Broome, check out the event below and head to the Love Bundle stall.

UPCOMING NEW HOPE INDIA FUNDRAISER – BROOME
This one is for our Broome supporters and friends – New Hope India Sip and Shop Christmas Markets is on again in 2023, after last year’s successful launch. Top tip for this year – get along early for all your Christmas gift shopping!
Join us (by gold coin donation) and over 30 stallholders in air conditioned comfort at the Broome Civic Centre on Friday, 1 December from 4-8.30pm. As well as all your gift shopping in one place, there will be food vans, entertainment including live music, face painting and bauble craft for the kids, as well as raffles and a bar!
Our big raffle will be drawn on the night – to purchase a raffle ticket and for more information on stallholders, head here.
And don’t forget to check out the Love Bundle stall and give the Christmas gift of love.
 
INDIAN BAZAAR AT CHAKRA

Anna and Linda enjoying the day!


What an amazing experience New Hope supporters and friends enjoyed in November at Chakra Restaurant, one of Perth’s most applauded Indian restaurants.
We were told to expect fresh, traditional home-style Indian cuisine including an array of canapes, curries, and dessert – and we weren’t disappointed! Along with cocktails and mocktails, guests enjoyed a raffle and a lively auction with generously donated prizes including a $1000 stay at Hamelin Bay Seaclusion and a Park Lane jewellery set.

Raffle winners


There was also the opportunity to purchase a selection of handmade Indian crafts – including traditional printed cotton tablecloths, throws and bags – as well as stunning donated antique jewellery.
Thank you to our supporters for attending this event, we raised over $3000 which was sent directly to New Hope India.

VALENTINE’S DAY LOVE BOAT FUNDRAISER
Thank you to everyone who joined us on Perth’s iconic Paddle Steamer, Decoy, in February for a slow cruise down the Swan River to raise much needed funds for New Hope India.
It was a stunning Perth day and we shared lots of stories and laughter while cruising.
On board we sold Indian jewellery, crafts, bags and copies of Maggie Sister’s book, Sister, Sister (also available here). We also held a raffle and sold delicious homemade fudge.
New Hope supporters helped us raise nearly $5000. We were so thankful and excited to send this money directly to New Hope India. The money raised from the jewellery sales is funding the operation and maintenance of Jean’s Tea House.

WHERE DO THE FUNDS RAISED GO?
All of the money raised by Friends of New Hope Australia goes directly to New Hope India. This year we helped to fund ongoing care and education of children and adults, as well as several projects.
Projects included the purchase and installation of a solar hot water system; renovations to one of the children’s dormitories; and an irrigation project. The irrigation project included three new stands, a new tank, repairs of existing and new pipes to all fields for a new season of planting, and irrigation pipes to fields providing food for many plus water supply of 75 mango trees, bananas and coconuts, which are used for food and for income.
 

ONE LAST THANK YOU
Friends of New Hope Australia is directed by a committee of dedicated and passionate volunteers. The committee recognises the many people we reach out to for donations, those who contribute in various practical ways, supporters of our events, and those who fundraise for New Hope, such as Flow with Nicole in Broome.
Beverley Selten – President

New Hope India Newsletter Aug 2023

NEW HOPE INDIA SUPPORTER UPDATE

Greetings from many people who know that so many in Australia are connected to them and their community – New Hope India.

We are halfway through the year and it’s hard to believe how much has happened at New Hope. First, we are truly thankful to all who have given to different projects and to children through sponsorship.

New Hope has always worked ‘horizontally’ – covering needs and situations as they arise not just a single vertical project. This means we see staff doing such a cross section of work that it takes time to absorb it all. From small but meaningful acts by Ramu giving Mother’s Day gifts to street women in the city, to discovering a whole new leprosy colony previously unknown to us!

Thank you for taking the time to read this update.

Eliazar T Rose
Director, New Hope India

DISCOVERING A NEW LEPROSY COLONY IN 2023

I know something of Australia, the South West and I ask you to imagine this! You have lived there for 25 years and someone says; “Do you know there is an incredible waterfall just an hour from where you live?” You are amazed and say, “no”. Well, after 20-plus years in Muniguda and having been to some of the remotest areas (including a place called Raghubari where people were scared when they saw a tall white-skinned woman – Maggie Sister – walking uphill to a plateau!) this is kind of what recently happened to us.

For years we have had a severely deformed young leprosy-affected person coming and going but never really telling us where he came from or went to. After a serious food and care situation he told us that he and a group of leprosy-affected people have been living reasonably near to us, down a road that we never travel on because it takes too long to go anywhere. A new leprosy colony in 2023! It bewildered the staff. They decided to stay ‘isolated’ because of social family connection reasons.

All of the people were from nearby villages and they were near to their villages, but in a forest area that is mostly thorn bushes so dense that even a goat won’t go down. A totally established mini village made from scraps of everything. We now care for this ‘new’ leprosy colony and twice a week give a ‘deluxe’ – as they call it – meal. There are children born in the colony and for me and one of our trustees, it reminded us of our lives 60 years ago.

MUNIGUDA

There is no newsletter without Namaste House. The government says it is called the ‘Care Home for Persons with Disabilities’. It’s the only such care home in western Odisha and although we are recognised, no support is offered or available. It’s a sad situation at one level but on the other level we are their guardians – their only family.

Three of our Namaste residents went to a State-level Challenged Young People’s Sports Competition. Our challenged children move around as much as their disability allows and they are also supported to move around for exercise. It’s no wonder that our Namaste group got prizes!
Now in the last six months we see Namaste young people just going along and enjoying their routine. Made happy that Covid is over, they can wander over and talk to the senior Tribal women who are back for eye checkups and cataract eye surgery.
CATARACT EYE SURGERY

On eye surgery, one of our seniors is now qualified as a Technician and has employment with a new national chain of hospitals that specialises in cataract eye surgery. Another two Nurses have qualified and are working or doing practical time, two have started a Nursing course, and in a few months one or two senior girls will be applying for admissions (a long, difficult application process).

SCHOOL HOLIDAYS

The State Government change of education policy has totally disrupted many lives and young people’s educational system and situation. However, our seniors always get back at every chance to Kothavalasa for a few days or weeks and summer holidays. I call it ‘the return of the circus’ as they are here and there! Their time here is social but at the same time they are engaged, especially the boys in doing work all through the community.

MICRO INDUSTRIES

Do you know what ‘paper marbling’ is? It’s fairly easy to do and the results get examined by each of those in the small groups that get together. It’s been a long-time hobby and social activity at New Hope but is now rarely done by anyone. Our students paste the envelope-sized pieces on their school notebook. Now they are asked by other students for prints – it’s become an ‘in thing’!

Jeevan Jyothi and Kusuma (below) making extra pocket money decorating plain bangles which nearby village women buy as quickly as they make. We are sure that they would sell at stalls in Australia but the reality today is that postage makes 75 per cent of all products that people would like to buy simply not economical or viable.

VASU AND THE COWS

We have just spent funds replanting four acres of grass seedlings for cow feed. Our previous Napier grass simply died of age! We now have a plant that needs less water and has quicker re-growth. We planted ‘extra grass’ because Pete Towns and a friend we call ‘The Walker’ keep supporting our ‘buy a cow appeal’. We now sell the surplus as income.The cows are ‘managed’ by a cross section of seniors. Gopi, who like others has helped, is still going to high school. In this photo is K. Vasu, now 6′ tall and smart (except that I have to continually remind him to ‘trim or shave!!!!’ – it’s my ‘thing’).

Vasu has a small speech impediment and finds it hard to pronounce some ‘dumb’ English words like ‘know’, ‘knot’ and then knowing the difference between ‘there’ and ‘their’. He calls Anil and spells the word and Anil patiently spends five minutes explaining and helping him to pronounce a word. Vasu laughs, Anil laughs, then Vasu explains it to others … who already know anyway. He is a character.

He has just successfully passed fifth-year high school as an Intermediate at an Agriculture College. From this he has now been given a ‘free’ two months hands-on and theory cow management course at a centre called Visaka Dairy. This course is recognised as an Indira Gandhi Open University course with accommodation and meals included. So he has been told to shave every day!!

MOTHERING SUNDAY

There was a newspaper piece about Mother’s Day, which became a discussion and then Ramu asked, “why don’t we give street women a Mother’s Day gift?” When Ramu asks, all I do is nod as I know he’s going to do it anyway! We took the front pieces of Christmas cards from friends in the UK (Soroptimist, Manchester) and made a card which went with a sari and of course a banana. We are now committed to giving one woman, who is not far from where Ramu has his micro-size pigeonhole office, a meal every day. She has been in the same place for three years because of Covid. We offered her a place at New Hope, but with her mental situation she believes she can’t shift as her daughter will come back and pick her up (unfortunately not realising that her daughter left her there).

KONDH DONGRIA TRIBAL COMMUNITY

We remain committed to working with and supporting the Tribal Communities that surround our area. By New Hope India selling the handmade traditional shawls it gives many women work while they sit in huts on stilts, watching that the birds don’t eat their crop close to harvest time. After many arguments and red tape these shawls have been given a ‘G’ mark which means they can only be made now by this Tribal group of women.

We also continue to give out Safe Delivery kits to the whole tribal community.

HIV CLINIC UPDATE

We have been designated as one of only four Non-Government Organisations in the State to be able to distribute anti retro viral drugs for HIV+ persons. This saves many women and young people hours of bus travel, often having to change buses and stand in a long line when they got to the central Government pharmacy. This is changing the quality of life of many, especially widows on a micro pension, who were spending part of that on bus fares to get their medications – an irony.

FINAL WORDS

I wish to share a simple reality with so many who have supported our work. We increased the number of cows we have, with one man and his family making it happen, and a long-time friend ‘The Walker” adding to it.

The goat house was repaired, again made a reality by one man. Every child who is receiving education, from our youngest who is now getting taller and stronger (U. Sai to Sumanth who is about to have a university seat allocated to him for studies towards a doctor MBBS).

Sponsorship is a ‘magic key’. It is impossible to explain that a majority of senior girls now going in and out and staying in safe hostels are from poor backgrounds (I think you say in Australia, ‘the other side of the railway tracks’). You can find out how to become a child sponsor here.

That expression was a truth for me – the Bethany Colony since my early days is still a hutment slum leprosy colony, literally on the other side of the railway line.

We still support women working in Bethany so they do not have to go begging. They make the bags many have seen and purchased.

For project information please email newhopeindia@live.com.

New Hope Newsletter Feb 2023

Read the latest update in our New Hope Newsletter 2023.

A LETTER FROM NEW HOPE INDIA – Eliazar, Director

Greetings and apologies that it is so long since we were able to write to you with this update New Hope India, people in leprosy colonies who we support and Tribal Kondh Dongria communities and all at New Hope have been affected by this pan endemic that has caused the world to ‘sigh in disbelief’ In India I have never felt such fear and sadness. For our culture not be be able to attend ‘last rites’ is – ‘shame’! It has challenged us with lockdowns and yet we had daring staff that for months got food supplies to Leprosy colonies. The irony that many leprosy patients go out to beg to survive and the lockdown kept them in their colonies. 5 major colonies literally survived by our ‘food support’ made possible by support was donors in the UK. It continues even today, We have an obligation still to support many and also aged Kondh Dongria women. We are but one piece of a jumbled up not fitting together jig saw puzzle of this time!

Jhan Jhur Leprosy Colony

Over the years many people we help have smiled and laughed when we have visited them to give a Love Bundle. This time it was different – they cried with joy that their actual survival was with us. The pressure on our staff and finances were stretched BUT faith overcomes such challenges – It’s like a ‘Bollywood movie’ that 6 times we used a boat to cross a river in Sambalpur to get food supplies to a leprosy colony during lockdown. At that time – no vaccinations – just masks and sanitizing. Not with nice scented lotions but old fashioned surgical spirit!

The situation of the Kondh Dongria 37 villages was simply horrendous. They are ‘animist (not Hindu) and believed that the Covid was an ‘evil spirit’ aroused by long gone anger ancestors. They simply isolated themselves because they heard that Kondh Dongria families who had shifted from tribal villages to live in town were infected – for this they saw evil. this isolation meant they would not come to weekly markets and sell forest products, their basic survival hand to mouth income. We drained our Emergency fund and had very complicated village by village come and sit socially spaced and collect essential food materials including for them one essential ‘salt’. The fact that we also gave them soap caused both joy and humour.

THE COVID AND IMMUNIZATION BATTLE

The second movies would be a story of frustration and at times angry discussions and heated debates as we went through the red tape of insisting on the Kondh Dongria people having a right to vaccination. Many ties we have said lightly “its a left over rule red tape from the British.” That’s true to some extent. BUT we Indians have painted it even more red or not ‘freed’ ourselves of it. Excuses have been fantastic “But they (the Tribal Community) dont have proper door numbers. I will leave it at that.

Director Eliazar

Sadly, the division of communities between groups who also live in the Tribal area has not helped. This has caused us to have to work around having different places than our own Community Centre for the Tribal’s and not associated with other communities. We came to a ‘working’ arrangement with the local health department which although hard and almost impractical e had to go along with to achieve the real goal. That staff spent days tracking up and down to different location with all that is needed to ensure safe immunization was not easy. We spent days planning how to start the Immunization that fitted in with the Government rules, the social disparity between communities and the sheer difficulty of getting aged in the hills at the far end of the Tribal hill forest area. So thankful to the Village Women Traditional midwives and our staff.

I say humbly that without New Hope and my own long association with the community and proudly I say with the support of a remarkable Tribal woman who started with New Hope and is now an elected woman District Councilor the immunization would not have happened. The fruit of many years of input

Working with Govt staff

with the Traditional Birth Attendants also paid off with their determination to ensure all people co-ordinated with the tight schedule needed to cover the maximum number of people. These are women who moved away from using unsterile knives to ‘cut the umbilical cord and a process that for generations was the root cause of Infant and Maternal Morbidity. The same women who helped us implement Iodized salt as opposed to traditional rock salt. It changed the high thyroid rate among women in particular.

The time required for this programme meant that visits often took place during peak times of the Monsoon season with work undertaken during incessant heavy rain. Workers exchanged stories at the end of each long day about tracking down patients who had gone hunting for food and spending time to reassure others who had last minute fears of ‘an injection’ or who had listened to vaccine horror stories!

As we near the end we have had what we call 7 rounds of villages. We have now covered age range 18 and upwards. A few oldies just shrugged in a ‘no’ that we accept. They represent 6% approximately. The population is those above 16 or mature girls (say 14 years range). More females than males and that is good as its women who go to markets more than men. Population target 2860 of this population in the 2,755 have 1st vaccination and 2,127 second vaccination. In the first round 489 had vaccine injections and they were mainly women who came down to the Immunization Centre we had set up in an adjoining village to our Tribal Community Centre. This ensured we had no ‘cross mixing. Then in round 2 and 3 – 799 across all villages 820 persons. In the 3rd round we also started 422 for 2nd Vaccination. This was not easy but helped that more women came down to the Centre and although they didn’t like being ‘touched’ by non Tribals as our mainly Tribal staff were there – it was accepted.

I can say that my own and the presence of long time ‘worker’ Sakuntala was a PR for those who came. We always see ‘people, but in percentage 96% covered 1 vaccination and 2nd vaccination 66% and ongoing. November 15th. This picture show how we worked in co-operation with the District Medical Government staff to ensure the Immunization was ‘fair’ to all communities and candidly the standards was as we have always insisted on.

EYE CARE PROJECT

Delivering eye care

This is one of the oldest original Cataract Eye Project – and it still goes on and due to expand to a new tribal area – wholly supported by donations of £20 an operation. It will take another 4 years to eradicate in this new adjoin area. Time is is time and we must keep doing this needed support – to mainly aged who suffer socially when ‘blind’ and unable to be part of the whole family work pattern in villages We have also been able to re start our Eye Care Project.

Pre Covid 19 times, New Hope would provide cataract surgery to over 470 patients a year, and we are indebted to our UK supporters for making this possible. During the pandemic our project halted as neither patients nor surgeons could move from their locked down areas, but with gradual easing of restrictions we are already planning our first safe socially distanced ‘cataract camp’. Thanks to the vaccination programme, many younger women came to ask about eye check-ups at the same time as they attended for their immunization.

NAMASTE HOUSE – CHALLENGED YOUNG PEOPLES HOME

Namaste games

Cannot have a newsletter without them. Last winter prior to Covid, the Namaste House group all

received ‘beabie’ caps. This was a gift plus for them at the start of Covid. They had long talks with myself and seniors whose words they ‘trust’. They stuck to masks and distancing whenever ‘others’ came near. They missed their walks to see ‘grans who came for their eyes to be fixed.’

Namaste House masks March 2020

ROELLIS GARDEN

Bee keeping

Childrens Community Centre – Kothavalasa – Chickens, Goats and Cows with Bees too; it changes to suit the ‘green situation’. Part Beehives, Hens goats live in the area.. Cows next door but get Roellis Garden grass. It has Passion fruit (lost in last storm like all the vegetable garden. Wind blew down vine trellis and vine growing frames, washed away drip irrigation – still recovering. The bee keeping and expansion has started to give a good yield and priority use is for the children and then to sell the rest.

BEE HIVE PROJECT

Bee honey extraction Pintu

We did not expect a high yield in the monsoon season, but we were surprised how good it was. However there is a still a sad cloud over the Bee project. The two main persons who have maintained it – Sreenu and Ramu. We made many jokes about and to Srinu having so many ‘girls friends’ – He started by jokingly saying one day ‘I’m king of the bees’. It rebounded of course. He ‘crafted’ the project and taught a younger senior oo manage ‘ordinary work’ on Hives. Its not as easy as one thinks.

Ramu travels twice a week to support the checking that needs to be done. Both were trained in Beekeeping. Srinu passed away. No signs of Covid but he had travelled that was a little upsetting. On return he was ‘well’ Then within five days passed away. Its similar to many senior born HIV+ to pass like this. Conscious talking in coherently to within an hour of passing. A sad and great loss as he was also our intrepid garden planner.

The hives are about to expand in number with change of season and we aim for 34 hives! In all though its one of the most well used land areas. The major borewell collapsed and through a generous donor in U.K, was ‘re-drilled’ and working again. It was a drama! New Hope Schools Situation Our schools situation has been a great concern for Ruth and I; due to the Covid lockdown, households were not allowed out of their area. Families who could afford to pay for education unable to send their children, resulting in a huge financial loss for our school.

As the pandemic wore on, those same families were themselves heavily impacted with many losing their jobs and livelihoods. We have sadly had to take the decision to suspend our school programme for a year in order for the economy to pick up again and for a return of children from families able to pay. It is the fees paid by these families which help to fund the education of our orphaned children.

New Hope looks forward to 2023 when we are able to open our school. Ruth and I have arranged for children from those families who would have lost out to be able to attend a government school so that they do not lose out on their education. It is with relief that we can let you know that our Rainbow School, for vulnerable children with highly compromised immune systems due to HIV, is continuing to run. Orphan children even though Ruth and I are their Guardians were told to return to their last address! This was one of those red tape rules that put children at risk.

So for example a ‘uncle’ came and left the child with us because both parents had died. Mother came as husband deserted and she begged to survive went back to the very situation that was the reason for them to be with us! No child from a economically sustainable situation comes to New Hope. It meant we supported aged Grandmothers to care for a child who they may in real life hardly seen the child. It was a stressful situation . These are children who were in a safe environment put out in areas where Covid was rampant. The children had clear instructions on safety. Most ‘persons who took a child’ also understood the risk that that they would somehow be held ‘responsible if the child became infected by their neglect. Six months and slowly we simply ‘manipulated the system! Its hard to express stress at this time.

Nurses supervised training 2021

One of the most in need girls has been returned to us In the midst of all that we have struggled to ensure senior girls were cared for in skill training The senior girl in the photo has a Grant to cover a major part of her Auxiliary Midwife Nursing course – Thank you Soroptimist – Manchester.

This is not appeal letter – but to share with you – after a long silence that we have all experienced in many different ways during the last 2 years of Covid. We are thankful to those who give through www.newhopeuk.org – Virtual gifts – More hens, a Beehive as a birthday gift, sandals for protective footwear for leprosy affected and Love Bundles. All appreciated – all needed.

May 2022 be a ‘safe’ and healthy year for all of us as individuals, families, communities and nations Eliazar T. Rose, Director New Hope India newhope@live.com.

Thanks to the New Hope UK Trustees who all give time, effort and more as real volunteers.