An affiliate and inaugural project of BlinkNow

 
 

To sustain and improve the quality of life and the future for

children of Nepal.


 

Our Vision

To create a self-sustainable living community for destitute children that provides their most basic needs and also contributes to post-war recovery and peace in the nation of Nepal.

Our Mission

Rural Development

Literacy and Education

Reduction of Poverty

Social Justice

Women’s Empowerment

Global Sustainability

Focus

•     Create a loving home, school and community base for orphaned, street children, child laborers, ex-child conscripted soldiers, and abused children, thus offering them a sense of safety and security.


•    Offer the children nutritious food, clean water, medical care, clothing, and a warm bed.


•    Provide the children with a multidimensional educational experience that both embodies and reaches beyond the traditional classroom. This will ultimately include art, music, world religion, sustainability and human values education. 


•    Provide vocational training skills to develop self-sufficiency  (i.e. sewing, cooking, gardening, husbandry, community outreach, computer skills)


•    Teach the children to grow and develop in an age of globalization while instilling a strong sense of cultural identity and connection to their heritage.


•    Establish a relationship with the local community, raise local awareness, and stress community influence. Change the social perspective towards the poor and lower castes.


•    Conduct programs for widows, socially vulnerable and destitute women within the community thus encouraging women’s welfare, empowerment, and gender equality as well as positive community relations.

Objectives

During an interim year following high school, 19 year old Maggie Doyne of Mendham, New Jersey landed herself in an orphanage, Ramana’s Garden in Rishikesh  India www.sayyesnow.org.  While in Ramana’s Garden Maggie formed many close relationships with Nepalese refugees, mostly children who had fled Nepal during the Maoist insurgency beginning in 1997.  She began closely following the events and settlements taking place in the news and after a major settlement in August 2006 made the decision to go to Nepal herself to see the aftermath of the war, with her own eyes.  Needless to say, she was amazed by the effects of the war, the burned temples, ransacked homes, and destroyed schools.  But what bothered her the most were the conditions of the children.












After speaking with NGOs, (non-government affiliated organizations), peace organizations, government officials and resident villagers in the border region of Nepal, Maggie discovered that one of the main issues Nepal was facing was the lack of placement for its misplaced children.  Whether they were ex-child soldiers, orphans, or children involved in sex-trafficking, there were not enough solutions for the placement, rehabilitation, and reintegration of these children into society.


By May of 2007 Maggie returned to Nepal a second time and purchased a small piece of land in what she decided was the most strategic and needful area of the country.  Along with a core group of local Nepalese, ready and willing to help, Maggie registered her NGO within Nepal, and began constructing a small hostel, which she named Kopila Valley Children’s Home.  In the Nepali language, Kopila means bud, the idea of the name being that when brought up in a loving and nurturing environment, the children would blossom from buds to flowers.  In August of 2007 Maggie returned home to raise funds and awareness for her project!


How We Began