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CANADIAN ENGAGED BUDDHISM ASSOCIATION
(CEBA)
  • Home
  • Success Stories
  • Events
  • Photos
  • Links
  • BLOG

Empowering Women, Transforming a Region

The Impact of Your Generous Donations

In under 20 years, your support has educated hundreds of girls. By providing access to women’s-only education, we are witnessing a profound generational shift.

🌸 "Educating a woman is educating a family."

Our Changing Horizon: Over 20 Post-Secondary Graduates

Your generosity has enabled more than 20 young women to pursue higher education, creating local and international leaders:

  • Global Impact & Leadership: 1 Alumna completed her Master's in Buddhism and works internationally for a global aid agency; 1 serves as the Principal of our Karuna Girls School.
  • Healthcare Champions: 4 Nurses and Midwives, 1 Alumna running her own private clinic, 1 Laboratory Technician, and 1 aspiring Doctor currently in medical training.
  • Sustaining the Vision: 2 Alumnae hold Bachelor’s degrees in Buddhism and now run the Bodhi Institute, lovingly caring for our young resident students.
  • Business, Travel & Arts: 4 Business Administration graduates/students, 1 Flight Attendant, and 1 Security Professional.
  • Education & Culture: 2 Education degree graduates teaching at our Metta schools, and 1 Entrepreneur currently pursuing a second Bachelor’s degree in Archaeology.

Vocational Skills & Local Leadership

Beyond academic degrees, we are building practical, real-world independence through:

  • Vocational Training: Active programs in Tailoring, Barista skills, and Computer Literacy.
  • The Karuna Journalism Club: Giving young women a powerful voice to share their community's stories.
  • A Culture of Giving Back: Many alumnae naturally return to volunteer and mentor the next generation at our schools and the Bodhi Institute.

A Regional Ripple Effect

The societal impact of your sustained support nearly two decades is measurable and historic:

  • Shifting Milestones: The average marriage age in the region has risen from 14 to 18.
  • Family Planning: Local birth rates have stabilized as women's literacy and education have risen.
  • Maternal Empowerment: Mothers have become active, confident participants in our schools and the broader community, flourishing alongside their daughters.
  • Community-Wide Praise: The Karuna Girls School is highly celebrated in the media and was recently voted the "Best School for Girls" by the local Muslim community, proving that education unites us all.

Bodhi iNstitute

Lumbini Cranes and Environment

Success Stories

Woman helps elderly man with oxygen during Nepal COVID-19 emergency.

Covid relief

 

Our local partners in Nepal at the Lumbini Social Service Foundation have put together this presentation about their work during Nepal's devastating 2nd and 3rd COVID-19 waves. We feel privileged to have helped them conduct this vital work. Our partners worked in 21 different sites throughout Nepal and distributed 52 oxygen concentrators and 63 oxygen cylinders, along with medical equipment and food for hundreds of personnel.

We want to extend our deepest thanks to everyone who donated to our campaign,  you helped people throughout Nepal survive in dire circumstances. 

This work shows...

Read More: Blog — Anatta (anattaworldhealth.org) 

 

Two female scientists conducting experiments in a lab with test tubes.

Vijita's story

 

Vijita is among the very first batch of girls graduating from our Metta School program. It was to insure a future with higher education for Vijita and other girls like her, that led us to start the Peace Grove Program. - Venerable Metteyya


Cultural Background

Vijita's family name is Karishma Chaudhary and she comes from the native Tharu tribe (also known as Choudhary). Native Tharus are the original inhabitants of the Nepalese Terai.  They were able to survive and thrive in this jungle environment due to their natural immunity to Malaria.  Traditionally known for their gentle demeanour and simple life, Tharus were known for farming the land and fishing in wetlands and rivers. 


The successful American-supported campaign to eradicate Malaria opened the Terai region for settlers from all over Nepal and India, resulting in clearing of the dense forests and settling of new villages and towns. The Malaria eradication came as a devastating blow to the Tharus. Unable to read and without knowledge of the sophistications of the modern world (ie. land deeds) , Tharu communities were not ready to cope with the changing world. Once the landowners of Terai, they were now considered poor, backward, and expendable by the ruling elite in Kathmandu. Young Tharu girls were enslaved as bonded labour (Kamalari) until the practice was abolished in 2006. Though illegal, in parts of Nepal (predominantly in eastern Nepal) Tharu girls as young as 8 years are still sold by their own families to work as domestic servants in wealthier homes. 

Access to education in Tharu communities still remains very scant and girls from Tharu community rarely go for higher education. 



Personal Background

As a young girl Vijita wanted to get good education and came to join Peace Grove together with her younger sister Dhammadinna. Vijita has very bubbly personality and is very caring towards her friends at Peace Grove.

Vijita's father is severely alcoholic and doesn’t offer much support in the family. If Vijita hadn't joined Peace Grove, she would have already been married at a much younger age. 


The road to become educated was not always easy.  In her high school levels Vijita struggled with mental concentration issues and started failing her high school exams. After trying for two years and still not passing, she was distraught. But good intervention from Conni Aunty and supportive encouragement from Bodhi ma and Peace Grove, she started again and ever since has done amazingly well. 

Post regular education, Vijita graduated as the very first Clinical Laboratory Technician from Lumbini and is perhaps the first Tharu Girl from the Lumbini region to do so. Right after the completion of her training she recruited a few of her colleagues and ran the very first lab at the 2019 Anatta Health Camp in Kapilavastu.   She has since found a job on her own, and has rented her very first apartment in Butwal city (the provincial capital-about 40 kms from Lumbini). We are very pleased to have watched her personality grow from a meek, shy little girl into an educated and confident young lady. She is an inspiration to all other young girls in Lumbini. 

Help Us Help Others

Your support and contributions will enable us to meet our goals and improve conditions. Your generous donation will fund our mission.

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