|
|
The Public Relations Committee of Nepalese Association in Southeast America (NASeA) would like to invite you All to the November Monthly Talk Session over the phone (Conference Call)
with
Dr. Suresh Chandra Chalise
The Nepalese Ambassador for the United Kingdom
The theme of this month’s talk session is:
Opportunities and Challenges to the Nepalese in the United Kingdom
&
Western Observation of the Peace Process and Constitution in Nepal
Date: Sunday, Nov 20, 2011
Time: 11.00 AM Eastern Time
(04.00 PM London Time)
Venue: Conference Call
Phone: 218-339-2500
Passcode:139004#
His Excellency Ambassador to the United Kingdom Dr. Suresh Chandra Chalise will join live from London, United Kingdom in the above date and time and share with us some of the current affairs of the Nepalese in the United Kingdom, the oppotunities they are exposed to and the challenges they face. He will also discuss the western perspective of the peace process and constitution development in Nepal. Before his appointment as the Ambassador to the UK, he has assumed a number of high ranking portfolis including the Ambassador to the United States and special advisor to the Prime Minister of Nepal. He has authored and co-authored a number of books which is given below with other details of his biosketch. Please do not miss out this important interactive session with the Ambassador. Following his talk, His Excellency will take questions. You can also e-mail your questions prior to talk session to NASeA Public Relations Committee chairperson Dr. Ram Chandra Baral.
Moderator:
Ram C. Baral, Ph.D
Professor of Psychology
Benedict College and
Southern Wesleyan University
and
Chair
Public Relationships Committee
Nepalese Association in Southeast America (NASeA)
https://naseaonline.org/
Bio Sketch of His Excellency Ambassador to the United Kingdom Dr. Suresh Chandra Chalise
Professional Background:
Current Position: Ambassador E & P of Nepal to the United Kingdom
2007-2008 Ambassador E & P of Nepal to the USA
2006-2007 November Advisor to the Prime Minister of Nepal (with Minister of State status) on Foreign Affairs
Worked for various international organizations such as NDI, DFID, FES, UNDP, SARI (energy), WHO as consultant.
Education and Training:
2006 December Senior Executive Course, Asia Pacific Centre for Security Studies, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA.
2005 July-November Post Doctorate in Development Sociology, University of Justusliebig, Giessen, Germany.
1998 Post-Doctoral Research, Institute of Political Science, University of Dortmund, FRG.
1986-1990 Ph.D. in Political-Sociology, Banaras Hindu University, India.
Publications (Books):
2004 December Nepal Human Development Report 2004: Empowerment and Poverty Reduction (one of the authors on Social Mobilization), UNDP and NPC of Government of Nepal.
1997 Coalition Governments and Political Acculturation in Germany, CCD, Kathmandu, Nepal.
1996 Co-author, Women in Politics in Nepal: their Socio-economic
Health, Legal and Political Constraints, CCD, Kathmandu, Nepal.
1995 Sociology of the Legislative Elite in a Developing Society, FES-NEFAS, Kathmandu, Nepal.
Various articles published in national and international journals.
DONATION NEEDED
Please donate by sending a check to
Gobinda Shrestha, Treasurer, NASeA
359 Roseglen Drive, Marietta, GA 30066
(Please, do not forget to mention: Donation for late Mukesh Dangi)
Please read the sad news below forwarded by Dr. Brian P. Treece
Assistant Dean of Students
Director of Residence and Greek Life
The University of Findlay
It was with great sadness that we reported the passing of UF student Mukesh Dangi earlier this week.
Many members of the UF community have asked if there is a way they can show their support to the Dangi family. We have three opportunities to share with you. Please feel free to share these with those you know outside of our community who knew Mukesh.
First, a memorial service will be held at 4 p.m. on Friday, November 11, 2011 in Ritz Auditorium in Old Main. Please plan to attend if you can.
Second, we will be collecting cards and notes to send to the family in Nepal. Please take your cards and notes to either Student Services or International
Admissions and Services by 5 p.m. on Friday, November 4, 2011to be included in the mailing.
Third, we have established a Mukesh Dangi fund through The University of Findlay to allow for contributions towards the substantial cost of transporting
Mukesh’s body back to Nepal (approximately $11,000). If you are interested in giving to this fund, please direct your donations to the UF Business Office and ask them to be placed specifically into the Mukesh Dangi fund. If you are writing a check, please make it payable to The University of Findlay, and then note “for Mukesh Dangi fund” on the memo line. If you wish to make a contribution using a credit card, you will need to contact the Business Office directly at 419-434-4786.
Thank you to everyone for your concern. Please continue to keep Mukesh’s family and friends in your thoughts and prayers.
Brian Treece
Dr. Brian P. Treece
Assistant Dean of Students
Director of Residence and Greek Life
The University of Findlay
1000 North Main Street
Findlay, OH 45840
Phone – 419-434-4570
Fax – 419-434-4757
http://www.findlay.edu”
Draft
(Oct 20 2011)
NASeA Guide to Organizing
Dheusi Bhailo in your City and States
Prepared by
Nepalese Association in Southeast America (NASeA)
In Collaborating with
Nepalese Association in North Alabama (NANA)
Nepalese Association of Georgia (NAG)
Nepal Center of North Carolina (NCNC)
Contributors:
Sanjeeb Sapkota, Saunak Ranjitkar, Raja Ghale, Tara Pun, Tek Thapa, Ram Dongol, Srijana Sharma, Sagun Shrestha, Hari Bhandari, Lekh Sharma, Dr. Dibya Pradhan, Pranaya Lama, Arun Dhital, Bijendra Gurung, Suman Silwal, Gobinda Shrestha, Arun Dhital, Dhana Timilsina, Bhabindra Basnet, Pashupati Neupane, Madan Yonzan, Mohan Timilsina, Ramesh Poudyal, Sangeeta Dongol and others
Alert: This guide is still in progress and has not been final yet. Please excuse any error, typos or mistakes. Do point those out to us as well as for other questions and email please contact
naseausa@gmail.com
Disclaimer: This is only a guide and it may or may not work in all the circumstances. This is just to provide examples of organizing th event, but it depends on the location, size of the community and many other factors.
Contents
- Purpose of Dheusi-Bhailo
- History of Dheusi Bhailo in the Southeast
- One-Stop or Home-to-Home or a combo?
- One day or multiple days?
- Pick the right date
- Promote the event and Solicit host families
- At the host house
- Evaluation
- Resources — Songs and others
1. Purpose of Dheusi-Bhailo
Dheusi Bhailo has been celebrated since time immemorial in the mountains and terais of Nepal. If there is one thing that is the most unique to Nepal during Tihar festival then that is Dheusi-Bhailo. Organizing this in the Diaspora (United States or elsewhere in the world) is one of the most cost-effective and productive thing a Nepali organization like yours could do. Such program has many benefits but broadly
– It provides fun and entertainment to people of all ages
– It promotes Nepali culture and heritage
– And importantly, it raises funds for your future events or programs
2. History of Dheusi Bhailo in the Southeast
Though organizing Dheusi-Bhailo is pretty new in the Southeast America, it has been popularly picked up by the Nepalese organizations in the Southeast . In Atlanta, Georgia, Alabama, North Carolina it began in 2005.
3. One-Stop or Home-to-Home or a Combo?
There are three different ways you could organize the Dheusi-Bhailo event.
One stop – You could select a venue/ location and invite all the families and friends there. Once they have gathered the singing group could sing them Dheusi-Bhailo. The individual families will give their contribution to the Dheusi Singing group.
Home-to-Home – You could request families to invite your Dheusi-Bhailo group via a mass announcement or contacting them individually. It is good to send out the announcement first and follow up individually via email or phone. Once the host family invite the Dheusi-Bhailo group in their houses then give them the date and time that you would like to be at their address or alternatively ask them to give you the time they would prefer. Once you work the date/ time with the host families, take your Dheusi-Bhailo group either in a van or drive separately. Whatever the transportation, plan to arrive at the host address 5-10 minutes prior to the previously agreed on time.
Combo- You could do the combination (combo) of the above. In the combo, you could have both meaning (a) you could have many families gather at one place where the Dheusire group sing song to all and (b) the dheusire group then could go to another location where another group of families have gathered similar to the one before.
4. One day or multiple days? – You could do one day Dheusi-Bhailo or a multiple day Dheusi-Bhailo for example Friday in the evening, Saturday the whole day, Sunday the whole day.
5. Pick the right date – It is important to pick up a right date that works for most in the Dheusi-Bhailo group as well as to the host families, especially when you are doing home-to-home Dheusi-Bhailo. Some prefer Saturday, others Sunday or some do not care which day it is. Some prefer early afternoon, some late afternoon and some late evening. It’s important that you talk to each family and figure out what works for each best and make your plan around it. Of course it is not possible to make a plan that suits everyone, so negotiate with families if they could adjust time.
6.Promote the event and Solicit host families – When you are doing the home-to-home Dheusi-Bhailo, the first thing you need to do is to draft an attractive announcement and send it out repeatedly to catch the attention of your community. Simultaneously, you need to contact families individually.
7.At the host house – Once you arrive at the host house, let everyone settle first. Find a wide area (living room, or family room) and let your group make a semi-circle. Plug in your loud speaker or Karaoke if you are carrying one. You could do the following sequence of songs/dance (this is just one example, you could plan your own sequence):
- First Sing Dheusire song for five minutes (examples are given at the back)
- Then Play the traditional or folk music and dance and encourage host family to join in the dance. This could go for another 5-10 minutes.
- Third, stop the music and say in melody that now you are about to leave and that you appreciate any monetary contributions to the group.
- Once the host family makes the contribution, ‘sing the blessing song’ (example given at the back).
- It is not necessary to sing only the Dheusi-Bhailo songs; you could sing Gajals, folk songs, pop songs, raps, recite poem, tell joke or whatever you or others in the group has talent in.
8. Evaluation:
Once your event is over, plan for a evaluation via conference call or in-person meeting to discuss what went well and what could have been improved. Such evaluation will help you do better next year.
NASeA wishes you all the best for your Dheusire event in your city/ state.
9. Resources – Songs of Dheusi and Bhailo
Dheusi song 1
Ae Bhana Bhana Bhai ho
Deusi Re
Ae Ramrari Bhana
Deusi Re
AeSwar Milai Kana
Deusi Re
Ae Bhana na bhana
Deusi Re
Ae rato mato
Deusi re
Ae chiplo bato
Deusi Re
Ae laddai paddai
Deusi Re
ayeka hami
Deusi Re
ye kera ko khamba deusi re
a dus bhai jamma
deusi re
ye aakasako tara
deusi re
ye sel khane dara
deusi re
ye aakhumbakhum
deusi re
ye sel roti chakhum
deusi re
Dheusi Song 2
Bhana Mera Bhaiho Dhesusu re
Swormelai Kana Dhesusu re
Rato Batoo Dhesusu re
Chiploa Batoo Dhesusu re
Laddai Paddai Dhesusu re
Akeya Hami Dhesusu re
(add your lyrics)…. …. Dhesusu re
(add your lyrics)…….. …. Dhesusu re
(add your lyrics)…….. …. Dhesusu re
Blessing song, example
Yo Ghar ma Dhesusu re
Sadthai bhari Dhesusu re
Laaka-ximle Dhesusu re
Basha Garun Dhesusu re
Yo Ghar ka Dhesusu re
Babu Nani Dhesusu re
Phalun Phulun Dhesusu re
Hamilai Aba Dhesusu re
Bida Dinus Dhesusu re
Bida Dinus Dhesusu re
Bida Dinus Dhesusu re
Bhailo song 1
Hario Gobar le lipeko
laxmi puja gareko
hey aunsi ko baro
gai tiharo bhailo
aye hami tesai ayenau
bali raja le pathayeka
aye aunsi baro
gai tiharo bhailo
Like said above you could sing modern song, traditional songs, recite poem or gajals, whatever you have talents in.
Video Links to Dheusure
http://www.nepshow.com/2011/10/tihar-song-deushi-bhailo.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ou2Klt3VMpM
Dear NASeA Family,
Nepalese Association in Southeast America (NASeA) is brining you the calendar of events of various activities in different states of Southeast America. Below is the event calendar for the 4th quarter of 2011 — October, November and December. Please feel free to send updates and help it make current.
October, 2011
October 1
Raleigh International Festival, Nepal Center of North Carolina demonstrated booth and cultural dance, Raleigh, North Carolina
Clarkston International Festival, Nepalese Association in Georgia with support from NASeA Clarkston, Georgia
Fundraiser momo sale, Nepalese Student Association in University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia
October 2
NASeA 3rd Executive Board Meeting, Columbia, South Carolina
Dasain celebration, Nepalese Student Association at Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Dasain Celebration, Nepalese in Jackson, Mississippi
October 4
NASeA Conference call with Nepali organizations in different states and universities of the Southeast
October 7
Dasain Celebration in Miami and Tallahassee, Florida
October 8,
Dasain celebration, Little Rock, Arkansas Nepalese Society, Arkansas
Dasain celebration, Starkville, Mississippi, Nepalese Student Association at Mississippi,
Dasain celebration, Athens, Georgia by Nepalese Student Association of University of Georgia
Dasain Celebration, Tampa, Florida
Dasain celebration, Nepal Center of North Carolina, Cary, North Carolina
Friendly Soccer Tournament, United Dasain celebration, North Carolina
Inauguration of website, magazine and Nepali movie, Organization of Bhutanese Communities of America, Clarkston, Georgia
October 9,
Dasain celebration, Birmingham, Alabama Nepalese Association, Birmingham, Alabama
Dasain celebration, Troy, Nepalese Student Association, Troy, Alabama
October 15
Health Fair, Huntsville, Nepalese Children of Nepalese Association in North Alabama (NANA) are assiting in the health fair
Dasain Celebration in Atlanta, Georgia organized by Nepalese Assocition in Georga
Dasain Celebration in Columbia, South Carolina, by South Carolina Association of Nepalese
October 15-16
Orlando, Florida, Annual Meeting Dasain and Visit Nepal celebration, Florida Nepal Assocition
October 16
NASeA October Monthly Talk Session with Prof Dina Bangel on Difficulties Nepalese Arts Face Today, 11.00 PM ET
October 22
Dasain celebration, West Palm Beach, Florida
October 23
Dasain Celebration, Nashville, Tennessee, Nashville Nepalese Association
Week of Octobe 24-28
Laxmi Prasad Devkota Jayanti in some states
October 28-30
Dheusi-Bhailo, Atlanta, Nepalese Association of Georiga supported by NASeA, 3 days of continuous Dheusi Oct 28-30
Dheusi-Bhailo, Huntsville, Georgia, Nepalese Association in North Alabama (Oct 29-30)
Dheusi-Bhailo, Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Dheusi-Bhailo, Raleigh, Durham, Nepalese Center of North Carolina
Dheusi- Bhailo, Triad Nepal Cultural Center, North Carolina
November, 2011
Nov 8 – NASeA Conference call with Nepali organizations in different states and universities of the Southeast
Nov 13 – NASeA Monthly Talk Session with His Excellency Ambassador of United Kingdom (to be confirmed)
Nov 19 – NASeA Executive Board Meeting, Birmingham, Alabama
Nov 22 – Deadline for submitting grant proposal that NASeA is planning to work with University in Huntsville, Alabama
Prasad Distributition, Hindu Temple of Birmingham by Alabama Nepalese Association
November NASeA Children-to-Children Webinar
NASeA Diabetes Awareness Activities (November is Diabetes Awareness Month)
December, 2011
NASeA-FANS Blood Drive, Tampa, Florida (date to be confirmed)
Dec 8 – NASeA Conference call with Nepali organizations in different states and universities of the Southeast
NASeA Executive Board Meeting, Tampa, Alabama (date to be confirmed)
December NASeA Children-to-Children Webinar
New Year 2012 celebrations in various southeast states, (details later)
Sanjeeb Sapkota
President,
Nepalese Association in Southeast America (NASeA)
www.naseaonline.info
Facebook http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=119743946954#!/profile.php?id=100001163516020
Twitter. http://twitter.com/naseausa (please follow NASeA on twitter)
|
Follow us on Facebook
|