Archive for the ‘Tibet’ Category

MEC donates sunglasses for Tibet

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010
Tibetans wearing sunglasses after eye surgery at the Nakchu eye camp in Tibet

Tibetans wearing sunglasses after eye surgery at the Nakchu eye camp in Tibet

Thank you to Mountain Equipment Co-op for the recent donation of both children’s and adult’s sunglasses for Seva’s eye care programs in Tibet.

This generous donation of $5209-worth of high-quality sunglasses will be very much appreciated by patients in Tibet who have received cataract surgery.

Tibet has one of the highest rates of blindness in the world, mainly due to cataracts. Each year, Seva conducts thousands of sight-restoring cataract surgeries in Tibet.

This photo shows patients at a Seva eye camp in Nagchu on the Tibetan plateau wearing glasses after surgery. The sunglasses not only protect their sensitive eyes from the  strong UV light, but also help to shield their eyes from dust and rubbing as they are healing.

Thank you, MEC! The glasses will be taken to Tibet this fall.

For more information about Seva’s work in Tibet, visit our website.

Yushu earthquake relief efforts: update and slideshow from Seva

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

Photo of Jeku in the Yushu area after the earthquake April 2010It’s now been just over two months since the devastating earthquake hit Yushu (Jyekundo). The official final death toll from the 7.1-magnitude earthquake on April 14 was 2,698, with 270 people missing, according to the authorities. We are told it was far higher.

We wanted to share with you the picture album below and to update you on the outcome of Seva Canada’s fundraising efforts and the use of your gifts. If you can’t access the pictures, let us know by emailing admin@seva.ca. These photos were taken by Kunga, Seva Tibet’s Program Director.

As a recap – 100 per cent of the Seva Canada board and staff donated specifically to the immediate relief efforts, together with some close Seva family, raising a total of $7,100. In addition, generous Seva donors contributed $5,072 towards the rebuilding of the eye care programs in the Yushu region. The pictures below show our relief efforts. The rebuilding of the eye care programs is a longer-term effort.

The Seva team and convoy of three trucks led by Kunga distributed 70 tons of food, water, clothing and tents for those severely affected. Our convoy was the first to arrive with tsampa (roasted barley flour), yak butter and black tea – the traditional food of the area. Shortly thereafter, the princess Rinzin Wangmu (the late Panchen Lama’s daughter) led a relief convoy of nine trucks and our team stayed on site to assist with that distribution. The princess summoned around 300 monks at the mass funeral to pray for those who lost their lives during the earthquake. There are pictures of all of this in the album below including the procession and the cremation site.

The hospital where our eye unit was located is being torn down due to structural damage. They are using a field hospital now and have short-term plans for a series of prefab buildings and eventually a new hospital. There is a picture of Dr. Norwu, the eye doctor we trained, sitting with Kunga in front of his tent… he too lost everything. The eye department is housed in a tent now but most of the equipment was removed in the immediate aftermath of the quake and warehoused. We have not been able to locate it (as of last month). The Zeiss microscope we had provided fell and the head was damaged. It will go to Beijing for repairs as soon as we can recover it from the same warehouse.

Next steps – we continue to work on re-establishing eye services to the community. We are planning to buy some new equipment and to fully re-supply the clinic with the funds raised. We’ll be doing our usual eye camps that include screening and surgery for Yushu and the surrounding communities. Hopefully there will be a prefab structure soon where the eye department can be housed before the onset of winter.

If you would like to contribute to the rebuilding of the eye care programs in this area, please visit https://app.etapestry.com/hosted/SevaCanada/OnlineDonation.html

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Tibetan eye center in Dartsedo opens and restores sight to the blind

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

The Seva-supported Kham Eye Center in Dartsedo will officially open in October 2010 but is already treating patients and performing cataract surgeries.

This blind Tibetan man is one of the first patients at the new  Kham Eye Center in Dartsedo. He will receive cataract surgery to restore  his sight.

This blind Tibetan man is one of the first patients at the new Kham Eye Center in Dartsedo. He will receive cataract surgery to restore his sight.

The region has one of the highest rates of preventable and treatable blindness in the world and the need for care is huge. The high prevalence of age related cataract blindness among Tibetans is perhaps due to high altitude ultraviolet light exposure. According to a study in the British Journal of Ophthalmology, blindness and visual impairment in the Tibet Autonomous Region are significant public health problems, with the most elderly having rates of blindness between 12% and 33%. Women in Tibet bear two thirds of the burden of blindness.The Kham Eye Centre is the first dedicated eye hospital on the Tibetan plateau.

Kham Eye Center is the brainchild of Dr. Dorjee, chief ophthalmologist and director of Kandze Prefecture People’s Hospital. Dr. Dorjee is an extremely dedicated and compassionate eye surgeon. When the devastating earthquake struck the Yushu area in April, Dr. Dorjee was in the region conducting surgical eye camps. He and his medical team rushed to the earthquake zone to offer emergency assistance and, in the first day alone, treated 800 earthquake victims.

Blind patients arriving at the Kham Eye Center in Dartsedo for eye surgery

Blind patients arriving at the Kham Eye Center in Dartsedo for eye surgery

The Kham Eye Center is a non-profit eye care institution specializing in clinical services, research, teaching and prevention and treatment of eye disease. Seva is funding the human resource development, technical and managerial mentorship, and provision of ophthalmic equipment instruments and supplies.

The goals of the Kham Eye Center are:

1. to conduct a minimum of 14,000 cataract sight restoring surgeries over the next 5 years;
2. to establish 10 vision centers by 2010;
3. to train 10 eye doctors and 10 county level nurses;
4. to establish the Center as a standard national eye hospital, using state-of-the-art technology;
5. to become the model eye care program in the Kham region;
6. to become an eye care training center;
7. and to develop as a community ophthalmology center.

Tibetan widow blind from cataracts can see again thanks to eye surgery from Seva

Monday, May 10th, 2010

“Hundreds of thousands of cataract operations are impressive, but to change one person’s life with sight-restoring surgery is magnificent. That is the reason we do it.”
Dr. Peter Nash, ophthalmologist, Seva board member and legacy donor

Here is one story of a life changed through the gift of sight.

Tsering Dolma, age 72, has been a widow for many years. Although she has a son, he works far away so she lives alone. In her village in Tibet, she is the loneliest woman because all the other older women have some family members living with them.

Since 2008, Tsering Dolma’s vision deteriorated from cataracts, but she had no idea of the reason for this, which caused many problems in her life.

yak in Tibet photo by Gary HahnOne day in the summer of 2009, Tsering Dolma was leaving her house to attend a village council meeting, and she fell down the stairs because her right eye was blind and her left eye had blurry vision. The fall seriously injured her knees, and she ended up bedridden for a month.

The following winter, it snowed a lot in her village and the streets were very slippery. Tsering was afraid of having another fall, so she decided to stay at home until it stopped snowing and the snow on the ground melted. The snow, however, didn’t melt that quickly. She was stuck in her house for seven days. She recalled, “During the seven days, I felt like a prisoner because I had nobody to talk to and I was completely isolated.” Tsering often believed that she had basic good health, but without eyesight she was powerless.

In January 2010, her son brought her to the Seva-supported eye hospital in Lhasa and Tsering’s sight was successfully restored. Tsering never expected that she would be able to see again and she was thankful that it actually happened to her.  On leaving Lhasa to return to her village 1,700 kilometers away, she said she hoped to work in her barley field, visit her neighbors every day, and to travel to visit her son several times every few months. She smiled and said, “I won’t be a prisoner ever again, and I will be enjoying my life as much as I can!”

Yushu earthquake: latest news from the disaster area

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

This morning we received the following email from Kunga Tashi, Program Director of Seva Tibet in Lhasa:

Dear all,

I am back home safely. We have distributed seventy tons of food, water, clothing and tents for those severely affected and others who’re forgotten. Thank you so much for raising funds for Yushu earthquake. We have used part of Seva’s donation to buy medicines and tsampa (our staple food). All the medicines including eye drops have been donated to Yushu Hospital. Sonam can send you the list later.

We were the first relief convoy to arrive in Yushu with the tsampa, butter and tea and people really enjoyed having their traditional food in their plate again. Seva’s partners and friends in Yushu are extremely grateful for our quick action and thoughtful gift.

Tons of pre-packed food is now flooding into Yushu. More locally driven relief convoys are on the way to bring tsampa , butter, meat etc. So we’ll make a period for our relief operation for now as we are tied up with our eye care work.

The majority in Yushu is suffering from loss of the dear ones and their homestead. It will take time to recover from this nightmare. We will continue to pay our attention for people in Yushu until they’re fully recovered from this catastrophe. We are anticipating that there will be shortage of food and warm clothing in the coming winter.We’re tentatively planning to organize another relief convoy around October.

The microscope we have donated to Yushu Hospital has fallen down on the floor. Carl Zeiss Shanghai Office will check if they can repair it. All the buildings standing in Yushu are in a state of disrepair. I think the government will rebuild them.

As you may have read in the news, the Chinese government is doing a great job to help the victims in Yushu.

The princess Rinzin Wangmu [Panchen Lama's daughter] has led a relief convoy of nine trucks and I have participated in the distribution of the relief items on the ground. The princess has summoned around three hundred monks at the funeral to pray for those who lost thier lives during the earthquake. It’s very comforting for those who survived.

More soon

Kunga

Seva Tibet staff deliver aid to earthquake victims in Yushu

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

We’ve just received one bit of very good news from the earthquake zone. Contrary to earlier reports, the hospital in Yushu where Seva works was not destroyed, though the building was damaged in the quake and has cracks. The latest reports via Dolma at the Seva Tibet office in Lhasa are that one hospital staff member died in the earthquake.

The Seva Tibet staff have been extremely active in responding to the quake. As far as we know, Dr. Dorjee of the Kham Eye Centre and his eye care team is still in the disaster zone providing emergency medical care. Seva Tibet’s program director is Kunga Tashi. Before joining Seva, Kunga was the head of the Swiss Red Cross in Tibet, so he is very experienced in relief efforts and he was also involved in the earthquake relief after the 2008 Kham (Sichuan) earthquake. Because Seva has worked in the Yushu region for so long, he has many contacts on the ground.

This morning (April 20th) we at Seva Canada got this update from Dolma in the Seva Tibet office:

A Tibetan woman collects her belongings in A woman collects her  belongs in Gyegu Town, near the earthquake-hit Tibetan Autonomous  Prefecture of Yushu,
A Tibetan woman collects her belongings in A woman collects her belongs in Gyegu Town, near the earthquake-hit Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Yushu,

Hi all,

Kunga la arrived on 17th around 7:00 pm in Yushu with 3 trucks of goods. On that night and the next day, he couldn’t distribute the food because there were many people (not necessary poor people or earthquake victims) trying to rob all the supplies of the three trucks. Those people tend to rob food and medical supplies and then sell them in the Yushu town.

In order to assure that the most needy people receive the food, clothes and medical supplies, Kunga la and the disabled person’s federation (our program partner) worked together and  distributed 35.5 tons of goods with 3 trucks to poor people on 19th. The goods distributed are $ 17,043 of tsampa (Tibetan barley), $23,023 of warm clothes and shoes, $10,800 of medicines and eye drops and $ 6265 of tents.

On Saturday evening (17th,) the second batch of goods with 4 trucks (46.5 tons) left for Yushu.  In those trucks, there are $26,063 of tsampa, $3055 of butter, $2135 of canned meat, $4453 of mineral water, $860 of dry black tea, $6059 of clothes, $1471 of salt, $220 of match and candles and $191 of instant noodles. All 4 trucks arrived in Yushu safely by 20th morning. Kunga la is trying to distribute some of the goods through monasteries, which have more access to poor earthquake victims. He is also linked up with a local association in which the director of the association is the Princess [the Panchen Lama's daughter) who Kunga knows well],  to locate more victims and to identify other needs. The Princess is traveling to Yushu on 22nd.

Kunga la is saying that 100% of Tibetan houses are collapsed and 80% of concrete-built houses are cracked. Medical needs are pretty well fulfilled by different groups of medical teams sent by the government. The urgent need so far seems to be tents, tsampa and butter. The food flooding to Yushu from mainland is instant noodles but many nomads have stomach ache of eating them everyday and have more desire to eat tsampa.

Best, Dolma

The board and staff of Seva Canada and our sister organization, Seva Foundation in Berkeley, have raised money internally and are wiring money to Tibet to help with Kunga’s efforts. We have appealed to our donors to help in the long-term rebuilding of the eye care programs in this region which has one of the highest rates of blindness in the world. http://www.seva.ca/sevaintibet.htm

According to reports on the ground, the death toll from the earthquake is much higher than the official estimates and the numbers of dead reported in the media. The media today, April 20th, were reporting that the number of dead has reached over 2,000 and that the earthquake also injured 12,135 people and left several thousand people homeless in the remote, largely Tibetan area. People providing on-the-ground relief estimate the death toll is many times higher.

Monks at a makeshift morgue near a monastery near Yushu after earthquake

Monks at a makeshift morgue near a monastery near Yushu after the earthquake

Of the injured, more than 1,400 were said to be in serious condition.

We are extremely grateful to our wonderful supporters for the generosity in helping Seva provide both relief and long-term eye care for the earthquake area. The following is a poem of thanks from Dr. Chundak Tenzing, Tibetan ophthalmologist and Program Director at Seva Foundation, our sister organization in Berkeley — as well as being Seva’s poet laureate:

Unimaginable
How in minutes
Life is buried
Under dust

And the eyes
shed tears
forever

Remarkable
How instantly
Kind souls
Reach out

To rebuild
The confidence
In life again.

For more information about the earthquake in Yushu please see Seva’s other blog posts:
Before and after photographs of the earthquake in Kham/Qinghai

Earthquake in Yushu, Qinghai: Aid and Seva’s response

Earthquake in Yushu, Qinghai: Report from Seva Tibet

Before and after photographs of the earthquake in Kham/Qinghai

Friday, April 16th, 2010

Two years ago, Seva Canada board member, Susan Erdmann, spent three months in Yushu at her own expense, working as a volunteer in the hospital and photographing the Seva eye camps that were being held in the region.

In this blog, Susan reflects on what she has seen, then and now and shares her photographs of happier days in Yushu.

Photograph of Yushu after the earthquake. From Rokpa www.rokpa.ca

Photograph of Yushu after the earthquake. From Rokpa www.rokpa.ca

Susan writes:

The pictures and further news from Yushu are terrifying.

I look at the pictures of Yushu today and I can’t imagine how anyone survived. The pictures I took and the memories of this busy little town with its flow of herders and nomads, the small shop keepers and vendors, students and beggars and monks and nuns. Where are they all now?  Are they under the rubble? Did they hopefully survive? Will I ever know? It is so sad.

Hospital in Yushu where the eye camp was held

Hospital in Yushu where the eye camp was held This is the photo of the hospital in Yushu where Seva works and where the eye camps I witnessed were held. NOTE: We had first heard that it was completely destroyed, but Kunga, director of Seva Tibet, has told us on April 19th that it is damaged and cracked, not destroyed as we had been told. Photo by Susan Erdmann, Seva Canada

The hospital, now collapsed, was an easy target for a quake and was pretty minimal in all that it could offer, but it was the only hospital and most of the staff are now gone.

This area, so challenged with life generally, has now nothing to fall back on save what is brought to them from the outside. Will the outside continue to remember their needs? Will they get the help they need even more? What can be salvaged here? I know it will happen… somehow it will come together. The Tibetans are tough, resilient and accepting. I am glad Seva will be involved in their recovery. They will have to see with even clearer vision for the future.

Here are more photos of Yushu that Susan took before the earthquake, in contrast with the devastation now.

A collapsed building in Yushu after the earthquake

A collapsed building in Yushu after the earthquake

Before the earthquake in Qinghai: main temple of the monastery south of Yushu

Before the earthquake in Qinghai: main temple of the monastery south of Yushu. It is reported that at least 40 monks died in the earthquake. Photo by Susan Erdmann, Seva Canada

interior courtyard of Rokpa's Orphanage and School for Tibetan Medicine in Yushu, Qinghai

Before the quake: This is the interior courtyard of Rokpa's orphanage and School for Tibetan Medicine in Yushu, Qinghai. Photo by Susan Erdmann

Before the earthquake, a street scene in the centre of Yushu, Qinghai

Before the earthquake, a street scene in the centre of Yushu. Photo by Susan Erdmann, Seva Canada

Earthquake in Yushu, Qinghai: Aid and Seva’s response

Thursday, April 15th, 2010
Kunga Tashi, Program Director of Seva Tibet at an eye camp near Yushu

Kunga Tashi (left), Program Director of Seva Tibet, is rushing to Yushu with aid for the earthquake victims. Here he is, in happier days, being thanked by Tibetans at a Seva eye camp in the area

We learned late yesterday that Kunga Tashi, Program Director of Seva Tibet, was leaving Lhasa to make the long and difficult journey to Yushu.

It will take him 30 hours to reach Yushu. He has a half a truckload of donations from the Tibet Red Cross and other Tibetans to provide food and blankets to the earthquake victims. Kunga has not been able to contact Dr. Sona Yangzom and nurse Dolma, both of  whom were trained by Seva at our partner hospital in Nepal, the Lumbini Eye Institute. Kunga will keep the Seva family updated about their conditions when he reaches Yushu.

When the earthquake happened, a team of Seva-sponsored ophthalmologists and field staff had just completed a nearby eye camp and they are already on their way to the devastated region to help in rescue efforts.

Reports are that hospitals and several schools collapsed, the old section of Yashu in the Quinghai province has been completely flattened and hundreds are buried beneath the rubble of homes and buildings.  Many medical staff were lost in the collapse of a hospital.

At Seva we are following the situation closely and applaud emergency relief organizations that are already on their way to help with the immense challenges to provide health care, food, water, blankets, clothes and other urgent life saving measures for a traumatized region.

With three decades of on-the-ground experience in Tibet, we know how to get help to those who need it.

Dr. Dorjee with eye care patients in Tibet is now heading to the earthquake area near Yushu to offer medical assistance

Dr. Dorjee, far left, is an ophthalmologist. He and his Seva-supported team were in the earthquake region conducting eye camps when the earthquakes near Yushu struck. He and his teams have rushed to the disaster zone to offer medical assistance. Here he is in better days with hundreds of eye patients after a cataract surgical camp.

Seva is committed to helping by doing what we do best.

We will focus our efforts to assist those who have sustained eye injuries, help rebuild eye care services and replace lost equipment destroyed in the quake.

You can donate to Seva Canada to help rebuild the eye care programs in the earthquake area where we have worked since 1995 and which has one of the world’s highest rates of blindness.

Your donation today will go toward rebuilding eye care services in Tibet.



Earthquake in Yushu, Qinghai: Report from Seva Tibet

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

This morning we received this email from Kunga Tashi, Seva’s Program Director in Lhasa, Tibet with reports of the situation in Yushu:

Re: Devastating earthquake in Yushu

Dear all,

Several strong earthquakes struck Yushu early this morning. The epicenter is 20 miles from town of Yushu. Hundreds of people lost their lives, thousands buried.

Dr Dorjee, an ophthalmologist from the Kham Eye Center, was conducting eye camps in the Yushu area when the earthquake struck and he and his medical team have rushed to the disaster area to provide medical relief.

Dr Dorjee, an ophthalmologist from the Kham Eye Center, was conducting eye camps in the Yushu area when the earthquake struck and he and his medical team have rushed to the disaster area to provide medical relief. Photo: Seva Tibet

A Kham Eye Center team led by Dr. Dorjee had just completed a screening camp yesterday in Sershul, 90km east of Yushu and was about to leave for Dege for the next camp. After hearing the big damage in Yushu this morning, his team left for the disaster area and is now rescuing the injured.

I managed to talk to Nima (assistant director of the Kham Eye Centre) over phone around 7pm. She said the entire infrastructure is damaged. She can only receive incoming calls from time to time. According to Nima, Yushu Hospital has collapsed. Around 70% of the hospital staff are either dead in the hospital or in their houses. The Kham Eye Center team is rescuing people in a school. The old part of the town is completely flat as she stated. (UPDATE TO THIS BLOG: On April 19th we learned that the hospital in Yushu did not collapse but was damaged and cracked. One staff member died.)

I spoke to Dr. Norbu Tsering early this morning and he was hurrying to the hospital. Norbu’s line was permanently off since then. Then I spoke with Dondup Tsering, former director of the Disabled Person’s Federation now serving as head of Yushu TV, and he told me that almost all the houses are collapsed and he was with a rescue team and would talk with me later.

Things are much worse than what has reported in the media. A medical team of 15 people from Dartsedo is on the way to Yushu. I have no clue what we can do at this stage but I asked the folks in Yushu to let us know if we can be of any help for the victims in Yushu.

Kunga

According to the media reports on the morning of April 14th, at least 400 people have been killed and more have been injured or trapped in rubble after a series of six earthquakes hit Yushu County in Qinghai Province. Officials said more than 10,000 people were injured.

Map showing epicentre of earthquake in Yushu, QinghaiThe China Earthquake Networks Centre put the biggest shock at magnitude 7.1, although the US Geological Survey put it at 6.9. The Haiti quake which killed more than 200,000 and left 1m homeless in January was magnitude 7. The China Earthquake Administration said phone lines were down, hindering rescue efforts, while workers were racing to release water from a cracked reservoir. The epicentre of the first quake was located 235 miles south-south-east of Golmud, a large city in Qinghai, at a depth of six miles, the US Geological Survey said.

Yushu county is a largely Tibetan area. Seva has been been working in the Yushu area since 1995 and is the main eye care provider in the region which has one of the highest rates of blindness in the world. Our colleagues in the Kham Eye Center in Dartsedo to the south, faced a similar nightmare during the Sichuan earthquake which struck on May 12, 2008 and which measured 7.9 or 8.0 on the Richter scale.

Everyone at Seva is deeply saddened by this latest tragedy to hit an area that has already suffered so much. With such destruction to the hospital and health care system, there will certainly be much for Seva to do. The people in Yushu will need our help to rebuild the eye care services at the hospital, possibly replace equipment and perhaps help fund the repair of the hospital.

Tibetan child’s eye surgery transforms lives

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

The story of Tsultrim Dorje
by Dolma Chugi, Seva Tibet Staff

“I asked the doctors to take my eyes out and exchange them with Tsultrim’s many times, but they kept telling me that such a medical technology wasn’t invented,” confessed Tsultrim’s grandmother. She would gladly have given her precious sight to her grandson and spared his parents, his aunt and herself the many tears they have cried in the past three years. She is pictured here on the far right with Tsultrim and his aunt. Worrying about his eye health has aged her beyond her 68 years.

Tsultrim Dorje with aunt and grandmother

Tsultrim Dorje with aunt and grandmother

Tsultrim lives mostly with his grandmother and his aunt because his parents work long hours. They only have time to be with him occasionally on weekends and during their holidays. His mother works as a bathroom cleaner at a hotel and his father is a porter. Together they earn only US $192 a month and that has to feed and support Tsultrim, his grandmother, his aunt and themselves.

For three years, Tsultrim’s father lived with the nightmare that Tsultrim’s blindness wouldn’t be treated and that he wouldn’t be able to go to school like all the other children. He shared his fears with me and, after rolling his eyes for a few seconds, he said “You know, nowadays, no schooling means no academic degree, and no degree means no life!” His voice trembling, he continued, “Tsultrim is my only child. The devastation of his life is the tragedy of my life!”

Tsultrim Dorje after his cataract sugery wearing his aphakic glasses

Tsultrim Dorje after his cataract sugery wearing his aphakic glasses

Tsultrim had his first surgery on one eye when he was only four months old. Ever since, he has been terrified of hospitals and doctors. His most recent surgeries were performed by Dr. Judy Newman, a pediatric ophthalmologist and volunteer from the USA. Dr. Newman has been a pioneer of pediatric eye programs for Seva in Tibet. She remembers Tsultrim very well because he cried the loudest and hardest throughout every visit, from registration all the way through examination, vision-checking, eye drops and surgery. He even cried during follow-up visits.

Cataract management for children is more complicated than for adults and, as a result,
Tsultrim has already undergone three surgeries. Intraocular lens implants are not recommended until the age of nine when ophthalmic nerves are better developed.  Now, at last, after all the crying and struggles, his sight has been restored and he can wear aphakic glasses – glasses that work to replace the eye’s natural lens. He can behave like a normal child!

One sunny Sunday morning three months after Tsultrim’s surgery, I was strolling in the Naga Park behind the Potala Palace and unexpectedly met Tsultrim and his aunt. Tsultrim was running energetically around the pathways. His aunt was thrilled to tell me that Tsultrim had been admitted to kindergarten in the fall. Tsultrim never stopped running around during our whole conversation.

Tsultrim Dorje wearing his special aphakic glasses at school in Tibet

Tsultrim Dorje wearing his special aphakic glasses at school in Tibet

On Tuesday, I visited Tsultrim in his kindergarten. It was almost lunch time. All the kids had just packed up their text books and cleared their desks to get ready for lunch. They would eat together and then nap together in a dorm. Tsultrim, however, was waiting for his aunt to pick him up and take him home for his lunch and nap. I felt sorry he couldn’t stay with his classmates but his aunt explained that tuition at kindergarten costs US $176 each year and is double if Tsultrim stays at school for his lunch and nap. This extra cost would be a huge burden to the family because of their meager income. Nevertheless, being able to go to school and get an education – just like all the other children – counts more than anything else to Tsultrim and his family!

The secret of happiness in Tibet

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

It’s eye camp season again in Tibet. Each day hundreds of blind Tibetans are being screened by Seva for eye problems and scores of people blinded by cataracts are receiving sight-restoring surgery.

Tibetan patients queuing at a Seva cataract surgical eye camp

Tibetan patients queuing at a Seva cataract surgical eye camp

Seva Canada has been working for over 27 years to restore sight and prevent blindness in the developing world. We’ve been working in Tibet since 1995, where we are the dominant eye-care provider, doing two-thirds of all cataract surgeries.

Worldwide 45 million people are blind, but people don’t go blind by the millions. They go blind one personal tragedy at a time. Here is one story about someone who was blind and had her sight restored by Seva thanks to the generosity of Seva’s donors.

Patients at the Seva eye camp in Chamdo, Tibet

Patients at the Seva eye camp in Chamdo, Tibet

Last autumn in Chamdo, Tibet, a little 7-year-old boy led his blind mother by the hand to a Seva surgical eye camp. Dekyi is a 48-year-old single mother with 6 children depending on her.

Dekyi told Sonam from Seva’s Tibet office, “I never had a husband, but I have two children. Dorjee is the younger one and he brought me here. The older one, my daughter, is at home herding the animals. I became an orphan when I was just 5. My only surviving family member was my older brother and he died 3 years ago.”

She groaned, but continued with a trembling voice. “I lost my sight two years ago and since then I have been depending on Dorjee and my 12-year-old daughter for living. I hope that my sight will be restored from this operation. There is a huge amount of debt mounted from my brother’s illness and death that I need to paid off and I need to free Dorjee for schooling and to raise my brother’s four children. Their mother died five years ago and left all the kids for my brother to raise. His death left no choice for the kids than to depend on me.”

Dekyi's son Dorjee at the Seva eye camp in Tibet

Dekyi's son Dorjee at the Seva eye camp in Tibet

She continued. “I am Dekyi. You know my that name means ‘happiness’ in Tibetan, but I’ve never been happy once in my life. My life has been all about death, loneliness, debts and now blindness. Often, I think I must have been a bad person in my previous life and that my bad karma is causing all this pain.”

Dekyi before her cataract surgery in Tibet

Dekyi before her cataract surgery in Tibet

When called to the examination room, Dekyi quickly pulled herself together, stood up with the support of her stick and called for Dorjee who was outside playing with other children. All of the sudden, Dekyi looked pale and restless. She fumbled with her hair and pressed it down at the back and said, “This is it. The only chance I have got. What if my blindness is diagnosed as untreatable?”

Dorjee led her by the hand to the examination room. With Dorjee’s help, she placed herself on a chair in front of the slit lamp. A few minutes later, she was diagnosed with bilateral cataracts and scheduled for a surgery in the afternoon on the same day. Dorjee rushed to her and held her from her behind and buried his head into her coat and cried for a long time. He shed tears for the joy of a new hope and for all the pain borne all the years by her mother and himself. Dekyi thanked and prayed for the Buddha, drawing her palms together at her chest, and then spoke with a tearful face, “I am now feeling happy and happy for the first time in my life.” She wiped her tears with her right-hand sleeve and then followed Dorjee for lunch. Dekyi was operated in that afternoon.

Dekyi getting her eyes tested after cataract surgery

Dekyi getting her eyes tested after cataract surgery

The next day, Dekyi had her vision tested and it was 6/9. She and Dorjee came to thank the Seva staff and to say goodbye. She looked much more tidy on that day than she did when she arrived at the camp. Her black hair was neat, she was smiling and she walked without the aid of her stick.

Dekyi feeling happy after cataract surgery by Seva

Dekyi feeling happy after cataract surgery by Seva

Carefully taking off her new sunglasses, she expressed her deep appreciation to Seva and asked that a particular message be conveyed to Seva’s donors. “Please tell all the people in your organization. They are the ones who have helped me end my bad karma and bring a glimpse of light to my life!” Tears of happiness were rolling down her cheeks as she said it.

Please consider supporting Seva Canada’s sight programs by becoming a monthly donor or giving the gift of sight. Call 604-713-6622 or visit our website at www.seva.ca.

Group photo of eye patients at Seva surgical camp Chamdo, Tibet. You can just see Dekyi in her red jacket at the top right-hand corner of the photo.

Group photo of eye patients at Seva surgical camp Chamdo, Tibet. You can just see Dekyi in her red jacket at the top right-hand corner of the photo.

All aboard! Seva's new bus for the blind in Tibet

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

Imagine if you were blind from cataracts and lived in a village deep in the Himalayan region of Tibet. The world has gone dark. You can no longer see faces of loved ones. You have no way to cook or feed yourself. There are no seeing eye dogs, beeping crosswalks, or eye surgeons to help you.

Tibetan landscape. Photo courtesy of Gary Hahn

Tibetan landscape. Photo courtesy of Gary Hahn

In Tibet’s under-served mountainous region, seeing an eye doctor would have likely meant a multi-day trek to Lhasa. It would cost you many months salary pay to have cataracts removed. For too many, this means a mother, father, grandparent, or even child could not have cataracts removed and would remain blind.

Since the beginning, Seva has already tried to help the most vulnerable and has reached out to remote areas where there is no care. Now, in Tibet, people needing eye care but who have no way to travel to get it, can take Seva’s new bus on the Roof of the World!

Seva's new bus in Tibet which transports blind people to and from hospital

Seva's new bus in Tibet which transports blind people to and from hospital

This bus will travel to remote mountain villages, picking up blind patients and transporting them, free of charge, to a hospital in the city of Lhasa staffed by local Seva trained eye surgeons. There they will have cataracts removed and their vision restored! And after they have had their sight checked and all their post-operative care, they will be transported back to their villages. A magic bus!

Thanks to Seva’s generous donors like you, this bus will help us better reach the underserved and restore sight.

Whitehorse raises funds for Seva's eye centre in Tibet

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

A huge thank you to Shelagh Smith, Rob McClure and all the people in Whitehorse who made last night’s fundraiser for Seva Canada (www.seva.ca) a big success. About 80 people attended and raised $1,000 for the Kham Eye Centre in Dartsedo.

Tibet has the highest rate of blindness in the world. Cataract is the leading cause of blindness in the Kham region, as it is in other Tibetan regions. Cataracts can be removed, and sight restored, with a relatively simple and highly cost-effective operation costing about $50, yet the cataract surgical coverage in the area is just 40%; 60% of patients remain untreated. Seva is trying to change this.

A 50-bed eye hospital, the Kham Eye Center, is currently being built in Dartsedo and will open in 2009. The Kham Eye Center will be a non-profit eye care institution specializing in clinical services, research, teaching and prevention and treatment of eye disease. Seva is funding human resource development, technical and managerial mentorship, and provision of ophthalmic equipment, instruments and supplies. The Kham Eye Care Center will have a multitiered pricing system to make the eye care more affordable and accessible to all patients in the community. The ultimate goal of the Kham Eye Center is to build a high-quality, sustainable, accessible, affordable eye care system.

It’s pretty amazing to think that for the price of a condo in Vancouver (even after the slump), you can equip an entire hospital, train the staff, help set up 10 vision centers and provide medical materials and surgical supplies for 4 years. Cost: $825,000. Gifts of sight for thousands of Tibetans for generations to come: priceless!

The goals are:
- to conduct a minimum of 14,000 cataract sight restoring surgeries over the next 5 years;
- to establish 10 vision centers by 2010;
- to train 10 eye doctors and 10 county level nurses;
- to establish the Center as a standard national eye hospital, using state-of-the-art technology;
- to become the model eye care program in the Kham region;
- to become an eye care training center;
- and to develop as a community ophthalmology center.

Thanks again to all the folks in Whitehorse for your generosity and compassion.

Grateful Tibetan patients at a Seva eye camp in 2008

Grateful Tibetan patients at a Seva eye camp in 2008

Helping Tibet

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

Tibet has the highest rate of blindness in the world.  Most of this blindness is due to cataract. For $50 Cdn, a 15-minute cataract surgery can restore sight and completely change people’s lives.

helping Tibet through eye care www.seva.caSeva has been working in Tibet since 1995 and is the leading eye-care provider, responsible for two-thirds of the cataract surgeries in both the Tibetan Autonomous region and in Tibetan areas outside the TAR.

In the Tibet Autonomous Region, Seva works in:
•    Lhasa, through Menzikhang (we’ve set up a tertiary eye care program there with Tibetan eye specialists)
•    Chamdo
•    Nyiri
•    Ngari in the far northwest
In Amdo:
•    Yushu
In Kham:
•    Dartsedo, where we are establishing the Kham Eye Centre
•    Ngaba
•    Liangsham

Each year Seva runs up to 25 mobile eye camps and each camp serves between 300 and 400 people and does up to 300 sight-restoring cataract surgeries.

To learn more about how you can help Seva help Tibet, visit http://www.seva.ca.

Surgical eye camps in Tibet

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

It’s always thrilling to look through the dozens of photographs and stories that emerge from eye camps.

Surgical eye camps in remote areas of Tibet are magical events. Literally hundreds of blind people, young and old, are led by their relatives to the camp to receive sight-restoring cataract surgery. Many have been blind for many years and need help from a full-time caregiver — often a child who can then not attend school.

Tibetans call the ophthalmologists “the eye openers”. The surgery takes about 15 minutes and costs about $50 and it changes people’s lives forever. Each year Seva Canada (www.seva.ca) and our sister organization, Seva Foundation, conduct up to 25 eye camps in Tibet.

Here’s a great group shot from an eye camp in the autumn of 2008. It makes us all smile.

A sea of happy faces of Tibetans who have had their sight restored at a Seva eye camp

A sea of happy faces of Tibetans who have had their sight restored at a Seva eye camp