Group of orphans, disabled on trekking expedition
April 28th, 2010 - 4:16 pm ICT by IANSNew Delhi, April 28 (IANS) In a unique initiative, an adventure club from Mysore has brought together teenagers from different strata of society for a trekking expedition to Kuari Pass in Uttarakhand. The 24-member group has 15 orphans, including two disabled.
The group, which started its journey from Mysore, was flagged off here Wednesday by Congress leader Sachin Pilot. It will make its way to Kuari pass (4,268 metres) in Chamoli district of the state.
“Such an initiative shows that every strata has hope, the government from different states should encourage such initiatives. A venture like this shows that caste, creed, strata should not matter,” Pilot said on the occasion, adding that the amalgamation of different cultures in the group will help the students gain new experiences.
D.S.D. Solanki, an official of the International Academy of Mountaineering and Allied Sports (IAMAS) club, said: “The orphans are from government-run orphanages. Since they do not mingle much with the general public and have fixed days to go out, they are detached. This initiative is to make them feel a part of us. It will instill confidence in them.”
The group has two differently-abled students — one is partially blind and has hearing and speech impairment, while the other one is visually challenged. The students are from Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, and Madhya Pradesh.
The club has collaborated with the Society for Trekking and Environmental Preservation (STEP), Delhi, which is providing the group with infrastructure, equipment, guidance and volunteers for the expedition.
For 15-year-old Kavya, the trip was her first. “The whole journey was a learning experience. On Tuesday, we went to see the Taj Mahal and other forts. I got to meet people from different states and learn about their culture,” she said.
Suhas Dilip Godake, 15, was on his second trekking expedition.
“I have trekked till Lonavala, Maharashtra, before. But, this journey is long and enriching. I made friends and realized even people, who don’t stay in orphanages, are like me. They talk about books, school, teachers just like me.”
“I got to know more about reality. After interacting with them (orphans) I could understand them better. We thought they will be quiet and aloof but they were friendly and wanted to learn more things,” said Anannya Deepanjali Kodandena, 15.
- Dropout who is engineering a hundred orphan dreams (Feature) - Apr 27, 2010
- Jagjit Singh Ji Dubs For An Animation Film - Nov 24, 2010
- Bomb blast kills 10 at Burmese orphanage - Nov 14, 2011
- Chandigarh boy wins Kingfisher's Himalayan expedition - Jul 15, 2011
- Welfare homes themselves violate child rights: Agnivesh - Feb 20, 2012
- Madonna to open an orphanage - Jun 30, 2011
- Father-daughter duo complete Trans-Greenland Ski Expedition - Jun 09, 2011
- Paris Hilton visits orphans in Bali - Nov 18, 2011
- High adrenaline adventures in Himachal's rugged trails - Jun 01, 2011
- Jamia Bazaar's second edition gets bigger, better - Feb 11, 2012
- "Avika Gor Is A Thorough Professional" Says Prabhakar Shukla - Aug 07, 2010
- SCRIPT 2012 film fest invites entries - Oct 13, 2011
- India will get more prominence at Harvard - Aug 07, 2011
- Malaysia's 'Mother Mangalam' turns 85 - May 17, 2011
- Tamil Nadu eco-tourism department organizes trekking expedition - Nov 29, 2009
Tags: abled, adventure club, amalgamation, caste, congress leader, different cultures, dilip, infrastructure equipment, international academy, karnataka, learning experience, madhya pradesh, member group, mysore, new experiences, orphanages, orphans, speech impairment, strata, tamil nadu