‘Kung Fu’ nuns bike across Himalayas

‘Kung Fu’ nuns bike across Himalayas
REMARKABLE FEAT: Buddhist nuns pose in Himachal Pradesh during their cycle across the Himalayas to raise awareness about human trafficking of girls and women in Nepal and India. (Reuters)
Updated 18 September 2016
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‘Kung Fu’ nuns bike across Himalayas

‘Kung Fu’ nuns bike across Himalayas

NEW DELHI: Clad in black sweatpants, red jackets and white helmets, the hundreds of cyclists pedaling the treacherously steep, narrow mountain passes to India from Nepal could be mistaken for a Himalayan version of the Tour de France.

The similarity, however, ends there. This journey is longer and tougher, the prize has no financial value or global recognition and the participants are not professional cyclists but nuns from India, Nepal, Bhutan and Tibet.
Five hundred nuns from the Buddhist sect known as the Drukpa Order on Saturday completed a 4,000-km bicycle trek from Nepal’s Katmandu to the northern city of Leh in India to raise awareness about human trafficking in the remote region.
“When we were doing relief work in Nepal after the earthquakes last year, we heard how girls from poor families were being sold because their parents could not afford to keep them anymore,” 22-year-old nun Jigme Konchok Lhamo told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
“We wanted to do something to change this attitude that girls are less than boys and that it’s okay to sell them,” she said, adding that the bicycle trek shows “women have power and strength like men.”
South Asia may boast women leaders and be home to cultures that revere motherhood, but many girls and women live with the threat of violence and without many basic rights.
From honor killings in Pakistan to foeticide in India and child marriage in Nepal, women face a barrage of threats, although growing awareness, better laws and economic empowerment are bringing a slow change in attitudes.
The bicycle trek, from Nepal into India, is nothing new for the Drukpa nuns.
This is the fourth such journey they have made, meeting local people, government officials and religious leaders to spread messages of gender equality, peaceful co-existence and respect for the environment.
They also deliver food to the poor, help villagers get medical care and are dubbed the “Kung Fu nuns” due to their training in martial arts.
The Drukpa nuns say they believe they are helping to change attitudes.
“Most of the people, when they see us on our bikes, think we are boys,” said 18-year-old nun Jigme Wangchuk Lhamo.