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Photo by Violin Chan. Kathmandu, Nepal, 2010​

Photo by Violin Chan. Kathmandu, Nepal, 2010​

Photo-A-Week #4: The Girl with the Large Shovel

May 27, 2012

When I look at the buildings in Nepal, I often consider where the building materials came from and how they were made. Maybe it's due to my architecture background. But there's something much more…. it's the reason why I go to mission trips in the very first place: the people whom God loves so dearly. 

Who made the bricks? How were they made? You'll find this out soon in the new photobook that we're busily working on.

Aside from bricks, concrete is the next most common building material used in Nepal. It certainly is the most vital for the strength of their buildings. However, in my quest to learn more about these building materials and how they were made, a pattern has emerged from the painful reality. It is the widespread practice of child labour.

When I look at this little girl whom Violin met at a construction site in 2010, I wonder how young she was. The shovel was up to the height of her shoulders! I also wonder how many hours she spent per day working and how physically demanding the tasks were. In first-world countries, we make concrete by simply mixing cement, sand, gravel, and water together in large concrete truck mixers. But as you see in the picture, it was up to this little girl and many others like her to do the job. Look into her eyes... do you see a glimpse of what her life was like?

- Joe

In Nepal
Photo by Violin Chan. Kathmandu, Nepal, 2010​

Photo by Violin Chan. Kathmandu, Nepal, 2010​

Photo-A-Week #3: Children in the Brick Kilns

May 21, 2012

Today is a statutory holiday in Canada, but I have spent most of the day working on the photobook about the brick kilns in Nepal. Page after page, I looked for suitable pictures to best accompany the text. When I got to the chapter about the children in the brick kilns, my eyes were wet with tears. My heart was heavy when I saw how the children were robbed of their childhood. I thought to myself... they shouldn't be there. They shouldn't be working. They shouldn't be so dirty. But what I saw was the incredibly sad reality. Their grief and sufferings demand our response and help. Please join our cause in supporting the children in Nepal. 

- Joe

In Nepal
​Photo by Joe Lee. Kathmandu, Nepal, 2010

​Photo by Joe Lee. Kathmandu, Nepal, 2010

Photo-A-Week #2: Brick Kilns in Nepal

May 14, 2012

I have travelled to many places. But if I were to name one place that shocked me the most, it would be the brick kilns that I visited in the outskirts of Kathmandu.

Brick kilns in Nepal is not your typical factory where workers operate different machines to manufacture goods in an enclosed building. Instead, workers in the brick kilns turn raw earth into fired bricks with only their bare hands, while continually exposed to the intense heat and dust pollution.

My visits to the brick kilns usually lasted around an hour or so, yet I found them physically challenging. One time I even got very sick afterwards. I simply could not comprehend what the lives of these workers were like...

- Joe

In Nepal
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