Ladakh News

Ladakh Flood update

The LAHDC has put together a website providing comprehensive updates of relief work ongoing in the Leh area following the flooding in early August.

ladakhflood.org provides facts and figures, an inventory of damaged infrastructure, relief operations and reconstruction and rehabilitation.

We are trying to get first hand detail from our members in Ladakh but communication in some areas is still problematic. We will post updates here as and when we receive them.

Call for Papers: Clarification

Call for Papers: 15th IALS Conference, Aberdeen, Scotland, 24–28 August 2011

Feedback from members after the Call for Papers was circulated seems to indicate some misunderstanding of the nature of the Conference, particularly its emphasis on a particular theme. As we tried to make clear in the original Call for Papers, we hope that the theme will be interpreted broadly, and will attract papers from a wide range of disciplines. To reinforce the point, please read the following clarification.

Responding to the Environment in Ladakh and the Western Himalayas


Throughout its history, the ruling powers, cultures and populations of Ladakh and the Western Himalaya have had to contend with difficult terrains, variable natural resources, and changing patterns of climate, disease and biodiversity, of which recent natural disasters such as this year’s Leh-area floods are merely one example. Both at a local and regional level, human responses to these changing conditions have helped to shape the society, economy and religions that we know today. Trade routes have shifted in response to shifts in rivers, the availability of passes and the vagaries of local climate. Villages and towns have expanded, contracted and been extinguished in response to the availability (or over-abundance) of water and the possibilities of agriculture and nomadism. Royal families, governments and religious and medical institutions have responded to the needs of populations struck by diseases, floods and earthquakes as much as they have to the possibilities of new products and trading conditions. These responses have included everything from the performance of rituals for both wealth and adversity, the development of medical institutions and practices, the provision of tax breaks, the negotiation of treaties and the siting and architecture of towns, palaces, and monasteries. In more recent times, the protection of archaeological and art-historical treasures have also focused minds on the questions of the region’s distinctive climatic conditions.

As well as being a standard IALS meeting with its usual range of papers, the 2011 conference in Aberdeen wishes to encourage participants to focus their regional expertise on the broad questions of (i) the actual nature and conditions of environment and landscape that influence life in the region, and (ii) how people respond and have responded to a changing and often extreme climate and landscape, at a social, economic, religious and political level.

In this regard, the conference can include papers aimed at understanding this issue in three frames: firstly, the historical frame; secondly, the conditions and responses presently at work in the region; and thirdly, the possibilities for the future. It is envisaged that addressing this issue in its fullness will require expertise from all fields of academic study— anthropology, archaeology, art-history, epidemiology, history, hydrology, medicine, political science, religious studies, sociology —whilst also maintaining that distinctive interaction between international and local perspectives and scholarship that is, and always has been the hallmark of the International Association for Ladakh Studies.

Call for Papers: 15th IALS Conference

Call for Papers: 15th IALS Conference, Aberdeen, Scotland, 24–28 August 2011

We are happy to announce that the 15th Conference of the International Association for Ladakh Studies will be held at the University of Aberdeen from 24 to 28 August 2011. The central theme of the conference is defined as ‘Responding to Climate, Biodiversity and Resource Changes in Ladakh and elsewhere in the Western Himalaya’. We hope, as always, to make this a multidisciplinary event, where scholars from different fields may interact fruitfully.

While the conference organizers will give priority to papers addressing the various aspects of the conference theme, we also welcome papers on more general topics associated with the study of Ladakh.

For a full conference statement and more information on deadlines and conference participation, guidelines for submission of papers, and guidelines for applicants seeking funding assistance, please visit our
Aberdeen 2011 conference pages.

In memoriam: Professor Luciano Petech

Professor Luciano Petech, the distinguished Italian historian of Ladakh, passed away in Rome on 29 September, aged 96. Professor Petech began his studies on Ladakh in the 1930s. His Ph.D thesis, A Study on the Chronicles of Ladakh (Indian Tibet), was published in 1939, and focused on the La dvags rgyal rabs. He returned to the same topic in a series of articles published after the Second World War and, most notably, in his 1977 volume, The Kingdom of Ladakh C.950-1842 A.D. This book remains the single most important work of Western historical scholarship on Ladakh, providing a firm foundation on which subsequent scholars have been able to build.

Professor Petech was already very frail in 2007 when the IALS conference took place in Rome, and unable to take part in person. However, a group of us were able to visit him in his flat, and the first Rome conference volume Mountains, Monasteries and Mosques is dedicated to him. We are thankful for his long life and manifold contributions to Himalayan scholarship, and send our condolences to his family.

Lettre du Ladakh: Les Jours D'apres

Céline Moulys has kindly allowed us to share her eyewitness account of the flooding in Ladakh.
Céline's
Lettre du Ladakh: Les Jours D'apres can be viewed as a pdf download.

Flood Reports

A month or so after the devastating floods several reports of interest have been compiled. The official record has been summarised in this REACH Ladakh report.

A
pdf report detailing affected villages and camps is also now available.

Arrival of 20th Bakula Rinpoche


Dr Sonam Wangchok has submitted a short, illustrated essay on the arrival of the 20th Bakula Rinpoche to Spituk. The essay has been posted on our
Gallery & Essays page.

Ladakh Flood Relief donations


The following NGOs are now accepting Ladakh Flood Relief donations. The IALS claims no affiliation with or responsibility for any of the organisations/sites listed. The inclusion of a link does not amount to an IALS endorsement.


Oxfam India
Gaden Relief (please tick 'general' donation option until specific relief projects are finalised)
Mahabodhi International Meditation Centre
Save the Children India
Medecins sans frontieres
Boond
E-xode
Ladakh Relief

Tibet Heritage Fund is assisting with the relief effort by repairing houses and improving drainage on the fringes of old Leh town, assessing stability of flood-damaged buildings in Leh and Choglamsar, providing designs for rebuilding with the later intention of being directly involved with rebuilding.

Namgyal Institute For Research on Ladakhi Art and Culture

(Account no: 10942143068. Electronic transfers: SBIN 0001365 State Bank of India, Main Branch Leh, Ladakh. (J&K).
More details available
here.

Chief Executive Councillors Relief Fund
CEC relief fund - J&K Bank, Leh account number CG-128
Contribution by cheque to be mailed to: Coordination Cell, Office of the Chief Executive Councillor, Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council, Leh, Ladakh 194101 INDIA
More details available
here.

The Lamo Trust (undertaking relief work in large parts of Old Leh town). Donations can be sent to "The Lamo Trust' - State Bank of India, Main branch, Leh, Ladakh 194101. Account number 30913378915. For electronic transfer the rtgs code is SBIN0001365. Please note we can only receive Indian Rupees as we do not have clearance for receiving foreign funds.


Flood update 3

A video report by French researcher, Céline Moulys, has been posted online. The footage covers the flood damage in Choglamsar and Leh and begins to capture the scale of the disaster.

Heritage Talk at Lonpo House

The Himalayan Cultural Heritage Foundation (HCHF) restarted its daily activities after the misfortune caused by the flash flood in Ladakh with a successful PowerPoint presentation on Buddhist Monastic Festival in Ladakh by Dr Georgias T. Halkais, a British Academy Research Fellow from the University of London and member of International Association for Ladakh Studies (IALS). The talk, held on the 18th August, was attended by foreign research students, tourists, Ladakhi students, cultural guides and members from other NGOs. It was heartening to witness that the participants could forget all kind of street talks about what had happened in Leh once they were in the lecture hall and concentrated their mind on the motivating and fruitful academic talk by Dr Georgias T. Halkais. 

Flood update 1


More
footage from Leh has now been posted at NDTV.

A control room has also been set up in Leh and anyone trying to trace friends and family can call these numbers:

99069 90613
99069 90833
99069 90807
99069 83544
99069 90748
99069 90835
99069 90787

Satellite phone: 00870 7636 13623

Flood update


The internet is now awash with news updates on the flooding in Leh area. This
recent India Today article provides a summary, there is also updated video footage now posted at NDTV.

There are reports that landlines are working in Leh, although I suspect on a fairly local basis, and the airtel network appears to be working.

Worst hit areas appear to be Leh old town, especially the old bus stand and below including the hospital, new bus stand and other private and government buildings in that area. Choglamsar has also been very badly affected, as has Sabu, and Nyimo and Phyang.


Flooding in Leh area

Reports are emerging from Ladakh that there has been serious flooding in and around Leh area. You can read more on today's Daily Excelsior homepage.

The IALS has many members both visiting and living in the area and we are concerned for the well-being of friends and family. Communications have been badly disrupted in the area but if anyone has any news that they would be happy to share with other IALS members, or post on this website, please do
contact us.

As reports become cleared we will also try and update this news page accordingly.

Our thoughts and best wishes are with everyone affected by this tragedy.

Hindu Kush-Himalayan countries will use a global platform to share biodiversity data

Hindu Kush-Himalayan countries will use a global platform to share biodiversity data
 
(Kathmandu, 15 June 2010) Some twenty-five representatives from the eight countries of the Hindu Kush-Himalayan region are meeting in Kathmandu from 14 to 18 June to discuss ‘Open access to and publishing of mountain biodiversity data from the Hindu-Kush Himalayan region’. The representatives, from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, India, Myanmar, Nepal, and Pakistan have been brought together in a workshop jointly organised by ICIMOD in collaboration with the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) and the Global Mountain Biodiversity Assessment (GMBA).
 
The participants will use the opportunity provided by the GBIF/GMBA global platform to publish, harvest, and use biodiversity data from the region. Following the principles of free and open access to biodiversity data, and mutual benefits for scientific research, conservation, and sustainable development, the countries have initiated a partnership process to adopt globally standardised and harmonised biodiversity information. The workshop will introduce international data and metadata standards, geo-referencing of biodiversity data, and use of data in policy making.
 
Mr. Berend de Groot, ICIMOD Director of Programme Operations, welcomed the participants and emphasised the importance of long-term partnerships among ICIMOD’s member countries and global partners to promote standardised and harmonised biodiversity data and information. This is urgently needed to fill the gaps in data revealed by the 4th Assessment Report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The ‘Transect Approach’ being promoted by ICIMOD for biodiversity assessment and long-term monitoring in the region should be linked to these activities.
Delivering the  Key Note Address, Dr Vishwas Chavan from GBIF emphasised the importance of information management as an integral part of the research agenda. He urged the regional countries and thematic global partners to use the opportunity to mainstream biodiversity informatics. Dr Eva Sphen from GMBA stressed how global biodiversity datasets can be used to address questions related to mountain biodiversity data and that there is an urgent need to broaden the data types to supplement biodiversity data. 
 
Speaking on the occasion, Mr Krishna Prasad Acharya, Joint Secretary, Ministry of Forest and Soil Conservation, Government of Nepal welcomed the approaches and emphasised the importance of free access data for effective conservation and the importance of supporting such initiatives.    
For further information contact:                           Dr Nakul Chettri Team Leader, Biodiversity Conservation and Management (BCM) International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development, (ICIMOD) email: nchettri@icimod.org
Ms Nira Gurung, Communications Officer
International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development, (ICIMOD) email: info@icimod.org, ngurung@icimod.org
[end]

Education, Art, Culture and Career Counseling seminar held in Nubra

Leh, June 10, 2010 The All Nubra Volunteer Students organized a day long seminar under the topic “Education, Art, Culture and Career Counseling” in the premises of Higher Secondary School Deskit Nubra. As many as 500 students from all over Nubra region including teachers, parents and other eminent people participated in the seminar. Prof. Geshey Konchok Wangdus, Mulvi Mohd. Omar Nadvi and Dr. Sonam Wangchok, Ladakh Liaison officer for IALS and Secretary, Himalayan Cultural Heritage Foundation were among the special guest speakers on art, culture and moral education while as Mr. Stanzin Tsepel and Mr. Rigzin Spalgon gave lectures on the importance of career counseling in student’s life. Prof. Geshes Konchok Wangdus strongly advocated the role of language in preserving culture and the identity of the people. Likewise, Mulvi Mohd. Omar Nadvi stressed for right mind and right vision for getting education and Dr. Sonam Wangchok spoke on the importance of preserving rich cultural heritage of Himalaya. The Incharge SDM, Nubra, Mr. Phuntsog Wangchuk, Tehsildar also attended the seminar and addressed the gathering.

Wolf


For those following developments in Ladakhi cinema 'Wolf' is a new full length HD feature film which tells the story of a young man who crosses the line in his search for easy money. Shot in the social realist tradition with a cast of non-professional actors the film is a co-production with a UK and Ladakhi crew and is due for release into festivals later this year. A mobile cinema will also tour the Ladakh region screening the film in village schools and community centres. The film was shot in Leh and Tia village and was directed by Martin Salter and Skarma RInchen with cinematography by Matthew King. The film stars Tsewang Dorje, Tsering Mingyur, Rigzen Namgyal, Tsering Dolma and Lhanzes Tsering.

The latest trailer can be
viewed on youtube, or for a HD version (with a slightly different ending) click here.

Ladakhis at the Winter Olympics


Two Ladakhis are competing at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. Both Ladakh Scouts, Jamyang Namgial is competing in the Giant Slalom, and Tashi Lundup in Cross Country Skiing.

For more details click
here.

Postscript:

Tashi Lundup
finished 83rd in the Men's 15KM Free, whilst Jamyang Namgial came in 81st position in the Men's Giant Slalom.