It all started with a simple idea. Instead of a whole bunch of people driving to Aldershot, I would combine efforts and collect a few things from local people who had things to donate and drive it all to the Army base for Ghurkas. It would save time and petrol. And it meant I could finally do a little something for the people of Nepal who had lost everything in the horrible earthquake that hit last week. It was only a small gesture.
After arranging to use our local village hall in Old Windsor as a drop off point and enlisting the help of a fellow resident, we discovered that the containers going to Nepal from Aldershot were already full. I had committed to people that their donations would go to Nepal so I needed to make sure that happened. But how?
In a Twitter storm, I initially received a vague commitment from the British Red Cross that they would take our donations. It later transpired that what they meant was they would take our donations and sell them in their shops for cash. I was unhappy with that arrangement as many of our items would be unsuitable for resale in the UK as they had been specifically chosen with the survivors of the disaster in mind.
Having filled my car with the donations from that day and due to demand, we secured the hall for a further drop off slot for the following evening. I spent the night looking for an organisation that would sort and ship the goods for us. Purely by chance, Twitter came to my rescue.
I spotted a tweet by the Leader of the Royal Borough of Greenwich, Councillor Denis Hyland,
The Leisure Centre was shocked by the quantity of goods we donated. I indicated that I would be returning the next day with the same again. I returned to Old Windsor just in time to open the doors of our village hall for the next donations.
What happened next was beyond my wildest dreams. The room started to fill up. Within the first 15 minutes, we had surpassed the volume of goods donated the day before. The parking lot was full. People were arriving with cars filled with bags. People brought tents. We received over 15 tents. We received sleeping bags, some used, some brand new with the tags still on them. We received baby nappies and food and wipes and clothes. We received shoes and boots and slippers. We received blankets, probably 100s of blankets. We received coats, hats, scarves, gloves, mittens.
As we neared the end of the three hour collection window, it became abundantly clear that I wouldn't fit it all in my car since it was already full. We had run out of room in the hall. We had filled my car and people were leaving bags just outside the door.
Once again the power of social media swung into action. With more than a little from from my friends, we secured a small truck courtesy of Frontline Logistics, to meet me and a few others at the hall at 8 am on Friday morning. We loaded the truck FULL and headed off towards Eltham.
Mid journey I received a tweet from a member of the Nepalese community asking if we would deliver to Woolwich Town Hall as the sorting and packing centre was located there. We modified our destination and continued round the M25.
Arriving at just after 10 am, we were greeted at the door by a member of the borough. With the help of the countless volunteers, we set to unloading the truck. I was shown to the sorting room where a large number of Ghurka widows were sorting items and boxing it up. It was an incredible operation. Every box had to be labelled with contents itemised and weighed. The room was full of goods and volunteers. What initially looked like chaos was, upon careful inspection, a fine oiled machine.
I hand delivered a bag of baby shoes that one woman had handed to me saying that they were her children's baby shoes and had been kept carefully preserved in her loft all these years. She was donating them because the children of Nepal needed those shoes more than she needed those memories.
I also hand delivered a lovely 100% wool blanket that must have cost a fortune. It was given to me by a woman who told me it was her mother's who had passed away. She could still smell the scent of her mother on the blanket. Again, she felt the people of Nepal needed that blanket more than she did.
I wept at every story.
I was introduced to the leaders of the Nepal community and they were touched by these stories. They were overcome with gratitude at the volume of goods we had come so far to deliver.
I was lucky to meet these leaders. Notably, I met Sonia and Fatta Thappa, who run Skills and Care, a dynamic, community-led, Nepalese social enterprise organisation. Fatta was the individual I was exchanging tweets with. I also met Sushila Karki of Nepalese Nurses, who have already sent doctors, nurses, and goods to Nepal and were planning to send more over the next few days.
I was satisfied that our community's donations would make it to the survivors of the earthquake. On Saturday, 2 May, 500 kg was shipped and 1600 kg will be shipped tomorrow, 5 May.
Our job is not done. Due to our overwhelming response, funds are needed to pay the cargo. You can help our goods get to Nepal by donating HERE.
And lastly a big thank you to all of you who responded by opening your hearts and giving.
2 comments:
"I was unhappy with that arrangement as many of our items would be unsuitable for resale in the UK as they had been specifically chosen with the survivors of the disaster in mind."
I really hope you are not referring to the quality of the items you collected - while these people may have lost everything, I don't think it's a helpful approach to suggest something that no one in the UK would use anymore is still good enough for them. At least the stuff the charities get for them is new and has not been used by someone else before (and thus doesn't come with someone else's smell already on it).
That wasn't what I was implying. We sent second hand wooden spoons, for example, as kitchen utensils were requested. I doubt very seriously that anyone would purchase a wooden spoon in a second hand charity shop. I might be wrong but that was our thoughts. Also, we donated a lot of baby clothing. Most charities refuse to even take baby clothing. We also donated lseeping bags and tents specifically for use in Nepal. Not something I suspect many people would buy at a charity shop. Disposable nappies, hand wipes, baby food, baby formula were among the other items donated that would be unsuitable for a charity shop. This is in no way derogative of the Nepal people. The things given were absolutely lovely.
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