Off the tourist track, Nepal still scarred by the quake

Journalism , Nepal , Politics Jun 02, 2018 No Comments

The first thought that went through Sanu Maya Gurung’s mind was simple: “I don’t want to die at work.”

It was April 25, 2015, and Ms Gurung, 32, was at her tailoring store in the village of Chautara in Nepal’s Sindhupalchok District. When the earthquake began, a little before midday, she ran outside, where her thoughts turned immediately to her family. “If I’m going to die,” she remembers thinking, “I should die with them.”

Everyone else on the street, it seemed, had been similarly driven by instinct into the open. To remain indoors, in buildings that may soon turn to rubble, was tantamount to suicide.
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But being outside was not much better. “The ground began to shift beneath our feet,” Ms Gurung says. “It was the scariest moment of my life.”

Read the full article at The Daily Beast.

Matthew Clayfield

Matthew Clayfield is a journalist, critic and screenwriter.

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