This unusual memoir immerses the reader in the fascinating story of a spirited girl in a remote, undeveloped region of Nepal near the border of Tibet, a place made known to the world in Peter Matthiesen's The Snow Leopard. Life above 13,000 feet in northern Dolpo--often called the last paradise because of its breathtaking snow-capped peaks, untouched beauty, and hand-irrigated green pastures--was one of constant risk and harsh survival. In the 1980s, Dolpo had no running water, electricity, motor vehicles, phones, school, or doctors, other than the local lamas, trained in the use of herbs and prayer.
Dorje Dolma's life centered around the care of her numerous younger brothers and sisters and the family's sheep, goats, and yaks. At age five she began herding and was soon taking the animals high in the mountains, where she fought off predatory wolves and snow leopards. Covering her first ten years, the story takes Dorje from her primitive mountain village to the bewildering city of Kathmandu, and finally to a new home in America, where she receives life-saving surgery.
With humor, soul, and insightful detail, the author gives us vividly told vignettes of daily life and the practice of centuries-old Tibetan traditions. She details the heartbreaking trials, natural splendors, and familial joys of growing up in this mysterious, faraway part of the world with its vanishing culture. The sharp increase in recent years of western trekkers to the area, and the introduction of modern communication and transportation, is causing rapid change in Dolpo. This wonderful and surprising tale of survival, loss, and self-reflection offers us entry to this difficult, yet magical, place.
Above all, this is the inspiring story of an indomitable spirit conquering all obstacles, a tale of a girl with a disability on her way to becoming a dynamic woman in a new world.
Yak Girl, Dorje Dolma, Sentient Publications, Paperback, 330 pp, $18.95
Dorje Dolma was born in the remote Dolpo region of Nepal, high in the mountains bordering Tibet. To find help for a life-threatening health condition, her parents took her at age ten on a month-long trek to Kathmandu, where they encountered westerners who brought Dorje to the United States for the surgery that saved her life. Dorje graduated from the University of Colorado with a degree in Fine Arts, worked as a pre-school teacher, and continues to develop her art. She will donate part of the proceeds from her book to help provide medical care to Dolpo.
1. A Small Girl in Dolpo
2. Playmates
3. Parents
4. Siblings
Sumchog's Horrible Accident The Death of a Baby Sister Losing a Baby Brother
5. Grandparents
My Father's Parents My Mother's Parents 6. Shomo Dechen
7. Daily Life in Dolpo
Stuck in the Snow Herding
8. Shomo Deye Lhamo and Summers in Shey
Herding in Shey Special Visitors Pilgrimage Festivals Family Visits The Curse Neighbors Saying Goodbye to Our Shey Community
9. Ani Dawa Lhamo and Ahyang Karma Tsering's Wedding
10. Shomo Deye Lhamo's Illness
11. The Month-Long Journey from Dolpo to Kathmandu
The Decision to Leave Dolpo Leaving My Home
12. Life in Kathmandu
Trying to Survive in the City Begging Pema Almost Dies
13. Searching for Doctors to Save Me
I Almost Become a Nun I Wanted to Go to School Rokpa and Meeting Mummy Lea Meeting the Inje Family Saying Goodbye to My Family At Rokpa House
14. Happy Home Boarding School
My First Exam Strangers Came to Visit Me I'm Going to America? A Letter from America Being Accused Seeing Jennifer Leaving Happy Home
15. Journey to America
Something Is Wrong with America Getting Around in Kathmandu with Jennifer Meeting Ram Leaving Nepal I Have to Eat Fish? Stopping in Thailand Stopping in California My New Home My New Life
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