Shoes for the children of Ramana’s Garden
Sunday, December 9th, 2007We got on a train again this morning @6:50am headed to Haridwar. We arrived in Haridwar at around noon. There was a taxi waiting on us there to take us to Rishikesh. We arrived at the Divine Ganga Hotel at 1:30pm. I went straight over to the orphanage to see what the plan would be that afternoon to help the children get their shoes we were purchasing. Tilak, Llyn and the kids went to check into the hotel.
I found Cara and Gary after some time looking in his room making Christmas cards for the sponsors of Ramana’s Garden. They said that Prabha had decided that all the children should have the same shoes and she is having a shoe salesman deliver a bunch of shoes around 5:00 to have the children try on and determine each of their shoe sizes. I was excited about this!!! I stayed with Cara and Gary to help them with the Christmas cards. We laughed and told stories while we worked. Some of the kids joined us as well. We put dove ornaments that the kids had made into the cards that we were making. I stayed there for about 3 hours helping and decided I had better go check on the rest of the family.
We decided to get a snack and we worked with the kids on some of their school work.
Tilak and I returned to the orphanage around 5:00 to help with the shoes. They took us to the room that they have satsang each night. The shoes were piled in boxes there. The kids were outside the room in line waiting to try on their shoes. They were so excited and so was I!!! The small children came in first and we began trying to find the right size shoes for them. Then the next older and so on. It made my heart more happy than I could ever describe to see these children excited about getting shoes. Many of them had never had shoes that tie (only flip flops) and we had to show them how to lace and tie their shoes.
They were very grateful for them and it showed with their “thank you’s” that they gave us along with the smiles and hugs!
We left there feeling high. We came back to the room and decided to have a late supper at Dev Raj restaurant with Llyn and Carter. We all ate well. We then went shopping for awhile afterward.
We retired to our rooms and had the first good night’s sleep in several days.
The hike up to the waterfall was beautiful. The trail was green. The air was clean. It was amazingly quiet. There were a couple of places to cut off of the trail and take a peek at the waterfall before you get to the top. We did so and took some pictures. At the top there was a bridge that crossed over the waterfall and a pool of water from the waterfall that we let the kids play in. They stripped to their underwear and played in the water until they were too cold to continue. Tilak and I stood on the bridge and watched the kids play, looked at the scenery and were glad to be there together.
We walked across the bridge that night to a restaurant called Chotiwala. Tilak had eaten at this restaurant when he was in India before and said that it was good food. Outside the restaurant sits a man painted purple with his hair pointed up in a pony tail who greets the customers as they come in by ringing a bell. We got our picture with him. The food was good. They served spaghetti there and French fries so the kids were happy. Tilak and I got traditional Indian food (Masala Dosa, rice, Vegetable Korma, etc.). We left full and happy.
Texil paired up with some boys that were close to his age and he helped them to write in cursive and read some English. Kali brought some of her math homework and worked on it next to some girls her age. They were interested in her work to see how it compared to theirs.