Quarterly Report (October, 2004)
[ Picture of the newly constructed Nitya Annadana Hall. ]
Dear friends and devotees,
Hare Krishna! Please accept my humble pranams.
This
month we have completed a new annadana hall at our Ashram in Bhadrak,
Orissa where we are conducting the Nitya Annadana Seva program for
daily feeding needy children with spiritual food. Below you can see
some of the pictures of the hall from the beginning stages up to
completion. We had hoped to complete this hall before the commencement
of the rainy season, but due to several delays we were only able to
finish the work half way through the rainy season. Despite the delay
the hall will provide us with a great relief for the remainder of the
year allowing us to continue the distribution of free food regardless
of weather conditions.
In
the past we were always at the mercy of the weather, and as soon as it
rained our program of food distribution would have to be cancelled or
delayed till the weather cleared. Even on days when there was no rain,
the children would still face difficulty from the scorching summer heat
which is almost unbearable. Now with the new annadana hall, the
children can enjoy their meals without disturbance.
The
main frame of the annadana hall is made from iron, but from the ground
level it has concrete pillars going 10 feet into the ground for a
strong foundation. We chose to utilize iron instead of concrete for the
main frame so that in the future it can be easily unassembled and the
entire hall can be moved to another location with little loss of money.
Once
the frame was completed, we needed to attach the tin roofing. One of
our volunteers had to go to the state capital, Bhubaneswar, to buy
1,000 sets of special nuts and 4 inch bolts to fix the tin roof to the
iron frame (they are a special "J" shaped bolt). These nuts and bolts
weren’t available in Bhadrak because in this area no one
makes the roof frame out of iron, everyone uses wood. For wood frames
they use an "L" shaped bolt system to attach the roofing. Our volunteer
had to spend an entire day searching throughout Bhubaneswar for a shop
that sold them, and finally by nightime he had located only 800 pieces
(enough for the roof, but not for the verandas). A second trip two
weeks later was required to locate another 200 pieces to use for the
veranda roofing.
Before
completion of the annadana hall we had switched from distributing rice,
dahl and subji to distributing puris and subji. This was because if it
would rain the children could carry the puris and subji in their hands
and eat it at home. With rice and dahl we wouldnt be able to serve
anyone if it started to rain. Of course the children like puris and
subji best, but it is much harder to make and more time consuming. To
feed the children we need to hand roll thousands of puris and fry them
quickly in oil. Not an easy task when there are hundreds of hungry
children waiting to get a hot puri. Just to get an idea of how much
each one eats, last week I saw one small child eat 37 puris with subji;
I didnt think it was physically possible. Another handicapped man ate
48 puris! Personally I can only manage to eat 4 or 5 puris at most, but
these small children are able to eat nearly 10 times that. You can
imagine how many puris have to be rolled by hand to feed 200 of these
children.
Completion
of the annadana hall was delayed slightly due to faulty estimates
provided by the workers. We soon realized that all the estimates given
for completion of their work were both too short and too cheap. In
Orissa workers have a tendency to give optimistic estimates in the
hopes that it will convince you to carry out the project. They think if
they give the actual estimate it may discourage you from undertaking
the work. Thus they will tell you they will make everything in 15 days,
but once the work starts going on you find out it will actually take
them one or two months; and they will say they need to use only 500
kilos of iron, but as the work goes on you find out it will actually
require 1,500 kilos. This type of misinformation is too common here, so
we have to adjust all of our estimates taking such things into account.
The workers fear if they tell the true cost or time involved, you will
go to some other worker who will give a lower estimate. There is no
real gain to them other than to secure the work, as their labor fees
are fixed before hand.
For
our next project we have already stocked up on 30,000 bricks, piled up
throughout the Ashram land, to begin construction on the Bhaktivedanta
Ashram School Project. New bricks won't be available till the end of
November due to the rainy season, so we had to purchase the bricks
ahead of the rainy season. Bricks can only be made in the sun where the
fire will burn hot. Since we plan to start building the Bhaktivedanta
Ashram School in the coming month, we stocked up on some extra bricks
to be safe. Most of the beginning work will involve concrete for the
foundation, so we shouldn't need too many bricks right away. We had
hoped to begin work on the foundation a little earlier, but due to the
delays in completing the annadana hall we have had to adjust the
starting date a little.
Yours in service,
Jahnava Nitai Das,
Bhaktivedanta Ashram &
Bhaktivedanta International Charities
http://www.foodrelief.org/
[ Below are some pictures showing the work on the Nitya Annadana Hall at the Bhaktivedanta Ashram in Bhadrak, Orissa. ]