The Standard (St. Catharines)

Volunteers feed hungry animals at revered Hindu shrine in Nepal

Without visitors offering food, starvation loomed for temple’s denizens

- BINAJ GURUBACHAR­YA

KATHMANDU, NEPAL—When COVID-19 came to Nepal, attention turned to an unlikely group of victims: hundreds of monkeys, cows and pigeons.

Normally, the animals are fed by thousands of devotees at the country’s most revered Hindu temple, Pashupatin­ath temple in Kathmandu. But last month, Nepal’s government ordered a complete lockdown to stop the spread of the coronaviru­s. People were forbidden from leaving their homes. Temples closed. And the animals risked starvation.

Now, every morning and evening, a few guards, about a dozen staff and some volunteers come out to ensure the animals survive.

“We are trying to make sure that these animals are not starving and they are taken care of,” said Pradeep Dhakal, an official of the Pashupatin­ath Developmen­t Trust, which controls the temple and surroundin­g areas.

Nepal has nine confirmed cases of the coronaviru­s. The lockdown, imposed March 24, banned all flights and ground transport, and closed markets, schools and offices.

It is common for devotees to feed cows, which are sacred and worshipped by the Hindus, and monkeys, which are believed to be descendant­s of the Hindu god Hanuman. Cows line up the path leading to the temple and the banks of the Bagmati River, while monkeys roam freely around the forested hill next to the shrine.

Dry corn is spread out on the banks of the river for pigeons while a dough is made for cows from grain. Hundreds of monkeys mostly line up to receive food from volunteers.

Each meal takes about four to six sacks of food.

The monkeys have not attacked the volunteers, said one, Nivesh Dugar. Minutes later, a large monkey snatched the plastic basket full of freshly cutout dough.

In this difficult time, said Dugar, an environmen­tal engineer, “we are just trying to help the animals survive.”

 ?? NIRANJAN SHRESTHA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A volunteer feeds animals, normally fed by thousands of devotees, at Pashupatin­ath temple, Nepal’s most revered Hindu shrine, in Kathmandu.
NIRANJAN SHRESTHA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A volunteer feeds animals, normally fed by thousands of devotees, at Pashupatin­ath temple, Nepal’s most revered Hindu shrine, in Kathmandu.

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