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Saturday, August 28, 2010

Exchange Visit to Yachuli area

Best Practices team from Mechuka and Koyu Korang areas were in Yachuli area recently. They reached Itanagar from their respective villages on August 24 and on to Yazali on 25. The team from Mechuka had reached Itanagar via Along accompanied by Kago Yam, the Project Supervisor there. Similarly, Takhe Meena, Project Supervisor led the one man team from Koyu area to Itanagar via Pasighat.

The Best Practices Project Coordinator, Pura Aiya accompanied the team from Itanagar and they reached Yazali on August 26. Punyo Rina, Project Supervisor of the area was waiting for them. The same evening, they trekked the fifteen kilometer path to Rubdi where the women groups and male volunteers welcomed them. The team, dead tired after walking for hours together through serpentine jungle path was rejuvenated withe cultural programs in the Nyishi village in the evening.

The teams had extensive exchange of ideas and shared the works they are doing in their areas. They later visited Kuch-Kuth village as well and came back to Yazali the next day. The came back to Itanagar on August 28 after a brief visit to Ziro.

The teams, especially with women from Mechuka villages were quite impressed and happy with the trip. They were a bit scared crossing a dilapidated hanging bridge on their way to Kuch Kuth from Rubdi. The wet-rice cultivation system of the Apatanis inspired the women and they are determined to replicate such practice in Mechuka as well.

No woman from Koyu area could make it this time. Apparently the women were willing but their husbands were worried about the landslides and roadblocks. An energetic Gaon Bura of Kakki village represented the area.

Read this for a brief news report about the trip.

2 comments:

  1. The Best Practices Project of FGA appears to be a pathbreaking initiative as far as community centric interventions in rural Arunachal Pradesh are concerned. The importance of the intervention can be better understood by understanding the fact that Rural Development as a discipline is in evolving stage in the State and there is a need for proper documentation of the concept, methodology, and the process of intervention along with the outcomes of the intervention. This will provide leading light to the rural development practioners in the state as well as policy makers at the national and state level.
    It should also serve as an eye opener to those who profess to be in the rural development field in the state and have not spent a single night in the villages with the villagers.

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  2. Thanks, Rakesh, for visiting. Looking forward to an eventful journey together.

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