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Nepal's monks trade robes for running shoes

Last Updated 17 March 2018, 19:49 IST

Swapping their maroon robes for running shoes, seven Buddhist monks take off at a sprint across the hills surrounding their remote village in the foothills of Nepal's Himalayas.

They are aspiring ultra-marathon runners, hoping the sport will put their remote village on the map and provide the funds needed to rebuild homes destroyed by a massive earthquake nearly three years ago.

"We found out that we can get many opportunities through running and hope to do something from our monk team -- make a name for our village and bring development here. That is why we are running," says Man Bahadur Lama, 21, the fastest of the group.

The monks -- most of them in their early twenties -- follow a strict regime, praying in the morning before disappearing into the hills to run up to 40 km each afternoon. Life is tough in Sindhukot  village, which lies just 80 km from Kathmandu but like many rural communities in impoverished Nepal feels totally cut off from the rest of the world. The nearest school is a two-hour walk and the shops are in a neighbouring village.

Many Buddhist families in Nepal send at least one son to join the local monastery, where they are usually fed, clothed and educated -- relieving their parents of the financial burden.

Lama was sent away when he was just eight, but is currently living back at home as the village monastery was destroyed in the 2015 earthquake.

Fellow monk Mingma Lama is matter-of-fact about his new pursuit, which he says his monastic duties in the community have prepared him for.

"Every day we go up and down the hills. We often have to walk far... So running wasn't too hard for us," he said.

Mingma Gyalbo, a member of the monastery who also organises races nearby, said the monks are talented but need more support to excel.
"They don't have the technical know-how, like for their diet, or even proper shoes for running," Gyalbo said.

Trail running and ultra marathons are gaining popularity in Nepal, where the Himalayan terrain lends itself to extreme tests of human endurance.
Nepal now hosts a handful of races each year, including the world's highest marathon that starts at Mount Everest base camp at a breathless altitude of 5,364 metres.

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(Published 10 March 2018, 19:42 IST)

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