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Everest Base Camp Yoga Adventure Trek
October 31, 2010 to November 14, 2010
A Pilgrimage into the Himalayas
View the brochure
Please contact tingting.peng@gmail.com for more information.

Nepal Orphans Home is honored and privileged to have the support of Sanctuary for Kids Foundation, a not-for-profit organization that raises money for international and Canadian charities. Sanctuary for Kids particularly supports charitable organizations that provide vital services to youth and children who are in crisis. Please visit www.sanctuaryforkids.org to learn more. During 2009 the Sanctuary for Kids Foundation donated funds toward Nepal Orphans Home’s newest home in Dhapasi for rescued Kamlari girls. The home opened in November and is called Papa’s Gumba (Sanctuary) House. The Sanctuary for Kids Foundation is also collecting donations for Nepal Orphans Home’s capital fund for construction of a future campus.
Welcome to Papa’s House
Our Mission
Nepal Orphans Home attends to the welfare of children in Nepal who are orphaned, abandoned, or not supported by their parents. Papa’s House provides for the children’s basic needs of food, shelter, and clothing, as well as schooling and health care, and administers to their emotional needs with love and compassion. Papa’s House allows children to grow up in a nurturing environment. The mission of Nepal Orphans Home is not just to rescue children from abject poverty, but to enable the children to develop and realize their potentials.
Our Vision
Our dream, in addition to the eradication of the Kamlari system, is to have a main campus in the Kathmandu valley. Currently Nepal Orphans Home leases all of our buildings and grounds. In particular, we would like to purchase 3 to 5 hectares of property (roughly 7 to 12 acres) outside of Kathmandu city, where we would have two homes, one for 100 girls and one for 50 boys, with a large playground. Read more
Our Story
Michael Hess found the orphanage in March 2005. This is the story of his discovery.
One fateful day many months ago I walked over the crest of a hill that I had found myself gazing upon nightly from my balcony. The crest was only a mile away, a 20-minute uphill walk. With each step I was leaving the hustle and noise of Kathmandu farther behind and entering a world of relaxed harmony, a quiet and serene landscape of individual small homes with gardens, and more chickens and goats than pedestrians, on the rocky dirt road snaking towards the top. There was a powerful
energy of goodwill emanating from the smiles of every person I would pass.
A friend of mine had found an orphanage another mile distant that she said needed some help, and she was anxious to take me there.
As we hiked I felt a tremendous sense of clarity, an awareness that I was in a moment of divine intervention; an unaccountable, quiet excitement started coursing through me that suggested something pretty remarkable was taking place in my life.
When we reached a miserable, abandoned-looking little house I couldn’t imagine anyone living there. “This is it,” my friend offered, and I was sure she was joking. It was still—not a sign of life in the midday heat—and so small. “Namaste!” my friend called out, and in moments we were engulfed by the kind and cheerful residents, some eager, some shy, as they poured out of the house led by “puppy,” the small house mascot and protector.
The spirit that came like a cloud around us was thick with love.
It seemed like a reunion had taken place when several hours later I waved goodbye. I felt that all of my life's work was in preparing me for this moment, and I am ready.
Read more about the discovery and renovation of the orphanage
Read about some of our children
View photos from our homes |