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Dhankuta is a hill town with about 20,000 inh. Dhankuta
District in the eastern part of Nepal. Until about 1963
Dhankuta Bazaar (the town) was the administrative
headquarters for the whole of north-eastern Nepal. Located a
half mile above the town were the buildings of the Bada
Hakim, the feudal district governor of the whole
north-eastern region, a man with enormous power. The town
also had the regional jail and army post. Because of
Dhankuta's isolation from the lowland Terai and from
Kathamandu, it was in many ways a self-governing area.
Income to purchase items (cloth, kerosene, batteries,
medicines, etc.) that could not be produced locally came
from a combination of sales of hill produce (tangerines,
potatoes, etc.) and funds repatriated back into the hills by
Ghurka soldiers serving first in the British and then
more-often in the Indian armiies.
The first four (2 male; 2 female) American Peace Corps
Volunteers arrived in Dhankuta Bazaar in Fall, 1962 to work
as teachers in the two high schools. In October, 1963 three
male PCV's arrived to help establish the new Panchayat
development program.
From 1963 Nepal was divided into 75 Panchayat Districts, and
the traditional Dhankuta administrative region was divided
up into about six of the panchayat districts. The power of
the Bada Hakim was transferred to the central government's
appointed Panchayat Development Officer and each district's
elected Panchayat President.
During the pre-panchayat period Dhankuta Bazaar prided
itself as being in the cultural vanguard, a relatively
progressive community with its own "intellectual" elite.
Dhankuta Bazaar, already in the 1930's, had the only high
school in Nepal to be located outside of the Kathmandu
Valley. Early on it added a girl's high school and a
two-year college.
Then and now there is a sharp contrast between Dhankuta
Bazaar and the surrounding rural villages. The town is a
commercial center and has a population that is primarily
Newar. The surrounding area is agricultural and the
population is made up of many caste/tribal groups, notably
Rais and Limbus with increasing numbers of Tibetans.
Dhankuta Bazaar, on the North-South Koshi Highway, is now
the administrative headquarters for the Eastern Development
Region, and is home to a number of offices for NGOs and aid
agencies serving in the area. The large bazaar of Hile
further up the road, is an important trading centre and
major road head, serving the remote hinterlands of the Arun
valley and Bhojpur. Villagers walk for many days from
surrounding districts to trade in Hile and Dhankuta bazaars,
although road building in the district may reduce the
importance of these centres.
The vegetation zones in the district range from sub-tropical
Sal forest along the Tamur and Arun rivers, and cooler
temperate forests on some of the high ridges that mark the
watershed between the two catchments. The altitude ranges
from around 300m to 2500m. The majority of the population
are involved in agriculture and crops include maize, rice
and millet. Important cash crops include citrus fruits,
cauliflower, cabbage, ginger, and in recent years, tea. A
well-preserved forest (Rani Bhan - Queen's Forest) spreads
along a ridge line on the northwest side of the village,
with well-developed mature stands of rhododendron and sal
(pine) trees.
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