Posts Tagged ‘Annual missions’
20 years of Responsible Service
Sunday, August 15th, 2010Shantiniketan Declaration “Peace through tourism in historically changed Cross-borders”
Wednesday, March 31st, 2010After an inspiring two-day workshop the delegates at the “Peace through tourism in historically changed Cross-borders”-Conference drafted the Shantiniketan Declaration (pdf).
Help Tourism :: Review 2009
Friday, January 1st, 2010
Dear All,
Namaskar and greetings of the New Year!
Year 2009 was indeed a very special for Help Tourism and its partners. Despite the economic down turn all over the world, the organization was able to sustain and strengthen its community tourism movements in East Himalaya where the celebration of life never ends!
Several new projects have been initiated with few more in the pipeline. Few new and exciting trips and circuits such as Butterfly tour in Northeast India, Cultural Festival tour in the Northeast India, Padmasambhava Trail in Western Manas with the heritage circuit of Gouripur and North Bengal extension, ‘Holi Water & Caves’ trail and Areylungchok Dzongri Round Trek from Tashiding, Gangyap and Labdang villages in West Sikkim have been launched. A ‘Heritage Home Stay’ project has been introduced in Ballavpur Danga, Shantiniketan. A special festival trip has been launched on the occasion of the 4th Pangsau Pass Winter Festival – scheduled from 20th to 22nd January 2010 at Nampong, Eastern Arunachal Pradesh. Help Tourism is the Tourism Partner of this unique and colourful cultural extravaganza which takes place every year on the same dates. As a part of the festival, a special vintage car rally named ‘Stilwell Road-Pangsau Pass Car Rally’ with WWII vehicles and motor bikes has been organized jointly by Help Tourism and North East Motor Sports Association.
In 2009 Help Tourism was entrusted with the responsibility for drawing the National Ecotourism Policy framework for Bhutan by His Majesty’s Ministry of Agriculture, Nature Conservation Division and Ugyen Wangchuck institute for Conservation and Environment(UWICE) and 03 rural tourism project of East & Northeast India Business Plan by UNDP & GOI-DOT. The projects will continue in 2010.
‘Green Circuit’ – a unique partnership initiative of five best responsible tourism organizations from India and Nepal was launched from the International Centre for Responsible Tourism’s (ICRT) stand at the World Travel Market (WTM), London to support community-run projects through cross-cultural tours, expeditions and hands-on conservation-volunteering programmes.
The website of Travel To Care – a platform based in India that supports and promotes responsible tourism projects and initiatives in India & the rest of Asia was also launched at WTM. Help Tourism is a proud member of this platform.
As a part of our Mission 2009-10, four PEACE PARKs have been established in some of the crucially important landscapes in the region – in partnership with local communities, to spread the message of cross-border peace, cross-border friendship, cultural exchange and cooperation through tourism.
As a part of our conservation mandates, several biological and species monitoring surveys were organized by our expert resource persons in the protected areas of Tripura, Nagaland, Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya and North Bengal. The Chilapata Toad & Frog Festival was successfully organized to raise awareness about the importance of protection of lesser-fauna and amphibian species of Chilapata Wildlife Sanctuary and surrounding villages in North Bengal.
The World Tourism Day was observed and celebrated with two major launching programmes: ‘Green Riders’ – a project conceived by a local association named Barefoot to support and empower 50 rickshaw pullers through green tourism in Puri sea beach in Orissa and ‘Kurseong Ecotourism & Heritage Park’ – a joint initiative of Himalayan Ecotourism Welfare Society, West Bengal Tourism and Darjeeling Himalayan Railway(DHR).
As advisor and partner of the initiatives, Help Tourism was present at the launching programmes marked with colourful cultural performances and workshops.
In recognition to its contribution to sustainable development through community-based tourism, Help Tourism received few prestigious national and international awards in 2009.To name a few: TTF Awards, CNBC-Awaaz Award, Wild Asia’s Responsible Tourism Award. We dedicate this to our partner communities, our tourism partners, our patrons-guests-friends-well wishers and the members of our extended family.
But then, the year did not end with all such good and happy moments only. Despite many new achievements and towering performances the country also witnessed devastating calamities, communal conflicts, rising corruption, alarming climate change, loss of biodiversity, shameless politics, dwindling wildlife, reckless consumerism, saddening violence.
The New Year calls for more responsible action from the citizens of India and the world, more responsibilities from the tourism and other industries before it gets too late!
Our mission – ‘Tourism for Peace’ thus continues in 2010!
With love, regards and appreciation,
Help Tourism Family
January 1, 2010.
Review 2008 and Mission 2009-2010 “Tourism for Peace”
Thursday, January 1st, 2009Dear Friends!
The year 2008 was quite exciting for us and the organization did indeed touch few new milestones.
As a country India has commanded more respect from the rest of the World as one of the largest economies and the largest repository of intellect and knowledge.But sadly, there can not be any denying the fact that our villages and communities have not benefited much from the growing GDP, large-scale developments, highest ever-recorded growth of the stock market and the successful space mission to the moon , though all these have marked 2008 as a very special year!
The year has also witnessed the suffering of the people and vast destruction of nature in the name of development projects such as the Teesta and Dibang Multipurpose river dams.The future of the wildlife looks grim with deepening Tiger crisis and the threatening projects such as a big port proposed in coastal Orisssa – an area which has drawn the attention of the world as one of the largest rookeries of the endangered Olive Ridley Turtles!
Just before the festive mood was about to set in, the country was shaken by unprecedented display of terrorism, violence.The serial blasts in Guwahati and Mumbai, the blasts in Gujarat and Jaipur gripped the country with unspeakable horror! With the nose-dive of stock market and economic recession millions of people have lost job and social security across the globe.
And the tourism , as the saying goes is one of the largest income-multipliers, faced the most challenging situation in the country and still continuing fighting with it.
But, the show must go on! Let us hope and pray for better days and also consolidate our strength and mandates to use tourism as a tool with more responsibility for the betterment of our people, our planet, our wildlife! Let tourism be the vehicle to enhance compassion, friendship,harmony in human civilization that has lived many thousand years despite calamities and wars! Let tourism bring PEACE -the item that the human society needs to restore most urgently and more profoundly at this hour than ever before!
May we declare the mission of Help Tourism for 2009 AND 2010: “TOURISM FOR PEACE!”
We wish you, your families a peaceful and prosperous New Year!
With lots of love, regards and appreciation.
Happy New Year!
–
Asit Biswas
Assistant Secretary & Founder Member
Association for Conservation and Tourism(ACT)
Tracing Traditional Routes through Tourism – Our Mission 2008
Wednesday, May 7th, 2008
“All roads lead to China border”, the Telegraph today headlined an article reporting that “India is sprucing up its frontier with China by taking up a massive four-year project to connect villages, military posts and towns strung on the border across the Himalayas from Ladakh to Arunachal Pradesh.”Few weeks back the “Maitree-Express” to Dhaka was flagged off from Kolkata as the first passenger railway service between India and Bangladesh since 43 years (article in The Hindu). For the East Himalaya the thaw in the border policy is a great chance and a great support to our this year’s mission “Tracing Traditional Routes through Tourism”.
Entering Tibet from Sikkim via Nathu-La Pass, visiting both the Indian and the Bangladesh Sunderbans as one ecosystem by boat, following the Ledo Stillwell Road through the Mishmi Hills of East Arunachal and crossing the Pangsau-Pass into Burma/Myanmar, entering Manas Nationalpark in India after a visit to Bhutan via the Royal Manas Nationalpark, experiencing the rich heritage of Central Bengal with the lost cities of Pandua and Gaur in West-Bengal on the Indian side and the World Heritage Site of Bagerhat in Bangladesh, or tracing Buddhism from Lumbini in Nepal via Bodh Gaia in India and the Somapura Vihara at Paharpur in Bangladesh before re-entering India in the Tripura, where Buddhism flourished from the 2nd to the 9th century, and many important sites are yet to be explored by tourists. The list could continue without losing any attractiveness given the cultural, religious, ethnic and natural diversity and links that characterize the region.
Eight years back we have promoted the “Destination 2000: East and North East India, Nepal, Bhutan & Bangladesh”, and in 2006 we headlined our efforts “Cross-border Conservation through Community Cooperation”. Now, we feel that our 2008 mission “Tracing Traditonal Routes through Tourism” is a vision increasingly being shared.




















