Posts Tagged ‘Conference’

Help Tourism :: Review 2009

Friday, January 1st, 2010

Review 2009

Review 2009

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.

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“Living Buddhism in Northeast India and its importance in Tourism” – Seminar

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

Help Tourism was one of the organisers of a conference that was held in Siliguri to highlight the links between tourism and a living Buddhism with a focus on the East Himalaya. Peace, spiritual oneness and preservation of heritage – tangible and intangible – are common aims.

Prayer Flags at Sanga Choeling Monastery in Sikkim

Buddhism to boost tourism!

Statesman News Service
SILIGURI, Nov. 23: Dr Ravindra Panth, the Vice-Chancellor of Nava Nalanda Mahavihara (Nalanda Deemed University) said that the hoary heritage associated with Buddhism must be preserved and the Northeast India, being the melting pot for several cultures, must play its role to disseminate the spiritual message of eternal India far and wide.
He was addressing a seminar on ‘Living Buddhism in Northeast India and its importance in tourism’ in Siliguri yesterday. Mr PK Dong, the former director (Europe), for the government of India, department of tourism, inaugurated the seminar. It was organised by Navanalanda Mahavihara and Help Tourism.
Emphasising the importance of Buddhism in today’s world Dr Panth said that with the world in turmoil the perennial philosophy enshrined in the Buddhist scriptures and culture must again inspire the world at large.
“And the Northeast India is the right place to disseminate the message of peace and spiritual oneness far and wide. My university is looking forward to the spiritually imbued region for the regeneration of the Indian mysticism, seemingly the only way out of the deepening crisis of civilisation,” he said.
Mr Dong said that an endeavour was on to create a circuit connecting the Buddhist communities in the Northeast India including the East Himalayas.

http://www.thestatesman.net/page.arcview.php?clid=10&id=258947&usrsess=1 

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When responsibility becomes big

Friday, March 28th, 2008

We (Help Tourism & ACT team) were in two minds before attending the ICRT conference, the second after the Cape Town conference in 2002. The reasons being:

  • Fees & conveyance:
    With the amount that would be spent for attending the conference, would be almost equivalent to building three toilets for our recent community project called Dihing River Camp. The same is expected to be functional by October, 2008.
  • Conference venue & delegate accommodation options:
    Our understanding of the principles of responsible tourism and the use of 5-star convention venue and also options for delegates to stay in the star hotels, whose responsible policy was not known, this was somewhat a question for us.

Raj on the Responsible Tourism Conference 2008

We decided to join the conference after several discussions realizing the fact that the East & Northeast India would go unrepresented in a declaration on responsible tourism being held in India. That several representatives from the Government of India, Department of Tourism and the state Governments would be attending the conference and we would influence them to draw a policy based on responsible tourism. The last but not the least, our presentation will help to influence the declaration on issues that we have been discussing locally.

We did gain something from the conference

  • Network with delegates nationally & internationally who thought on the same lines like us
  • Our presentation could influence the declaration through its acceptance of the fact that the community participation phenomenon was the core strength of the responsible tourism movement, and that travel warnings by tourist originating countries on host countries should be more responsible
  • Contact people who were interested in our cross-border tourism & conservation issues
  • The interaction with the South Africa team, where the 2002 or the first declaration took place on their views that: Policy to action is still far to go in their country, the policy should be considered from the community priority, i.e. bottom up policy

The outcome of the conference, the Kerala Declaration on Responsible Tourism sets a both promising and challenging framework for the way ahead. For the next conference hopefully we have already gone as far as to allow more ground practicioners sharing their experience – their knowledge is too valuable as to set them aside because participation would be too costly for them.

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Responsible Tourism in Destinations – Conference 2008 in Kochi

Monday, March 10th, 2008

Raj will present Help Tourism’s experiences in tourism in the East Himalaya at the 2008 International Conference on “Responsible Tourism in Destinations”, to be held in Kochi, Kerala from 21st to 24th of March. Responsible Tourism in Destinations Conference Logo

SUNDAY 23rd MARCH
SESSION IV (9.00A.M. TO 11.00 A.M.)
CASE STUDIES FROM INDIAN DESTINATIONS

Help Tourism model in East Himalaya – Supratim (Raj) Basu, Director, Help Tourism Community based tourism in the biodiversity hotspots of Eastern Himalayas.
A model for South and South East Asia

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Mail from Australia

Friday, November 23rd, 2007

Still in Australia, the first mail arrived with feedback on Asit’s presentation at the Ecotourism Conference:

Dear Asit,
As a delegate at the Ecotourism Conference I was fortunate to hear your wonderful presentation yesterday. [...] I am sorry to send an email like this, just telling you about ourselves – but I was so very moved by your presentation (which I wish had been allowed to run all afternoon, with lots of time for questions!). I would love you to know that there are many people like ourselves in Australia absolutely committed to the concept of sustainable tourism – tourism which positively impacts on individuals, both the tourists and the members of the communities they visit. I think I just wanted to make contact with a ‘kindred spirit’ and congratulate you for the wonderful work you are doing.

I hope you are enjoying your stay in Australia – next time you visit, perhaps you will come and stay with us? I will soon be looking at your website in the hope of finding a wonderful holiday to share with my husband next year (I would love to spend some time with your magnificent elephants.) So one way or another, and in one continent or another, I am sure we will meet again.

With very best wishes
Ali

Thank you, Ali. The East Himalaya being so diverse in culture and nature is an easy topic to report about for several hours. But please come and experience yourself. You will learn that word’s cannot really describe this area adequately.

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