Time to teach: Meet Christine Stone

January 2012 Text by : Pat Kauba
Photograph by : ECS Media

Sitting with Christine Stone is like sharing moments in times pages; immersed in helping fellow man, with faith in the above; shared through a softly animated voice. Now in her 70s Christine’s slight-frame is packed with energy. She shared her extraordinary life one chilly evening as her companion Nirmaya, a Scottish Border Collie, cuddled into her lap. Around Sanepa’s streets she is known as ‘the woman with the dog in the basket’ zooming by bicycle between appointments.

“If I were to look in my planner, I can tell you I am booked for the next year”. Christine is an educator, teacher to all levels; prepares curriculums; writes children’s books; consults for government and private schools; helping just about anybody who asks. She knows Nepal like the back of her wizened hands, living here 30 years. Amazingly Christine has traversed those years without salary, only by donations and gifts—mostly from patrons of the Church of Scotland, where she is a member.

Christine has donated her life to teaching, calmly fueled by belief that it’s God’s wish. Yesterday she gave training to teachers from remote Doti District, while tomorrow she’s training at the British Council. Rich, poor, privileged or not means little; Christine comes with perspective and humor that can only come from a life lived.

Her own childhood started in Hong Kong to an army dad and loving mother before World War II. As the Japanese advanced Christine and her mother were put on a boat and dropped onto a random Australian beach. Dad was captured in Singapore in 1941, spending the war under brutal conditions, building the Bridge Over The River Kwai. When the war ended the family reunited, but soon sent Christine to a Christian girls school in Cyprus, which she detested more than any prison.

While doing her degree in Physics in Bristol University Christine was surprised to start finding a love for God and his gift of life. She became a follower and after her degree read an advertisement by the United Mission for teachers in Nepal. She applied, prayed and… got the job.

Christine first went to Gorkha District for five years at a government school, then another five in Pokhara Gandaki Boarding School. She reminisces that her best experiences were reading to students evening-time. In Nepal nobody ever read stories, but with a stack of Ladybird books Christine ignited fires. By the end she was reading classics like Les Miserables; even teachers asked her to read to them too.

In the last few years Room To Read, an INGO promoting libraries for children, has commissioned Christine to create Nepal’s first children’s books with characters like Tommy Tempo, Rishi Rickshaw and Birke Bagh. Teaching lessons like: sharing, consideration for others and winning is not everything. Presented with illustrations by artists like Ajay Thapa; a child Christine read to many years ago.

Forty years has taken Christine on various journeys: Scotland teaching troubled children; remote Tristin d’Akuna Island between South Africa and South America, where boats only came thrice a year; Ethiopia, Nepal and more than text allows.

Christine recognizes that her window to set up a life back in Scotland gets smaller, yet she comes with the buoyant outlook that she’s doing what she’s meant to; happy with her simple room, hot water bottle and loving Nirmaya for company.

Kind, humble and giving, Christine Stone’s life seems the fullest. She is a testament to the value of life lived for others.


Pat Kauba is a freelance storyteller with a love for teachers. Contact him at patkauba@gmail.com.

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3 Comments add your comment »

They say that for every person, there is that charismatic teacher who changes the course of your life altogether, opening up the world to you and thereby preparing you for better, bigger things in the future. They are more than educators; they inspire you, protect you, and become a role model that you can aspire to. In doing so, they become the most important factor in the complex adult identity we all eventually achieve. rnI owe most of my identity to Christine, and here is a much overdue thank you.rnAjay Thapa
Posted 2012-05-06 by Ajay Thapa
I was one of the lucky ones to be a student of Christine Stone. I vividly remember the time she used to read the evening-time stories. It was always the most awaited moment of the day and that has made me an avid reader today and I love to read to my 2 year old who loves it to the fullest.rn Not only that I remember her saying “we always learn something every day in our life” and to this day those words ring to my years and every morning I look forward to learn something EVERY DAY and I do.rnThere are many teachings and deeds of Christine which cannot be expressed in words and I thank Pat a great deal for writing this article, as we got to learn some more about Christine Stone.
Posted 2012-01-17 by Bijay Aryal
Hi ECS Thank you so much for this article. Ms Stone as we called her at GBS is simply a fantastic teacher. We al love her very dearly. A lot of fond memories, and yes we were the lucky bunch that she read to every evening. I remember putting my pen down to listen to her stories. It felt like watching a movie, it was very real. Twenty years later, I now read stories to my one year old girl and three year old boy. I try to make it as real as I can, so they can feel the story, and hopefully develop a passion for reading. We are very blessed to have her books from "room to read". We are in Perth, Western Australia so it it special to have her books in English and Nepalese. Once again, thank you very much, and to Miss Stone, we love you very much. Puspa
Posted 2012-01-17 by Puspa RAWAL

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