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HuffPost Greatest Person Of The Day: Maggie Doyne Builds Orphanage And School For Kids In Nepal

Maggie

First Posted: 06/ 1/11 04:43 PM ET Updated: 06/ 2/11 11:50 AM ET

After finishing high school in Mendham, N.J., Maggie Doyne wasn't sure what she wanted to do. She'd been an ambitious and driven student -- the editor of her school yearbook, a varsity athlete, and the class treasurer -- but as she weighed her options for college, she felt increasingly burnt out, and decided that she should take some time off.

"I took what's called a gap year," Maggie said, speaking to The Huffington Post from her family's home in Mendham. "I was about to make this investment in my life, but I didn't have a strong direction. I wanted to figure that out."

For the first semester of her gap year, Maggie traveled with a backpacking expedition program called LeapNow, which leads students on service missions and cultural projects across the globe for a semester. And when it came time to decide on her Spring plans, Maggie asked a mentor how she could best "have an impact."

"I said I wanted to be of use and I wanted to work with kids," Maggie recalls. "So I headed off to India to work for an organization there."

In Northeast India, she met countless young Nepalese refugees who had fled the country after the recent Maoist uprising and civil war. One teenage girl she met had escaped Nepal six or seven years earlier, and hadn't been returned since. So she and Maggie decided to take a trip together - back to Nepal, to look for the girl's family.

"We sat on a bus for two and a half days," Maggie said. "At the end of the trip, we just came to a stop on the road, and the bus driver was like, 'Alright girls, you can't go any further.'"

The two teenagers then trekked for two more days through the Himalayas, ultimately finding the girl's former village. They received details about her dissipated family and where many of her relatives had ended up.

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"The effects on the whole area were very, very raw," Maggie said, remembering the experience. "But I immediately felt attached the region, like I was supposed to be there."

Maggie grew enamored of Nepal's natural beauty, as well as the sense of community and optimism in its people, but she was also deeply affected by the orphans she met in the villages. She often saw one young Nepalese girl breaking rocks on the side of a dry river bed. The girl had no school, no family; she had nothing, but she still smiled and waved every time Maggie walked by. The girl's name was Hema.

"It was really this rude awakening," Maggie said. "I thought, it only takes $5 admission and $5 for a uniform to put her into school. Why can't I do that?"

So Maggie did. And then she put a few other young girls into school, too. And she realized she could do so much more by staying in Nepal and dealing with the refugee problem at its source, rather than waiting for these kids to flee to India, or, worse, get stuck at the border and find themselves victims of human trafficking or domestic servitude. She realized she wanted to give these kids a real, permanent home.

That was when Maggie called her parents from a "rickety phone booth in the middle of nowhere" and asked them to wire her life savings - $5000 she'd earned from babysitting in high school - over to Nepal. After a lengthy conversation ("I don't really remember what I said, exactly," Maggie laughed) her parents agreed to send the money.

Maggie bought a piece of property in Surkhet, Nepal, and assembled a team from the local community to help her dig the initial foundation for an orphanage that would double as a home for herself. But soon, Maggie realized she'd need more resources if she actually wanted to get it built. So she flew back to New Jersey and worked. She babysat, dogsat, house-sat, held garage sales, bake sales, and anything else she could possibly do to raise more money. Local papers eventually picked up Maggie's story, and soon checks from admirers started pouring in. In five months, Maggie raised close to $60,000.

With this added financial support, Maggie and her team in Surkhet were able to continue the construction and finish Maggie's home. She formed a Nepali board of directors and established her orphanage, which she called the Kopila Valley Children's Project. She registered as an NGO. She was only 22 years old.

Kids started moving in almost immediately and Maggie's vision was realized. "I could see exactly what I wanted," she said. "I had visited orphanages, I could create a model that works based on how I grew up. I want these kids to raise animals, to take care of each other."

But Maggie didn't stop with the orphanage. Last year she also established a school in Surkhet -- the Kopila Valley Primary School -- which currently enrolls 230 students and 14 full-time teachers. The kids eat a full, nutritious lunch every day, sometimes their only daily meal, given that they live in an area where 50% of kids under five are malnourished and malnutrition is the cause of 70% of deaths under the age of five.

Maggie's work is all done under the banner of her non-profit, BlinkNow. Its mission is to "empower young people to become pioneers in developing their own solutions to world poverty."

"I feel there's a big shift going on in the world, and people are not okay with the way kids are living," Maggie said. "I think people are really starving for hope."

Today, Maggie is 24 years old and has formal custody of 40 Nepalese children, all of whom originally came to her with no family, no money, and no education. Many were abused. She has provided all of them with basic medical care and food, and she has taught them to read and write. "The first little girl I took in is a genius," Maggie said. "She learned English in only a couple months and she reads every book I give her. I could see her going to Harvard or something."

When Maggie's own parents visit her in Nepal, her kids refer to them as "grandmother and grandfather." They continue to help her out as much as they can, especially with organizing board meetings and dealing with tax receipts. While Maggie is home in the U.S, her younger sister is back in Nepal, working at the orphanage.

"A lot of people think I grew up in a teepee or some crazy out there family, or I was raised in a hut in Africa," she said. "But I just tell them I'm a regular girl from Jersey."

Watch Maggie speak about her journey below.

Maggie Doyne -- Why the human family can do better from The Do Lectures on Vimeo.


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After finishing high school in Mendham, N.J., Maggie Doyne wasn't sure what she wanted to do. She'd been an ambitious and driven student -- the editor of her school yearbook, a varsity athlete, and th...
After finishing high school in Mendham, N.J., Maggie Doyne wasn't sure what she wanted to do. She'd been an ambitious and driven student -- the editor of her school yearbook, a varsity athlete, and th...
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jwald1
1 minute ago (2:07 AM)
kudos to her parents for raising such a beautiful human being, and allowing her to find herself. She is proof there is hope for the world.
03:42 PM on 6/06/2011
After spending the 30 minutes on this page, i realized how useless I am. Because of this brilliant girl Maggie, I will strive to help others. her story is truly inspiring, and i wish i can help her out with donations right now. but because i'm a broke college student, i am not capable of so. i commend you, maggie. if i would have saw this article after i graduated from high school, i would have chosen the path you've enlighten me with.
12:47 PM on 6/06/2011
Very inspiratio­nal. It had me thinking maybe I should put my mind on figuring out what can I give, rather than get.
10:29 AM on 6/06/2011
After reading this, I feel that I have done very little to improve things.
05:56 AM on 6/03/2011
Kudos....v­ery moving piece.
01:11 AM on 6/03/2011
Very inspiring! More people like Maggie need to open doors to the world for children from a beautiful country like Nepal...
09:42 PM on 6/02/2011
Oh, man! I could not even fathom doing what she did at such an age,,,it's truly inspiring and courageous ....I donated to her organizati­on ..the least I could do to help..
03:31 PM on 6/02/2011
Wow. Reading that makes me think I can do anything. What an inspiratio­n!
05:08 AM on 6/02/2011
Commendabl­e, but the hardest thing is to ensure a project like this is sustainabl­e. Many a project like this ends in failure because it only works when there is someone actively pumping in cash and resources.

Who will manage and teach in the orphanage into the future and where will their income come from?
12:06 AM on 6/02/2011
Thank you Huff Post for bringing such an inspiratio­nal woman into our lives. This is the type of informatio­n I commend you for.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SirenForSanity
01:21 AM on 6/02/2011
Yes.
11:56 PM on 6/01/2011
Cool... Very cool. If even 5% of American kids were this driven the change would be profound.
11:29 PM on 6/01/2011
How can that picture not warm your heart and bring a smile to your face - Thank You!
Donation on the way - Buddha's light on you.

Om Mani Padme Hum!
11:00 PM on 6/01/2011
BEST thing I've read all year :)
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brooklyncitizen
Quaerite primum regnum dei
10:48 PM on 6/01/2011
We can all learn something from her- I sure did.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wandering girl
grownup
10:40 PM on 6/01/2011
fabulous