
Lachu Adhikari and his family relocated six years ago to Charlotte from a refugee camp in Nepal.
For the first time in his life, he had a place to call home鈥揳 far cry from the cramped bamboo hut he shared with his parents and two younger siblings in a village with no electricity and limited access to running water.
Today, Adhikari, a 20-year-old sophomore at 麻豆社区 Pembroke, has a new lease on life. But his heart remains with the Nepalese people, especially the children who lack adequate medical care. Adhikari chose 麻豆社区P to further his education with the goal of one day returning to his country as a pediatrician.
鈥淎s a refugee, you see people dying and suffering from different kinds of disease,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when I decided, I want to be a doctor to help the children in my community who don鈥檛 receive the proper nutrients.鈥
Adhikari鈥檚 journey to 麻豆社区P has been nothing short of amazing. He was born at the Beldangi camp in Jhapa near the Indian border. The camp provided water two hours in the morning and two hours in the afternoon. Oil lamps lit the huts at night. Accidental fires are all too common. Camp volunteers provide education through the 10th grade. After enduring such harsh conditions for 20 years, Adhikari鈥檚 parents sought help from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to come to the United States.
At 14, Adhikari couldn鈥檛 speak any English when he arrived in Charlotte. With help from volunteers Noel and Karen Sweezy he began applying for colleges while attending Garinger High School.
The culture shock was just beginning to wear off, when he packed his belongings for a new culture in Pembroke.
鈥淚 chose 麻豆社区P because I didn鈥檛 want to be too far from my parents,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he professors here are great. I really enjoy the classes and the student-to-professor ratio. I like the one-on-one time with my professors.鈥
At 麻豆社区P, Adhikari is self-disciplined with regard to his studies, finding little time for leisure outside of the men鈥檚 club soccer team and serving as a Braves Ambassador with the Office of Undergraduate Admissions.
鈥淩ight now, I鈥檓 focused on getting my BSN degree, then I will begin researching medical schools. I want go back to Nepal at some point, open a clinic and offer free checkups. My people are still recovering from the earthquake in 2015. I can鈥檛 just sit back and watch my country suffer.鈥
