Emma Cohen


Emma Cohen

Emma Cohen is a recent graduate from Wellesley College where she majored in Peace and Justice Studies with a concentration in the carceral state and minored in Environmental Studies. Passionate about conflict transformation and prison abolition, Emma has worked as a Mediation Assistant for the Dispute Resolution Center, volunteered for Restorative Justice Community Action, and tutored in a juvenile detention center through the Petey Greene Program. During undergrad, she participated in the Advocacy and Community Based Training Semester hosted by the University Network for Human Rights. As part of the program, she traveled to Nepal to meet with conflict victims and work with leading advocate Ram Bhandari. She is excited to continue working with Ram and his organization, NEFAD, on transitional justice through the Advocacy Project this summer.



A Place of Conscience

16 Jul

“This is a place of conscience,” Ram always says of Bardiya.

It’s true.

Bardiya District, located in south western Nepal, just on the border with India, is quiet. People ride bicycles down dirt roads that wind past fields of rice. A group of cows find respite in the shade of a Sal tree. A dog bounds down the road, mountains stretch across the horizon. Everything is draped in soft hues of blue and green.

We’ve settled in quickly. Our first day was spent talking over dal bhat eaten in the garden, stuffing our faces with mangos ripe from the tree, and staying up late playing dhumbal, a popular Nepali card game.

There is peace, community, and joy, both for those who live here and those, like us, that visit. But, if you listen, you can feel the missing.

During the armed conflict, the state targeted Bardiya’s Tharu communities under the assumption that they were associated with Maoists. Over 250 people were disappeared. The loss, longing, and sense of cruel injustice linger, heavy like the hot air.

We drive through a stretch of forest on our way to a meeting. Signs warn of tigers and rhinos, and we gasp at the sight of wild elephants. But these are not the only residents of the national park. As Ram reminds us, this area was occupied by state security forces during the conflict and an enormous number of people are believed to have been disappeared here. The forest knows their stories.

Loss is familiar to me, but not like this. For families of the disappeared, loss brings a grief fraught by hope — one which leaves them waiting in that liminal space defined by longing for truth. This is not a loss that rolls over. Rather, it is one that fuels a quiet determination, anger sharp with love, a fight for justice. More than just its blue mountains or heavy air, Bardiya is a place of resistance.

Posted By Emma Cohen

Posted Jul 16th, 2025

4 Comments

  • Aaron Bailey

    July 20, 2025

     

    Your writing captures Bardiya’s beauty and weight so vividly. It reminds me of some of the conversations happening in northern Uganda around transitional justice and the legacy of the LRA conflict—especially the quiet strength of communities living with both loss and resilience. There’s so much to learn from places like Bardiya, and from how people carry memory and seek justice in the aftermath of violence.

  • Iain Guest

    July 20, 2025

     

    Nice blog – simple, athmospheric and very well written. Establishes Bardiya are a key location in your unfolding story. Some photos of you all enjoying your mangoes would have been nice!

  • Angie Zheng

    July 20, 2025

     

    Emma, I appreciate how you capture the many layers of Bardiya’s landscape and that liminal space between loss and longing. It’s a poignant reminder that memory and trauma often reside in the in-between spaces, and that the act of remembering and retelling can itself be an intimate form of resistance.

  • Shuyuan Zhang

    August 3, 2025

     

    So beautifully put. Bardiya holds both peace and resistance—grateful to be here with you all, feeling the weight of the missing and the strength of the fight for justice.

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