In the heart of Kathmandu, where narrow streets echo with the sound of everyday survival, Sujan Pariyar has built something extraordinary — a space where learning feels like freedom. Children Home Nepal is not a conventional school; it’s a movement. A place where poor children from the local community come for a few hours each day to learn, laugh, move, and create — often for the first time in their lives.
Here, education isn’t about memorizing lessons or chasing grades. It’s about unlocking potential, nurturing creativity, and giving every child a reason to believe they matter.
A Different Kind of Classroom
The children who come to Children Home Nepal don’t sit behind desks all day.
Then come hours filled with color and imagination: painting, singing, acting out stories, playing educational games, and learning English through songs and laughter. Sujan believes that art and play are not luxuries — they are languages of healing. When children draw, dance, or build something with their hands, they learn more than skills; they learn to trust themselves again.
Unlike regular schools, there are no strict uniforms, no heavy books, and no fear of failure. The children are encouraged to express themselves, to ask questions, to think freely — and most importantly, to enjoy learning.
Why It Matters — Especially for Poor Children
Children from low-income families often face challenges that go far beyond academics. Many of them grow up in stressful environments, where education feels distant or even impossible. Traditional schools, with their rigid systems and pressure-driven methods, often fail to recognize what these children truly need: attention, encouragement, and emotional connection.
That’s where Sujan’s program stands apart.
At Children Home Nepal, children find an atmosphere of acceptance and joy. Every session is designed to help them rediscover curiosity and confidence. Arts and creative activities improve their concentration and self-esteem. Yoga and movement bring balance and peace to restless minds. Games teach teamwork, problem-solving, and communication — the building blocks of future success.
These classes may last only a few hours a day, but for many children, they become the happiest hours of their week — a small window of possibility that changes how they see learning.
The Power of Creativity and Compassion
Sujan Pariyar believes education must touch both the heart and the mind. His philosophy is simple: when children feel safe, they start to dream. And when they dream, they grow.
By focusing on arts, yoga, and creativity, Sujan and his team are helping children build the soft skills that matter most — empathy, confidence, and imagination. These skills can’t be measured in tests, yet they are what empower children to break cycles of poverty and hopelessness.
This holistic approach doesn’t just help kids learn; it helps them heal. A child who once avoided speaking begins to tell stories. A shy girl paints her first picture. A boy who used to fight on the street learns teamwork through games. These small changes, repeated over time, create lasting transformation.
A Community Effort That Inspires Change
What makes Children Home Nepal even more remarkable is how deeply rooted it is in the community. Volunteers — local artists, teachers, travelers, and young professionals — all contribute their time and talents. Together, they’ve built a program that proves education doesn’t need fancy infrastructure or big budgets; it needs passion, purpose, and people who care.
Sujan’s vision has turned a small community space into a sanctuary of hope. Through these few hours of learning each day, poor children are gaining the confidence and creativity they’ll carry for life.
Changing Lives, One Creative Class at a Time
Every painting, every yoga stretch, every shared laugh inside Children Home Nepal represents something bigger — a belief that education can be joyful, free, and empowering for all children, not just the privileged few.
Sujan Pariyar isn’t just running a program; he’s redefining what education means for Nepal’s poor children. His mission reminds us that true learning doesn’t always happen in classrooms — sometimes, it happens in open hearts, colorful walls, and the simple joy of creating something beautiful.
Children Home Nepal is more than a center — it’s a spark. A place where every child who walks in learns that they, too, can shine.


