Sonam Wangchuk (born 1 September 1966)
is an Indian engineer, innovator and education reformist. He is the
founding-director of the Students' Educational and Cultural Movement of
Ladakh (SECMOL), which was founded in 1988 by a group of students who had
been in his own words, the 'victims' of an alien education system foisted
on Ladakh. He is also known for designing the SECMOL campus that runs
on solar energy and uses no fossil fuels for cooking, lighting or heating.
Wangchuk was instrumental in the launch of Operation New
Hope in 1994, a collaboration of government, village communities and the
civil society to bring reforms in the government school system. He
invented the Ice Stupa technique that creates artificial
glaciers, used for storing winter water in form of conical shaped ice heap.
Wangchuk was born in 1966 in Uleytokpo, near Alchi in
the Leh district of Ladakh. He was not enrolled in a school
until the age of 9, as there were not any schools in his village. His mother
taught him all the basics in his own mother tongue until that age. His
father Sonam Wangyal, a politician who later became the minister in state
government, was stationed in Srinagar. At age 9, he was taken to Srinagar
and enrolled in a school there. Since he looked different compared to the other
students, he would get addressed in a language that he did not understand, due
to which his lack of responsiveness was mistaken for him being stupid. He
recalls this period as the darkest part of his life. Unable to bear the
treatment, in 1977 he escaped alone to Delhi where he pleaded his
case to the school principal at Vishesh Kendriya Vidyalaya.
Wangchuk completed his B.Tech. in Mechanical
Engineering from National Institute of Technology Srinagar (then
REC Srinagar) in 1987. Due to differences with his father over the choice
of engineering stream, he had to finance his own education. He also went for
two years of higher studies in Earthen Architecture at Craterre School of
Architecture in Grenoble, France, in 2011.
In 1988, after his graduation, Wangchuk (with his brother and
five peers) started Students' Educational and Cultural Movement of Ladakh (SECMOL).
After experimenting with school reforms in government high school at Saspol,
SECMOL launched Operation New Hope in collaboration with the
government education department and the village population.
From June 1993 until August 2005, Wangchuk also founded and
worked as the editor of Ladakh's only print magazine Ladags Melong In
2001, he was appointed to be an advisor for the education in the Hill Council
Government. In 2002, together with other NGO heads, he founded Ladakh
Voluntary Network (LVN), a network of Ladakhi NGOs, and served in its executive
committee as the secretary till 2005. He was appointed to the Drafting
Committee of the Ladakh Hill Council Government’s Vision Document Ladakh
2025 and entrusted with the formulation of the policy on Education and
Tourism in 2004. The document was formally launched by Dr. Manmohan
Singh, the Prime Minister of India in 2005. In 2005, Wangchuk was
appointed as a member in the National Governing Council for Elementary
Education in the Ministry of Human Resource Development, Government
of India.
From 2007 to 2010, Wangchuk worked as an education advisor
for MS, a Danish NGO working to support the Ministry of Education for
education reforms.
In late 2013, Wangchuk invented and built a prototype of
the Ice Stupa which is an artificial glacier that stores the wasting
stream waters during the winters in the form of giant ice cones or stupas,
and releases the water during late spring as they start melting, which is the
perfect time when the farmers need water. He was appointed to the Jammu
and Kashmir State Board of School Education in 2013. In 2014, he was
appointed to the Expert panel for framing the J&K State Education Policy
and Vision Document. Since 2015, Sonam has started working on establishing
Himalayan Institute of Alternatives. He is concerned about how most of the
Universities, especially those in the mountains have become irrelevant to
realities of life.
In 2016, Wangchuk initiated a project called FarmStays Ladakh,
which provides tourists to stay with local families of Ladakh, run by mothers
and middle-aged women. The project was officially inaugurated by Chetsang
Rinpoche on 18 June 2016.
Wangchuk has been helping in designing and overseeing the
construction of several passive solar mud buildings in mountain regions
like Ladakh, Nepal, Sikkim so that energy savings
principles are implemented on a larger scale. Even in -30 Celsius winters, his
solar-powered school, built with the rammed earth, keeps the students warm.
Led by Wangchuk, SECMOL has won the International
Terra Award for the best building in July 2016 at the 12th World Congress on
Earthen Architecture in Lyon, France. The rammed earth 'Big Building',
located at SECMOL. The campus was built using simple, low-cost traditional
techniques on principles of passive solar architecture. The building comprises
a big solar-heated teaching hall, along with several rooms for the students and
other classrooms.
Ice Stupa
In January 2014, Wangchuk started a project called the Ice
Stupa. His aim was to find a solution to the water crisis being faced by the
farmers of Ladakh in the critical planting months of April and May before the
natural glacial melt waters start flowing. By the end of February in 2014, they
had successfully built a two-storey prototype of an ice stupa which could store
roughly 150,000 litres of winter stream water which nobody wanted at the time.
In 2015, when Ladakh faced a crisis due to a landslide which
blocked the Phugtal river in Zanskar and caused formation of
15 km long lake which became a huge threat for the downstream population,
Wangchuk proposed to use a siphon technique to drain the lake and water jet
erosion to safely cut the edges instead of blasting the lake as was being
planned. However, his advice was ignored and blasting work was carried on. On 7
May 2015, the lake finally burst into flash flood which destroyed 12 bridges
and many fields.
In 2016, Wangchuk started applying the Ice Stupa technique for
disaster mitigation at high altitude glacier lakes. He was invited by Government
of Sikkim to apply siphon technique for another dangerous lake in their
state. In September 2016, he led a three-week expedition to the Lhonak
Glacial Lake in North-West Sikkim, which had been declared dangerous for
the last few years. His team camped for two weeks at the lake, amidst rain
and snow, installing the first phase of a siphoning system to drain the lake to
a safer level until other measures were taken up.
In late 2016, the idea started gaining traction from the
authorities in the Swiss Alps. Wangchuk was invited by the president
of Pontresina, a municipality in the Engadine valley, Switzerland to
build Ice Stupas to add to their winter tourism attractions. In October
2016, Wangchuk and his team went to the Swiss Alps and started building the
first Ice Stupa of Europe, together with the Swiss partners.
In February 2018, a group of young local sculptors and artists
from Ladakh built an actual 10-feet high ice stupa. The wondrous sculpture is
made entirely of ice and it took them 25 days of hard work and dedication to
complete the project. What makes it more special and challenging for the team
was the extreme conditions under which they've worked. As the stupa was housed
inside another giant ice tower (ice stupa artificial glacier), they have to
work in very low temperature of at least -12 degrees Celsius.
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