SHANGRILA NO MORE, SHANGRILA, STILL
Nepal is little understood by outsiders because it was not colonised — the reason why there was not enough written about it till the mid-20th century. The country is also a bit mysterious because there is so much variety within it — demographic, geographic, climatic – to be fathomed easily. The feudal era, which lasted all the way till the 1950s, did not help in the understanding of history either. Finally, Nepali scholarship has itself been weak, and what is written with on-the-ground sincerity is mostly available in the Nepali language.
The world therefore understood Nepal first as a Shangri La, and that representation endured for decades after the tourists discovered Nepal in the 1960s. That two-dimensional image of the country was made up of key markers which included: Himalayan Buddhism, the snow massifs (himals), the Tibetan societies of the Himalayan rimland, and the Kathmandu Valley culture. The highly populated midhill region — which actually provides Nepal its own self-image — and the Tarai were largely excluded from the mind's picture of Nepal.