Nepali student’s annual day speech goes viral, compare social media

During the annual program of his school, a fierce speech of a Nepali student has gone viral on social media. The students, identified as Abiscar Raut, were addressing the gathering in the 24th annual event of the school, where he gave a rauting monologue, which expressed concern about the political and economic challenges of the Himalayan nation.

Raut said, “Today, I am standing here with the dream of building a new Nepal. The fire of hope and passion burns within me, but my heart is heavy because this dream seems to be slipping,” Raut said after presenting himself as the head boy of Holi Bell School.

“I put myself in this moment in this moment, which penetrates the dark nimbus of the loom to throw light within my consciousness.

Talking about Nepal as a nutritional mother, she questioned whether the citizens were giving back to the country which was properly outstanding.

“Nepal, our mother, the country that gave birth to us and nurtured us-asked it in return? Just our honesty, our hard work, our contribution. But what are we doing?” Raut asked.

He said, “We are bound by the series of unemployment … are caught in the selfish sports of political parties. Corruption has woven a web that extinguishes our future light,” he said.

Social media reacts

Reacting to the speech, a part of social media users appreciated the boy for his confidence and diction, while others could not help but could help compared to a certain Nazi leader.

“Those who are zero confidence are making fun of them – irony is not lost on us!” One user said, while the other said: “His speech reminds me of someone. A man with a strange mustache.”

One third remarked: “Brother, this is the annual day, not an attachment.”

The student’s speech comes under the backdrop of ordinary Nepali citizens who demand a return to the Hindu monarchy. Thousands of people have taken to the streets to start the campaign, asked Gyanendra Shah to return as a king amid concerns over political instability, corruption, cost of living crisis, unemployment and lack of economic development.

About 17 years ago, in May 2008, Nepal abolished the 239 -year -old Hindu monarchy to kill more than 16,000 people to bring curtains on a decade long civil war.