Sunita Nepali ’27 & Sol Tran ’27 Receive Projects for Peace Grant
Two Whitman students will use the $10,000 grant to increase computer access and literacy at a school in Nepal
By Bradley Nelson
Photography by Gelic Gerona ’27 and Mas Ra’ed Aldardasawi ’28

Building educational bridges. This summer, international students Sunita Nepali ’27 (left), from Gandaki, Nepal, and Sol Tran ’27 (right), from Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, will travel to Nepal to implement their computer literacy project.
Two Whitman College sophomores have been awarded a $10,000 grant through Projects for Peace, a program that supports young peacebuilders and encourages undergraduate students to design innovative, community-centered projects that are scalable to respond to the world’s most pressing issues.
This summer, Davis UWC Scholar and Politics major Sunita Nepali ’27 and Economics-Mathematics major Sol Tran ’27 will travel to Nepal to implement their project titled “Gyanko Pul, Computer Literacy Project for Nepali Students.”
The Nepali phrase “gyanko pul” translates to “a bridge in education,” and the students’ project aims to address education inequality by building a computer literacy program in Nepal. The grant will fund the purchase of 20 computers which will be donated to Kusumakar Secondary School in Karaputar, Lamjung, Nepal. The school, which serves more than 500 students from preschool to grade 12, currently has a single computer lab with only eight computers. The two Whitman students will set up the new computers, prepare an instructional booklet on basic software skills (in English and Nepali) and lead an initial computer literacy program.
Making an Impact Close to Home
Growing up in Nepal, Nepali had limited exposure and access to computers due to a lack of resources at the schools she attended—including Kusumakar Secondary School. When she was accepted to a United World College in Norway, she initially found it challenging to adapt to a setting where computer use was standard.
That challenge is shared by many other Nepalese students. According to the World Bank, in 2021 only 42% of schools in Nepal provided access to computers, the majority of which were private schools.
“I am passionate about creating positive changes that foster peace and sustainability, and this opportunity serves as a milestone for pursuing that mission,” Nepali says. “I am confident that the experience and learning gained from this project will further shape my career by enhancing my collaboration and problem solving skills.”
When Nepali and Tran received the notification of the award, they found the moment surreal and deeply emotional.
“It gave us a profound sense of purpose,” says Tran. “More than anything, I felt immense gratitude for the opportunity to turn an idea we care so much about into something tangible. We hope to create opportunities for young students to explore and bridge the gap in education, just as Whitman has encouraged us to do.”
About Projects for Peace
This year, the Projects for Peace cohort includes 134 projects by 94 partner institutions. Those projects will be funded in 62 countries and in 16 U.S. states. Since the Projects for Peace grant was created in 2007, nearly 30 Whitman students have been selected to implement their projects in a dozen countries around the world.
Explore fellowship and grant opportunities at Whitman.