Jhowa thought of resigning many times because she could not speak in the House. When she spoke in the House for the first time, she was scared when everyone laughed, but she didn't mind. She expressed what she felt with great confidence in Mughali language.
During the first term of the Karnali State Assembly, Muguki Jhowa Wik used to come into the limelight due to her original speaking style. Being a proportional MP from the Congress, she was adept at commenting on the problems of her constituency in the state assembly in her mother tongue, Mughali Lovejam.
Every sentence he spoke was viral on social media at that time. Some people used to laugh at his speech. In the state assembly, she always wore the dress of the Himalayan Bhote caste. Mugali used to speak in love. She was presented in a simple style.
After serving five years as an MP, Jhowa Mugu has been living in a house in Gamgarhi. He has no party responsibilities now. At that time, she raised her grandchildren at home and spent her routine in household chores. Despite the introduction of the former state MP, he is nowhere to be seen even in party programs and other public events. ``No one is calling me now, there's no point in going to an uninvited event,'' Jhowa said, 'I haven't read, even if I'm the daughter of Abujh Bhote, they won't call me.' She says, "They only call me if I have a position. I don't have a position, so they don't call me. Now I play with my grandchildren, I stay, and after going to the state and center instead of my place, many people respect me."
She thought of resigning many times because she could not speak in the House, Jhowa . She was scared when everyone laughed when she spoke in the House for the first time But they don't eat. She expressed what she felt with great confidence in the Mughali language. Party leaders also gave courage in the state assembly. She remembers Congress leader Jeevan Bahadur Shahi, who is also the former Chief Minister, as her political mentor. "My brother helped me a lot when I was honorable," she says, narrating her experience, "I have requested many plans for the development of the village in five years. Many people saw my face and passed the budget.'
While working in the state assembly, she said that she learned to speak Nepali language by interacting with other MPs. She spent the first two years in the state assembly very hard. She did not understand Nepali language well. He also did not come to speak Nepali language. Shahi, the leader of the Congress parliamentary party, used to teach how to speak in the provincial assembly in his own language style. She says, "After he taught, my confidence increased, he taught me many times, because of him, I now listen, see, and speak a lot."
When he was an MP, many people used to greet him . Often the chief guest was called to inaugurate the program. "Nowadays, Bhupu says honorable, they don't even say hello, the post will be big, she says, "They don't call me that much in the club of state parliamentarians, maybe that's because I live in a remote area.'' Now they have the opportunity to understand about many policy rules, politics, society then they are not in any public role .
There is a small house in Gamgadhijhowa . A family of 10 lives in Sagol. The family has a husband, sons and daughters and grandchildren . "My daughter-in-law earns and eats, but I have no place to get money from, no business, only sorrow," she says. She says that she spent her salary as an MP on her family's household expenses and her children's education. Now, Mugu is living on the rent of Gamgarhi's house.
Even as an MP, he has a bitter experience of facing discrimination from his own caste. Recently nominated to the Central Committee of Dalit Sangh, she has now reached the House of Representatives and has dreamed of exposing the problems of remote areas and backward class communities like Mugu. He believes that the party will evaluate him well as he spent five years actively in the state assembly.
He says that the practice of giving only one opportunity to women should be stopped. "Either we should be allowed to compete or the party should give us an opportunity," says Jhowa, "We need not only to fulfill the quota, but also to show responsibility by doing some work." Having recently nominated a central member of the Dalit Sangh, she is hoping that the party will call for the program.
