As we work to provide water, we're committed to helping people like you meet your global neighbors and to realize that we all share the same basic needs. We hope to break down stereotypes and the false distinctions between the so-called winners and losers, rich and poor, the needy and charitable, by introducing you to the people we serve with the respect and admiration they rightfully deserve.
These are stories of hope, told in the words of those who carry out this work every day - our friends in the field.
The Lungi Government Hospital desperately needed clean water before the well on the hospital campus that the staff relied on was rehabilitated last year. "Before the rehabilitation of this well, getting pure and safe drinking water was a big issue. We found it difficult to run [the] sanitation affairs of the hospital, especially the cleaning of th...
The community members of the Emalingana Community used to collect and use dirty water because they had no other choice when their spring was unprotected. "I always felt bad whenever it was time to get water because the water was always dirty," said 60-year-old farmer and chair of the water user committee, Sophie Atemba. But after the spring was p...
When we first visited the Kalangba Junction Community, people were collecting and drinking dirty water because they had no other options. "The time this water facility was not completed, we only had open wells as sources of drinking water in the community, and it was very difficult fetching water from there. I was not having enough time to play wi...
Before we installed a new sand dam and shallow well in Mbitini, people had to walk for kilometers at a time just to fetch a single jerrycan of water. "I had to go fetch water to drink and cook at [the] Mbitini River, but I returned home feeling exhausted due to the long distance under the burning sun," said Gabriel. "I used to walk several kilomet...
Before we helped to create a sand dam and shallow well in Mbitini, water was so scarce that it adversely affected the lives of everyone living there. “In the past, I had to walk several kilometers to [the] Mbitini River to enable our cattle [to] drink water, because I am usually tasked with herding cattle during the holidays and weekends," said ...