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.
Life at Gimengwa Primary School was difficult for students like 13-year-old Rodger K. before a rain tank was installed on the school campus last year. Students were exhausted from collecting and hauling water, barely leaving them any time or energy to focus on learning. "It was hard and tiresome to get water, and I used to fear being in school," s...
Before we installed a rain tank at Shikomoli Primary School, the students were weighed down by the burden of supplying water for their school. Teachers checked students' jerrycans at the school gate each morning. Students without any or enough water would be punished or sent home. "It was hard because we walked for long distances to get water," sa...
Before we installed a rain tank at Gimarakwa Primary School last year, water-fetching was a burden students had to bear every day. "Carrying water to school every day in the morning and in the afternoon was a huge task put on us," said 12-year-old Janis M. "Very early in the morning, one was able to spot students carrying water to school. We used ...
"Before the completion of the [protected] spring, the spring was open to contamination, which was risky to the community members," said 20-year-old tailor, Esther Maongo. "Typhoid was the song [of] the community." Before its protection last year, Govet Lumbasi Spring constantly infected its community members with water-related diseases. And during...
Before we built a rain tank at KG Jeptorol Primary School, everyone used the water students were able to fetch from outside of the school grounds. Pupils would juggle their books along with heavy containers of water, depleting their energy before their school day had even begun. Students were often absent, and there was no end to the crisis in sigh...