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.
Before the well in Satamodia was rehabilitated, Adamasey had so much trouble fetching water to complete her everyday activities. "It was not good for me as a woman in this community," Adamasey explained. "Women and water work together. If there is no water or not enough water, hygiene and sanitation will not be completed." "The distance I had to ...
Before we rehabilitated the well in her village, 15-year-old Mariama's days were strenuous. "It was [a] difficult moment for me," Mariama said. "I had to wake up very early in the morning to go to [the] stream to fetch water. I [would] break a lot of buckets for my mother and she [was] not happy about that. I sustained a lot of injuries on the wa...
"There was a great challenge in my community due to the water facility. Though it was in use, the water was not enough to serve the number of people living in this community," said Aminata K., 16. She continued, "Because of that, we, the school-going kids, sometimes got late for school because we had to queue in the morning at this facility to fet...
We asked the caretaker of the well in Borope Community, Kadiatu Mansaray, 45, how the well functioned before it was rehabilitated last year. She said, "The pump was functional but it dried up in the dry season and it was very challenging for us at that time." She continued, "I had to spend money on package water for drinking because where we were...
Before we constructed a rain tank at Mwikhupo Primary School, last year, students had a difficult time finding time to study. "Time was wasted, which affected our academic performance," explained 14-year-old Vitalis. "At, times we couldn't complete our lessons without being asked to go get water from River Lusumu. This also resulted [in] indiscipl...