Our implementing partner received this request for a well in Bwola...
"In the last 20 years of war, Padibe Sub-County was the most affected, with the highest death rate in Kitgum district, and with the largest squalid camp condition of 45,000 people during the war. It was the entry and exit point of the LRA rebel activity in and out of Sudan. As a result, there is the highest percentage of trauma and poverty level, ever seen in northern Uganda.
Education, agriculture and income generation, social development, spiritual development, medical care, women and children's needs, have all been severely neglected during these last 20 years of war.
Bwola village, particularly, which is in Padibe, is where the water well is highly needed. It has a population of 700 plus people that would be using the well in the immediate vicinity plus many others traveling in for its use. The village is made up primarily of farmers, and some school teachers.
Bwola village was hit by a Hepatitis E epidemic, as a result of dirty water source from a seasonal stream. Thirty people died from this epidemic in 2009 in Bwola village alone, and over 350 people died in the whole Padibe subcounty as a result of this outbreak.
Because of this, we mobilized and sensitized the village on the use of clean water, and village resettlement project and their main plea was to have a clean water source.
There is a need in the area for a primary school and a clinic, which is also part of our 'village resettlement' vision. This well would be centrally located to serve both of these projects as they are developed.
Right now, the center of the well location, would be the church, which is right now being built. The pastor of the church has graduated from our Bible College in Gulu, and he has formed a co-op within the church community in Bwola to start animal and livestock sharing, as well as oxen sharing for plowing the church families' farms.
The vision is great, but having a water source is the first and foremost need for that area."
On completion of the well our partner sent this update...
"My
name is Ayaa Ester, and I’m 62 years old. We‘ve had no clean water from
our village. The only water is from Lagwel, which is located three
kilometers from our village.
The major problem would not
be the long distance, but when we get there for water, we are limited
to only two water cans per family, which is not enough to sustain our
families.
I
give thanks to Water Harvest International, and to the Therese
Foundation. This well will help us so much and will reduce the stress,
struggle, and fighting for water. May the almighty God bless you all and
continue to work through you to solve the problems of us."