uganda

March 8, 2011
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celebrating women around the globe.

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It’s International Women’s Day! So we’re taking a moment to look back at all the incredible women we met last year while in the field. Some have clean water, others are still walking hours to the nearest source. Many are mothers, balancing parenting with housework, jobs or work in the community as hygiene educators and well caretakers. Some run their own businesses or entire clinics and schools.

All are beautiful.

photos: Esther Havens, Mo Scarpelli, Scott Harrison

womens day
womens day

Celebrate women today! Take a look back at some of our latest stories from the field about powerful women:

jerry can
- Elodi from Central African Republic: She lost a child to waterborne illness. But the Live Drill would change the future for her other kids.
- Rose from Kenya: Now that she has clean water, she’s getting her grad degree.
- Keisha from Haiti: She fled to an island after the earthquake — with no water, but lots of hope.
- Helen from Uganda: “Now, I am beautiful.”

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April 19, 2010
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From the field: every ash cloud has a silver lining.

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Our water projects director, Becky Straw, attended the Eastern Africa Regional Sanitation Conference and Learning Forum last week. She’s still stranded in Kampala due to volcanic ash flight delays. But she’s staying positive. She sent us the photo below from her Blackberry (and wow, do we feel sorry for her)…

Follow all the volcano-related comments — some hilarious, some informative, some kind of sad — on Twitter with #ashtag.

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March 9, 2010
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celebrating women: Uganda.

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We love women. Since International Women’s Day was Monday, we’ll share photos of some of the women we’ve met in the field all week long.

Today, we’re lifting up the mothers and daughters from northern Uganda. This community uses clean water from their new charity: water well and they also elected women to their Water Committee (which oversees the well’s operation). This is the first chance for women here to have a local leadership role and — as you can tell — they’re pretty excited about it. As are we!

Learn more about how you can help communities like these here >

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November 30, 2009
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from the field: beauty in northern Uganda.

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Driving down a bumpy road in the middle of Northern Uganda, we kick up dust as we head into the rural countryside. I’m traveling with teams from two other non-profit organizations to evaluate the work of our shared local partner, Joy Drilling, which drills wells and trains communities in sanitation and hygiene. Before piling in, I made a last-minute decision to jump into the truck’s flatbed. The Ugandan drilling crew looked stunned that I’d do such a thing, but I didn’t care. I was happy to suffer a little dust for the view.

I have a pretty incredible job. As charity: water’s Water Project Manager, I travel to some of the most desperate places on earth in search of clean water. And while the landscape changes, there’s always one thing that remains the same: the women are always walking. Whether I’m trekking the mountains of Ethiopia, taking cover from a rainstorm in rural Liberia or tramping through the jungles of Central African Republic, the women are always carrying water.

From my vantage point in the truck, I watch women gather up their children and move to the edge of the road to let us pass. Their feet are gnarled and calloused: a result of thousands of miles walked barefoot over rocks and mud. With babies strapped to their backs, their brightly colored skirts sway and their knees quiver, bracing under the weight of water and children. Most balance pails on their heads, while some grip 80 pounds of water with sweaty palms, a bright yellow five-gallon Jerry Can in each hand.I’m in awe of how they manage. But of course, they have no choice. The average woman in Africa walks three miles every day for water. Often, it’s water from putrid rivers or disease-infested swamps. Worldwide, women are more than twice as likely as men to collect drinking water.

Without warning, we suddenly swerve off the road and up over an embankment. Dried corn stalks thump against the side of the truck as we plow through a field. My knuckles are white as I try to hold on and not bounce out.

Moments later, we find ourselves in a clearing — and in the middle of a huge celebration. Esther, our photographer, pokes her head out the window, smiles, and yells back at me, “Looks like our mission’s been compromised!” I usually prefer to surprise communities by our arrival because it makes it easier to monitor how our water points are functioning without hundreds of people watching. But once you visit a few communities in the neighborhood, rumors of your presence spread like wildfire.We jump out of the truck and walk into a party. The women meet us with exuberant cheering and dancing. Pure and loud joy rocks the village.

* * *

This is when I meet Helen Apio. While most women hang back politely, Helen jumps toward me and screams two inches from my face. Technically, it’s singing. But the high-pitched shrieking is so loud and reverberates with such energy and emotion, I know I have to talk with her.

She tells me about the new fresh water well in her village.

“I am happy now,” Helen beams. “I have time to eat, my children can go to school. And I can even work in my garden, take a shower and then come back for more water if I want! I am bathing so well.”

A few of the men chuckle to hear a woman talk about bathing but all I notice is Helen’s glowing face, the fresh flowers in her hair, and the lovely green dress she wears for special occasions. Touching her forearm, I reply, “Well, you look great.”

“Yes,” she pauses. Placing both hands on my shoulders and smiling, she says, “Now, I am beautiful.”

That really hits me.

My job is to focus on sustainable development, health, hygiene and sanitation; to make sure charity: water’s projects are working in 20 years. But nowhere on any of my surveys or evaluations is there a place to write, “Today we made someone feel beautiful.”

How Helen became beautiful is the real story.

Before she had clean water, she would wake up before dawn, clutch a five-gallon Jerry Can in each hand, and walk almost a mile and a half to the nearest water point, which happened to be at a school. Because there simply wasn’t enough water for the area’s population, she’d wait in line with hundreds of other women who also valued clean water. Helen’s only other option was to skip the wait and collect contaminated water from a pond.

Helen spent most of her day walking and waiting. She told me she’d say to herself every day, “How should I use this water today? Should I water my garden so we can grow food? Should I wash my children’s uniforms? Should I use it to cook a meal? Should we drink this water?” With two children, one husband and 10 gallons, Helen had to make choices.

I see the shame in her eyes as today she describes how she used to return from her long trek to find her two young children waiting for her. They were often sent home from school because their uniforms were dirty. Helen just never had enough water.

I see now why she is so eager to scream out her joy and gratitude. She wants me to understand that this gift from charity: water is real. With the new well in her village, her life has been transformed. She now has choices; time, options, freedom. Also, Helen has been chosen to be her community’s Water Committee Treasurer; she collects nominal fees from 51 households to use for the maintenance of their well. Water Committees are often the first time women are ever elected to leadership positions in villages.

Last month, Helen was standing in line waiting for water.

This month, she’s standing up for her community. And now, she is beautiful.

– Becky Straw

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July 8, 2009
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from the field: northern Uganda

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Our water projects manager Becky Straw just returned from northern Uganda, where it all started for charity: water. In 2006, donors funded the first set of wells in a refugee camp that desperately needed clean water. Today, with your help, we have 94 projects in Uganda serving people with clean water. Our friend and photographer Esther Havens took some amazing portraits and got to meet the people we’ve served.

See the photo captions for a glimpse of everyday life — the story from this trip is coming soon.

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