ORDA

March 8, 2012
tweet this

Recognizing women in the water crisis.

6 comments

Today is International Women’s Day. We’re taking a minute to celebrate some of the women of this past year — specifically, some amazing daughters, mothers and grandmothers we met in November 2011 while traveling in the Amhara region of Ethiopia.

Almost a billion people in the world live without clean water. We call that the water crisis. And while we know many of these are men, the water crisis takes a significant toll on women of the world. Women are twice as likely as men to collect water for their families each day. Many in Sub-Saharan Africa walk up to four hours each day to get water that’s likely to make them sick when they get it home to drink.

Today, we hope you join us in recognizing the women of this world who bear this burden, who get up early or stay out dangerously late, who haul forty pounds of water weight in a Jerry can strapped to their backs… who strive for and hope for their children’s health, who put their families first. We’re lucky enough to have met some when we travel to the field. Their stories continue to shock us, inspire us and keep us working to bring clean water to every person on the planet.

photos: Mo Scarpelli / charity: water
womens day

Women we met in Baskura, Ethiopia, in November:

This video was made for the Rockstar Cavemen, the sponsors of this new freshwater well.

Stories of amazing women and girls in the past year:

jerry can
- Khadija from Bangladesh: Clean water and toilets brought her back to school.
- Mintamir from rural Ethiopia: She used to wish for clean water to wash each day like the city girls… her wish came true. “I am just like them now.”
- Poppy from Bangladesh: Not much is clean or accessible for the disabled in Pora Bosti slum… but Poppy’s new toilets are.
- Whitney from the U.S.: She ran coast-to-coast to raise funds and awareness for clean water.

Have more stories to share about amazing women? Leave us a comment with a link or a personal story. Happy Women’s Day!

Categories:

November 17, 2011
tweet this

From the field: country life in Amhara, Ethiopia.

3 comments

Amhara, Ethiopia.

minchit

I arrive in Ethiopia’s Amhara region after rainy season has just swept through. The fields are lush smears of gold and emerald. Every piece of land seems to be covered in a crop. In vast acres of teff, maize, sorghum and corn, specks of white scarves appear and submerge again — the farmers bent over their crops, harvesting their livelihood.

minchit

From what I picked up in conversations from the fields to the villages, farmers in Amhara make a pretty decent wage.

But country life isn’t easy.

Those who aren’t in the fields — usually kids and moms — spend most of their day preparing food, collecting firewood, herding animals and taking care of other chores necessary to keep their families healthy.

Mintamir, 18 years old, is one of them. Like a lot of the farm kids from my hometown in rural Michigan, she’s been handling chores since she was old enough to walk. When these chores were taken care of, only then would she get to school.

But unlike most farm kids in the U.S., of all her responsibilities, the most time-consuming and physically difficult was collecting water. She’d spend much of her morning walking to an open pond, then hauling her Jerry can home to her house. Her family would make the most of just a pair of these five-gallon containers of water each day. That meant only enough water to bathe (at most) once a week and wash clothes every two weeks.

“We didn’t even wash our faces or care for our personal hygiene,” she tells me. “We were ashamed of our body odor. But also, we’d get sick and then we didn’t focus on school. We’d be tired and sleepy.”

minchit

Mintamir has met kids from another life; the city. Her school was a mix of country and town folks. As she learned about their lives — more available water, no cattle to watch over, no crops to tend — she grew anxious. These other kids had time. School was their main focus. What if she fell behind? What if her chores, her illnesses, her waning self-confidence, set her back?

“We are country girls,” she says. “Because we were born here, we’d have to care for animals and the farm and also have to fetch water. We’d be late to school.”

Mintamir pushed through. She’d get up early, she’d stay late, she’d do whatever she had to in order to finish her education. But she’s the exception, not the rule. Our partners tell us that many kids in this area miss school to collect water; the dropout rate for girls is especially high.

Such is the way of country living, many believe. Girls like Mintamir accept that this comes with growing up in a farming family. But they also know that one of their most demanding chores could be relieved completely if they had a clean water source nearby.

“The society is changing here. Now, our time has become like… a computer! Efficient. It’s very different.”

So do we. In 2010, our local partners A Glimmer of Hope and ORDA (Organization for Rehabilitation and Development in Amhara) built a charity: water well right in the middle of Mintamir’s village.

She explains that families can now accomplish more each day. Kids can finish collecting water before school and buckle down on their studies instead of juggling multiple trips for more water later in the day. They can come to class clean and ready.

“The society is changing here. Now, we’re using our time efficiently,” she laughs. “Our time now has become like… a computer! Efficient. It’s very different, very different.”

minchit

And with clean water so close, she says families have doubled the amount of water they can use each day. People bathe regularly and wash their clothes every week.

Like the city people, she says.

“Now we are the same! We drink well water, too, and feel clean,” she says, speaking for the younger kids around her who are still in school. “When the bell rings, we attend class at the same time.”

She laughed.

“I am just like them now.”

Mintamir has plans to move from her small village of Minchit soon. She’s going to Bahir Dar, Amhara’s second-largest city, to pursue more education. She’s a farm girl at heart, but she’s eager to keep learning. Now that Minchit has water, she hopes more girls in her village will have that chance, too.

– Mo Scarpelli
charity: water multimedia producer

To date, we’ve funded 330 projects in the Amhara region of Ethiopia. Learn more about our local partner, A Glimmer of Hope, here >

Categories:

May 24, 2010
tweet this

A Glimmer of Hope in the office for the morning.

2 comments
glimmer office visit

Philip Berber, co-founder of our partner in Ethiopia, A Glimmer of Hope Foundation (AGOH), came by the office to give us the background on his organization and an update on their recent work.

Philip was a tech entrepreneur for 20 years before he sold his company at its prime (right before the dot-com bubble burst). He and his wife, Donna, started hearing about the famines in Ethiopia on the news in the mid 80s while living in London, at the time of Band Aid. The issue especially struck a cord with Donna, and years later in 1999, she found a way to travel to the country to get more perspective. When she came back home to Austin, Texas, she was a changed woman, in a state of shock from witnessing the living conditions and aftermath of the famine among the rural poor. She wouldn’t leave the house for six weeks; when she showed her husband footage from her trip, he understood why. Philip then embarked to Ethiopia on his own and visited a village called Dembi Dollo. “That’s where my heart opened,” he told us.

glimmer office visit

Donna and Philip knew something had to be done — something different than sending aid to entire countries or districts. They formed A Glimmer of Hope Foundation and formed a strategy: “to help Ethiopians help themselves” in specific regions. First, they listened — after identifying villages to work in, the Glimmer staff asked each village what their greatest needs were. The primary concern was safe drinking water, followed by health care and education. Glimmer vowed to help provide all three. And they decided to go with what they knew best: an entrepreneurial approach, “combined with passion and heart.”

The Austin-based foundation opened an office in Addis Ababa, hired local Ethiopian experts and teamed up with a local NGO and a self-help organization to start implementing projects throughout Ethiopia. From their local office in Addis, Glimmer ensures each project is financed carefully and constructed responsibly while involving community members as much as possible.

Glimmer operates like a business in that they measure success with profit — “social profit.” They focus on three main elements:

glimmer office visit

Enterprise — refers to work and microfinance programs. These are mostly for farmers, women and budding small-business entrepreneurs.

Development — refers to health care and education programs. Glimmer now has more than 150 health clinics and 300 education projects in Ethiopian schools.

Humanitarian — refers to life’s most basic need: water. Glimmer uses three water technologies: deep boreholes (drilled wells), hand-dug wells and spring protection systems.

In less than a decade, Glimmer has helped more than 3.3 million people in Ethiopia by creating programs, building projects and engaging the community in their success. Their prototype is Dembi Dollo, the village Philip and Donna first visited in 2001. Here, freshwater projects have brought safe drinking water nearby. Health care and primary education reform have changed the residents’ way of life. The community used to worry about life-threatening diseases and not having enough food or any clean water; now, they are working to build a teachers’ training college, a university, a job training center and to provide loans to small and medium-sized businesses in the area.

“It’s about integrated community development. Water is a fundamental building block. The energy that used to be focused towards getting water, etc., is now put towards education and bettering themselves.”

– Philip Berber, co-founder

Business prospects really pave the way for the future, said Philip. “Financial empowerment creates personal empowerment,” he explained. “Aid is sometimes seen as a huge Band-Aid, but micro-financing is key. The way out of poverty is to make money.” He added that this is especially true with women seeking to provide for their families; and for farmers needing to irrigate dry Ethiopian land.

charity: water is Glimmer’s largest partner and supporter. Glimmer implements charity: water projects using two Ethiopian organizations on the ground: the Relief Society of Tigray (REST) and the Organization for Relief and Development in Amhara (ORDA). Both REST and ORDA have a history of comprehensive and community-centered work. We realized early on how effective these partnerships are and view Ethiopia as the perfect place for charity: water to invest big and move the needle on the world water crisis. Since 2007, we’ve funded new projects and rehabs here almost every quarter. Overall, 35% of all charity: water projects ever funded have been for Ethiopia.

Here’s Glimmer’s feature video, shot by Paul Pryor (he helped make our September and Unshaken videos):

We’re often asked why we choose some partners who work on other development projects beyond water. How does water work alongside education, micro-financing and other areas that seem completely separate? Phillip summed it up for us pretty well: “It’s about integrated community development. There’s a clear synergy with water, education and health care — doing all of these creates a holistic effect within the villages. We look at how people are caring for themselves… and water is a fundamental building block. The energy that used to be focused towards getting water, etc., is now put towards education and bettering themselves.”

“Eliminate poverty. Illuminate lives.” That’s Glimmer’s tagline. And they’re heavily involved in community-level progress, scaling with the help of charity: water and local partners, but their long-term vision is to make themselves unnecessary in the areas they work — this happens when the communities have taken full ownership of their projects. In the mean time, Philip says he’s grateful for charity: water’s standards of proof for each project. Our requiring GPS coordinates and photos of each completed water projects brings accountability to the forefront.

Learn more about A Glimmer of Hope Foundation here.

Categories: