Living Water

June 8, 2010
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from the field: reuniting with Jean Bosco.

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Two years ago, humanitarian photographer Esther Havens met a young boy named Jean Bosco as a charity: water well was being drilled in his village. Since then, she’s photographed hundreds of people around the world for charity: water. She recently revisited that first village and met up with Jean Bosco again. Here is her story.


All I could hear was my heart thumping.

I walked a familiar dusty road with a camera in my right hand, a stack of photos in my left. I was on a mission to find Jean Bosco.

My world first collided with his two years ago when I traveled to Rwanda with an organization called Wishing Well Africa. We spent three days in his village, Murinja. Each morning, we followed people as they collected drinking water from small, murky ponds and watched them fill their Jerry Cans from the same place where animals sloshed and women washed their laundry. People here spent hours walking for water that made their kids sick. Their kids constantly complained of stomach aches.

I remember the first time I saw Jean Bosco; I took a photo of him immediately. He was a bashful boy but his face resembled maturity beyond his years. He showed me his home. He walked me along the path he used every day to collect pond water.

Like Jean Bosco, I never knew you could drill a hole into the ground and drinkable water would come spewing out.

I wondered if he’d ever know how many people would recognize his face. Without a clue, this one boy had helped bring clean water to villages all over the world by inspiring others to help.

But I saw this first-hand. The day we arrived in Murinja luckily corresponded with the day a charity: water well was drilled. Jean Bosco and I stood side by side and watched as the drilling rig bore into the earth, finding water 70 feet below. We rejoiced together when clean water gushed out of a new well that was a short walk from his home. We knew then that life for him and his neighbors would never be the same.

I left Murinja unsure if I’d ever see him again. But I couldn’t forget Jean Bosco. I shared his story with charity: water, and they shared his story with the world. Before I knew it, he was famous. His face debuted at the charity: water Saks Fifth Avenue gala and showed up at other fundraising events and exhibitions in NYC. I got calls and emails from people so moved by his story that they sponsored wells, started their own fundraising campaigns or in one instance, named a pet after him (the African Grey Parrot at Sea World is lovingly named “Jean Bosco”).

Jean Bosco’s story offered a sobering look at life for millions of kids in the developing world. But to many, he became a symbol of hope and inspiration. Villages like his don’t have to keep drinking brown pond water. All they need is a little help.

villagers looking at photo

In April 2010, charity: water asked me to return to Rwanda. Anticipation mounted as I took off for Murinja Village with water program director Becky Straw and multimedia producer Mo Scarpelli on a crisp Saturday morning. We passed the murky pond where the community once collected water and children fell in step behind us near the freshwater well. I pulled out a couple of photos from years before and asked if anyone recognized Jean Bosco. They giggled at the sight of their friend -– yes! He was nearby! They could show me.

I heard the familiar seesaw-like sound from the well; kids were pumping away, filling their Jerry cans, and I even recognized a few. I asked if they remembered their well’s drilling or if remembered me. “Last time, my hair was white, like Santa Claus,” I explained. A few laughed and said something in Kinyarwandan. “They say you are the same,” our translator told us. “But your hair was like an old man before, so you are younger now.”

“Jean Bosco!” A chorus of excitement rang out as a slight, graceful boy stepped up a small hill where I stood.

jean bosco smile

I was taken aback -– Jean Bosco looked the same! He was a little taller but his face was indistinguishable. Becky and Mo recognized him from the six-foot tall photo that hung in the charity: water office, a world away.

I handed him printed photos of himself. The corners of his mouth lifted slightly. He hesitated. Then a smile broke out on his face. He reached over — and hugged me. I was flattered and surprised. He remembered me! And he knew why the charity: water well was important to his community.

“We used to get sick,” he told us as his younger brother held tight to his side. “We don’t get sick now.”

“Our stomach pains are gone,” other children chimed in. I scanned the small crowd forming around us and recognized a young woman.

field

“Clarisse!” She smiled back up at me, bent slightly forward with a new baby on her back. She told us she watched the drilling two years ago while pregnant with her first child. “I knew the water would be safe for my baby,” she told us. “I was relieved.”

We asked her if the new well affected her in other ways.

“Before, I could not get clean,” she told us. “Now, I am shining. I am clean!”

Just two years of clean water transformed this village -– and I got to see it with my own eyes. As I stood with Jean Bosco again near his well before saying goodbye, I wondered if he’d ever know how many people would recognize his face. Without a clue, this one boy had helped bring clean water to villages all over the world by inspiring others to help.

This is why I tell stories, this is why I get close to the people I photograph and this is why I share their heart. Jean Bosco doesn’t yet fully understand the impact of his story. But I’ll keep telling it forever.

– Esther Havens with Mo Scarpelli

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April 19, 2010
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from the field: reunited.

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The last few days have been a blur of visits to water projects outside of Kigali, Rwanda. We toured rainwater catchments and eco-friendly latrines at schools with Water for People (currently our partners in Malawi). We caught up with the Access Project to see government-run health clinics in the Bugesera district that need clean water. Today, we checked up on charity: water wells drilled two years ago in Murinja.

It’s here we ran into Jean Bosco, a young boy Esther photographed two years ago. Do you remember him? We shared his story at our 2008 Saks Fifth Avenue event and all over our charity: ball 2008 walls. His photo still hangs tall in our NYC office. And you may have seen him on the cover of our Water for Schools booklets…

Esther was so excited to see him again — at the well that transformed his community.

Read Jean Bosco’s story from 2008 here. We’ll have photos and a video of the reunion soon, so stay tuned.

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April 6, 2010
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from the field: an education at Kampi Ya Moto.

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When we visit water projects at schools, we're usually greeted by hundreds of little pounding feet, threadbare book sacks slung on tiny shoulders and more smiles than we can count.

But here at Kampi Ya Moto, we arrived to find grown-ups, instead. School’s out for Easter break but there’s still plenty of water – and learning – here.

Two and a half years ago, charity: water built its first water project at a primary school in northwestern Kenya. The well now serves 350 students at Kampi Ya Moto school and an additional 1,000 people in the surrounding community. Our local partners drilled a deep borehole, then piped the water through the school grounds and to a kiosk out in front of the school's gates. The school employs a manager to sell water to the community for three Kenyan shillings ($.04 cents) per Jerry can and uses these nominal fees for maintenance. Between 200 and 300 people show up at the kiosk during peak hours on any given day. The manager admitted that he’s now working 12 hours each day to meet the demand.

This is where 25-year-old Andrew comes for water. He drinks the water at Kampi Ya Moto -- but he makes a living from it, too. Ten times a day, he fills his three Jerry cans with clean water from the school's kiosk and straps them to the back of his bike. He then pedals around the community, delivering water to families.

We met Andrew on Good Friday, when we pulled up to Kampi Ya Moto School to check up on the project.

"I'm just getting water," he stammered, thrown off guard by the three women jumping out of a car to talk to him. Then he smiled.

We asked Andrew if this clean water has helped him. He responded emphatically, “This water gave me a job.”

As we spoke with Andrew, a woman quietly slipped behind him to lean comfortably against the kiosk wall. Her bright red sweater caught our eye. We asked if she’s a teacher at the school. “No,” she replied, “I am a school counselor at another school down the road. I am just a neighbor who lives across the street.” She pointed towards a sturdy and modest brick house a few hundred yards away.

Rose used to spend two hours every day collecting dirty water from the Molo River. She’d return home only to feel uneasy each time her children took a drink.

“Since this well was drilled, all the kids in the community are now healthy,” she told us. “There’s been such an improvement in attendance at this school. We used to have a problem with typhoid – but not anymore. Now, the water is so clean. We are so happy.”

We asked her how she spends those two hours saved each day. She scrunched her face in thought. “Since the well was drilled I decided to go back to school, so I suppose I use that time for studying.”

What for, we asked?

“My Master’s degree,” she replied, matter-of-factly. “In counseling. To further my career.”

Since the beginning, charity: water has been dedicated to helping schools. We don't fund pencils, notepads and textbooks, though. We fund water.

Our Water for Schools program was formed to not only provide safe drinking water for children at school (and surrounding community members), but also to promote their education. Half of the world's schools don't have clean water. Millions of kids miss class a result -- they spend hours collecting water for their families or they fall sick with waterborne disease. Water projects bring kids back to class. The children have a chance to finish their education, to become the doctors and teachers and astronauts they tell us they want to be.

But as Kampi Ya Moto proved, a water project makes education possible for the adults, too. Soon, Rose will have more school under her belt than many Americans. The reason: she doesn't have to walk for water. And she doesn't have to tend to her family's chronic sickness from contaminated sources. She can spend those hours studying, as she does, and then working the job she’s been dreaming of for years.

We noticed the sign outside the school's bright turquoise gates said "Knowledge is Power" in big, bold letters. How true, both for kids normally at the desks inside and the adults filling their Jerry cans at the kiosk outside.

We photographed Rose and learned her story on Friday morning. The next day, we came back to share Esther's printed photo... and Rose shared some of her photos with us, too:



Want to help fund projects like the well in Kampi Ya Moto? You can. Learn more here.

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December 27, 2007
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from the field: clean water at Mogotio.

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I turned on the tap, and this time, clean water came out.

Back at the Mogotio clinic in Kenya only two months after my first visit, Dominic Mosa and I grinned in front of more than 100 onlookers, then cut the blue ribbon blocking the door of the new water station. Inside the kiosk, we turned two red knobs, and heard a rush of water. Clean water.

Two months ago, mud from the nearby Molo river slid through Mogotio’s pipes, turning sheets brown and stomachs green. Now, with the help of hundreds of donors, a 140-meter well has brought clean water and hope to the staff, patients and nearby community.

It started with a simple idea. We’d use my 32nd birthday – which also happened to be the one-year anniversary of charity: water – as an excuse to help more people in Africa get clean water. I’d ask for $32 donations in lieu of birthday gifts, and hopefully raise enough to fully fund a project.

I’d then fly to Africa with the money and drill the well, sending daily videos of the work to donors and supporters. But we needed to find a project.In northern Kenya, we found Mr. Mosa and a health clinic that desperately needed a break. We made a video, took photos, and asked for your help. We needed $40,000 to build a deep well with an electric pump, repair the tanks and piping, and construct a water station for the community’s use.

It worked. Within 2 weeks, hundreds of you responded with gifts, and more than $59,000 came in.

We went back and, through our partner Living Water International, drilled the well for Mr. Mosa and the people of Mogotio. We hit three underground aquifers, and a column of water shot skyward on the first afternoon of drilling. By day four, more than 7,000 liters of clean water per hour flowed from a pipe. We knew we were on to something, and didn’t want it to end with just my birthday.

We wanted to help more health clinics, so we asked all of you born in September to sacrifice your birthdays and join me. More than 80 people signed up, each asking for their age in currency. As September closed, we’d raised more than $120,000. Enough not only for Mogotio, but enough to fund two other water projects at clinics in the same state.

Yesterday, I visited the Abidah Health Center near Kisumu, the second project funded through these efforts. Clean water ran loudly now through the pipes, and we sat under a shade tree listening to grateful men and women as they stepped forward to offer thanks and gratitude. “We simply have no words” the community leaders said.

Neither did we.

* * *

We’d like to invite you to view the newly launched September site, where our designer Vik has spent more than 100 hours putting the new videos, photos and stories together.

charitywater.org/september

Included is the latest video from Monday’s ceremony at Mogotio where you can watch as we did, children drinking clean water for the first time in their lives.

I head from Kenya to Northern Uganda this morning to check on 18 completed charity: water wells. I hope soon to bring you more stories of lives changed by your donations.

Thanks for your continued support.

– Scott Harrison

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October 22, 2006
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embracing Ethiopia.

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As I prepare for a 12-day trip to Ethiopia, I am shocked to learn just how bad the water situation is there.

The country has more than 76 million people, and 76% of the population has no access to clean and safe drinking water.

I go to meet with the organizations we work with on the ground there, Healing Hands and Living Water Intl. The charity: water initiative seeks to fully fund 60 wells in the south of Ethiopia, yet I know already so very many more are needed.

Please watch this space for images and videos from the field.

Scott Harrison

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