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August 10, 2011
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From the field: keep the girls at school.

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What did you care about when you were in the fifth grade?

Getting A’s or +‘s on your report card? Riding your bike?
Whether you’d make the first rounds in being chosen for a kickball team?

How about what would happen when you left school to walk a mile by yourself to use the bathroom?

Your school probably had restrooms. And you wouldn’t dare walk home by yourself, even if your house was within a mile from your school. You likely didn’t have to worry about this.

Khadija did.

(music: This Will Destroy You)

Khadija’s story.

Talking toilets — it’s not comfortable. But Khadija’s eager. She stands straight up, hands at her sides, in her school’s small yard, waiting patiently in the misty aftermath of Bangladesh’s heavy rain.

She politely answers questions: her age, who her friends are, where she lives, what she wants to be when she grows up. But it’s obvious Khadija is ready to get to the real stuff.

She wants to tell the story of how toilets brought her back to school.

khadija

A year and a half ago, No. 57 Government Primary School didn’t have a bathroom. At first, Khadija tried using the fields close to school, so she wouldn’t have to miss so much class. She’d have a friend stand guard so that no one else could watch or bother her.

But this became “too troublesome” — two people missing class instead of one. So Khadija and her friends started using the toilets of neighbors that lived near school.

In bright green uniforms, Khadija and her classmates stood out as they walked about 20 minutes along the street to strangers’ houses to take care of their business. Boys in the neighborhood would follow them, yell at them, sometimes throw things at them. One day, a crew of kids crushed stones on top of Khadija’s head.

The teasing was about being girls, but it was mostly about being poor. “You go to the school for the absolute poor people,” they taunted. “You have to go someplace else to get water — to beg for water!”

And the retribution wasn’t just from kids. The school’s neighbors were not happy about kids using their private restrooms.

“They’d ask our teachers, ‘Can’t your students pay to use the bathroom?’” Khadija recalls. “They’d say a lot of things to our teachers, but mostly to us.”

Embarrassment set in. Khadija started missing school to walk home alone and use the toilet at her house. Her walk increased to about two-thirds of a mile; with more time on the road by herself, the harassment increased, too.

“I’d feel really bad coming to school,” Khadija said. “I’d tell my parents that the latrines at the school are bad and because the boys are bullies, I shouldn’t have to go to school.”

khadija's school -- girls

They spoke of my school as ‘one where they live like absolute poor people…’ Another time, they crushed stones in my hair.

Last year, she missed 15 days of school as a result. In the United States, many public schools expel you if you miss more than 10 days in a year (unexcused absences).

And Khadija’s count was actually quite low. Out of the school year’s 229 days, the average days missed by No. 57 Narayanpur Government Primary students each year was 35 full days.

Girls specifically averaged 33 days missed; sometimes for sickness — 20% of students suffered from water-related diarrhea, dysentery or skin diseases last year — and sometimes to avoid harassment.

Khadija speaks about these problems in the past-tense because they’re a recent memory for her.

Now, she and more than 300 others at her school have separate latrines for boys and girls, installed by our partner Concern Worldwide. The students and teachers also received training in handwashing, personal hygiene, disease prevention and menstrual hygiene.

All of this has helped drive down the rates of waterborne illness by 15%.

The kids are healthier but more kids show up for school each day, too. Attendance and enrollment have both increased; now, 100% of students in Khadija’s area attend school.

And reports of harassment have fallen by 8%. Khadija told us she feels safer at school; she’s not the only one. Across Shariatpur, Concern Worldwide found that the increase in girls’ attendance was directly due to the decrease in abuse and harassment.

“I use the bathroom at the school — I no longer have to run to my house,” Khadija said. “Now, we don’t have those problems.”

There’s no guarantee that Khadija will never be teased again. Nor is there certainty that she’ll never have another water-related illness. But as she quickly ducked back into her classroom, narrowly missing the rain that started pelting the palms surrounding No. 57 Primary, one thing was for sure: this girl wasn’t going to miss anymore class if she could help it.

– Mo Scarpelli
charity: water multimedia producer

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toilets

Why toilets?

We often get asked these two big questions about our projects that include sanitation (toilets):

Why are you putting money towards toilets? That’s not water.

Access to clean water is just the first step to reducing diseases. Safe water alone can cut the chance of diarrheal disease by 21%. But hygiene practices (like simple handwashing) with sanitation can drive disease rates down nearly 45%.

Health is one thing; dignity is another. Girls in developing countries are likely to drop out of school as soon as they hit puberty, i.e., when they start their period. Wouldn’t you, without a private, clean place to use the restroom and wash? Toilets built at schools have been shown to increase attendance, especially among girls.

What’s so bad about just going outside?

The privacy issue plays into this (explained above). And maybe you’ve squatted outside while camping sometime in your life — you’d think it’s no big deal. But imagine if all the members of your community were doing their business right in their — and your — backyards every time they had to go. Imagine that you walked to school or the store or work through trails of other peoples’ excrement.

People living in areas with open defecation live every day with a high risk of getting and spreading waterborne illnesses. And while diarrhea may be something you can cure with a little Pepto here, in developing countries, it’s often deadly, especially for kids under the age of five.

More about Concern Worldwide’s work in Bangladesh.

charity: water’s projects for schools in Shariatpur, Bangladesh, are part of the Amader School Project, a program implemented and managed by our local partner, Concern Worldwide.

khadija

ASP launched in Oct. 2006 and has since improved education and student health for more than 150 schools across Bangladesh.

The goal is to improve learning achievement in the classroom, increase attendance and retention of students and to make sure the poorest families have access to education.

Water and sanitation projects are an essential piece of ASP. Through charity: water’s projects at schools in Bangladesh, more than 59,000 people have received access to clean drinking water and latrines.

Concern’s local teams manage project construction and form local groups to look after the projects and handle hygiene training. They work with the local government to test the water quality of each well. And, they gather data from each area to track the impact of the projects.

Here’s how Concern’s ASP program uses water and sanitation to bring kids to (and keep them in) school:

concern

Khadija’s story is just one example of how water and sanitation projects at schools can make kids at these schools healthier, more prepared to learn — and even safer. We’re proud to partner with Concern Worldwide to enact change at schools in Bangladesh.

Learn more about Concern Worldwide here >

*Sources: Concern Worldwide, World Health Organization, UNICEF.

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July 21, 2011
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From the field: We hit water in Moale!

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You may have followed our Live Drill during last year’s September Campaign. On charity: water’s fourth anniversary, we tried to drill for clean water in a remote village called Moale, deep in the forest of Central African Republic.

We did not hit water.

But we did promise Moale we’d be back.

Yesterday, we drilled in Moale again… and this time… watch the video!

See all the videos from the September Campaign 2010 Live Drill here >

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June 9, 2011
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from the field: some REST in Ethiopia.

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charity: water founder and CEO Scott Harrison has spent the last week in the field working on the upcoming 2011 September Campaign. We’ll launch the campaign in late August and celebrate our five-year anniversary on September 7. In the mean time, here’s a quick update on his time with our local partners in Ethiopia:

Hi, friends —

I’m writing from a town called Hawzien in the Tigray region of Northern Ethiopia. It’s my 15th visit to Ethiopia in four years, and it’s probably my favorite country that charity: water works in. We’ve spent the last week in the field with A Glimmer of Hope (our country partner for Ethiopia) and specifically with our local implementing partner in Tigray, an organization called REST (Relief Society of Tigray). Together with your help, we’ve been making incredible progress here.

tek

REST is now 32 years old, and is still led by its co-founder Tekloine, who is considered a hero in these parts; a man for the people. During the famine in the late 1980s, he helped march 160,000 Tigrayan people to Sudan and feed them. After the communist regime was overthrown, he convinced many of the freedom fighters to turn swords into plowshares and help him bring the people out of extreme poverty.

When I first came up here on a visit in 2008, I saw an incredible opportunity to go deep in Tigray — to move the needle towards total water coverage. All the key components seemed to be in place: a visionary leader we could trust, an organization with skilled national staff, high integrity, strong fiduciary controls and finally, a rural population in extreme need of clean water. REST was also brimming with intangible qualities like heart, grit, dedication and pure motivation. They hadn’t yet done the kind of individual project reporting charity: water requires of our partners (completion photos + GPS coordinates of every project), but were eager to learn and deliver.

If you’ve been following our work in the last four years, you’ve seen and heard plenty of the stories we’ve brought home from Ethiopia.

You’ve seen muddy water holes and you’ve listened to women talk about five-hour back-breaking trips for dirty water. You’ve seen leeches in contaminated open springs and heard about hyena attacks at night as the women and children fetch water from great distances.

But most importantly, you’ve been a part of the solution here. You funded more than 1,000 hand-dug wells, deep drilled wells, spring protections and rainwater harvesting systems, and you helped more than 370,000 people here get access to life’s most basic need.

drink

MAP

Here’s a snapshot of the work you’ve made possible in the last three years; how your donations have grown REST’s local capacity to construct life-saving water projects:

In 2008, REST had 103 people working in their Water Programs.
Today, they have 216 people.

In 2007, REST built 257 total water projects.
This year, they’ll build more than 750 with
charity: water funds alone.

In 2007, the total clean water coverage in Tigray was 33%.
Today, it’s 49%.

In the last four years, you’ve funded over 1,000 water projects with REST that will serve more than 374,000 people with clean water.

It’s an important achievement in a short time, and it’s all because of your generosity. Stay tuned — we have some very exciting plans for Tigray and a big announcement coming this fall.

– Scott Harrison
charity: water founder

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May 25, 2011
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From the field: toilets in Pora Bosti.

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poppy

Poppy doesn’t speak much at first. She acknowledges me with a shy nod and smiles warmly, her red lipstick a perfect match to her bright floral sari.

Then, she promptly offers to show me her toilet.

I’m in Bangladesh with our Water Programs Manager, Jonna, to visit charity: water projects and explore new water and sanitation opportunities. Today, that means a block of latrines in a crowded slum in the country’s capital city. Toilets are nothing new to the charity: water team. During the last few months especially, we’ve racked up quite a few miles over some rough terrain to see varying latrine designs. But this latrine block is quite a bit different. In Bangladesh’s urban areas, nearly 20 million people live without sanitation. Yet these toilets were made to help a group that would otherwise likely sit at the end of the list — the physically disabled.

walking

We’re in Pora Bosti, which means “Burned Slum.” Years back, this entire area caught fire and burned to the ground; the name has stuck ever since.

Pora Bosti is home to an enclave of handicapped residents. Some use a crutch to walk; others have wooden wheelchairs or crawl on their hands. But with five different latrines built to accommodate different physical ailments, all now have ready access to a safe and clean place to do their business.

Poppy is the president of the management committee which oversees these latrines along with a freshwater well installed here. When she was 12 years old, she was hit by a car (this is not hard to believe in traffic-laden Dhaka). She now lacks the use of her legs, but seems to get around fine in her wheelchair. And she’s excited to show us not only what the toilet she uses looks like — but how quickly and easily she can hop on the seat.

“Before we had these toilets, we would try to go in other toilets that aren’t really usable for us,” she tells us. “So we might go by ourselves in an open space, in the dark so no one would see.”

Poppy’s committee of 18 members collects a monthly fee of 1,000 Taka per family that uses the latrines (about $14, though the rate varies based on income), which they keep in their group bank account until they need funds for maintenance or repairs. They meet once a month to discuss hygiene practices while making sure the current latrine designs are working for everyone using them. And if they aren’t? Then they alter the model. This is why Poppy’s chosen toilet has a rope dangling from the center of the ceiling; she proposed it to the organization that helped build the facility, it was installed, and now she can comfortably use the bathroom.

“I’m happy I can use this now,” she tells us, though she doesn’t really have to. Her eagerness to show us her toilet in the first place spoke for itself.

doors
On the way out, I take another glance at the latrine doors; they’re each decorated with colorful murals showing people with different disabilities. I’ve never seen so much artistic detail on (or in) a bathroom in my life. The paintings seem to me a mark of creativity and ownership, but also of pride. Poppy made it clear: she and her neighbors in this little corner of Pora Bosti aren’t hiding their disabilities. And they’re no longer ashamed of how they go about doing what we all have to do several times each day.
In fact, they’re making it plain for anyone to recognize their right to — and their excitement about — toilets. What better way to show confidence in how you do your business?
– Mo Scarpelli
charity: water multimedia producer

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October 5, 2010
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september campaign: making water projects last.

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How do you make sure a well in one of the most remote countries in the world lasts for years? You involve the community in construction, you employ maintenance teams — and you instill a sense of ownership and responsibility with those that use it.

Watch how our local partners in Central African Republic are doing this with every charity: water project funded by this year’s September Campaign:

September Campaign is over — but our work in C.A.R. is far from finished. What happens next? Learn more here >

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