Mai Nebri, Ethiopia. April 11, 1:30 P.M.
It started with a 140-character tweet on January 8. And a few hours
ago, in a remote Ethiopian village, hundreds cheered as clean water shot
from the ground. The sight was a familiar one for us, but this well was
special. Here's why.
On February 12, people from 202 cities around the world came together
for charity: water using a micro-blogging tool called Twitter. The
global event was called Twestival, and
was organized in less than four weeks completely by volunteers.
More
than 10,000 individual donors contributed just shy of $250,000 -
enough for 50 villages and 12,500 people to get clean water. As always,
100% of the money will fund water projects. Overwhelmed
by the generosity and passion of the Twitter community, we couldn't
wait to show their impact in real-time and answer the question, "What can this money really do?" So
today, with lead Twestival organizer Amanda Rose and the help of
satellite partner Evosat,
we shot, edited, and posted the first of four daily videos from Northern
Tigray, Ethiopia.
Mai
Nebri has a heartbreaking story, but today it's being rewritten.
"Welcome to this remote and forgotten place," proclaimed the 34-year-old
village chairman, Guerish. "You have sacrificed a lot to come to
this very remote area." While we had traveled far to
visit this community, our long journey seemed trivial compared
to the challenges the 500 people here face every day.
Like so
many in this harsh region, Mai Nebri's women and children walk more
than 5 hours every day for unsafe water. Some of
the women had deformed backbones from carrying 40 pounds of water.
A hyena attack recently claimed the life of a child on her way to
the water hole at 4 a.m., and waterborne diseases like bilharzia
and diarrhea are common. Many of the girls here don't get a chance
to attend school and instead have to fetch water.
Seven-foot
tall Nato Mohammed, who village elders told us was the 2nd
tallest man in the nation, said softly, "Without water, there is no
life." With
the drill rig and support trucks only a few feet behind him, he spoke
with a smile, "You have brought life
into this community."
Watch
today's video here, and join us over the next three days as we post
daily videos from Ethiopia. We'll be back in Mai Nebri on Tuesday
the 14th to see the pump installed, and share with you the celebration
of new life and opportunity for our new friends here.
* * *
charity: water's work in Ethiopia would be impossible without our local partner, A Glimmer of Hope Foundation.
Through this partnership, charity: water has funded more than 300 water projects in four regions of Ethiopia
and provided more than 120,000 people wth clean and safe drinking water. Learn more about Glimmer here.
Follow charity: water on Twitter: @charitywater
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