Water is Life Kenya's Water Walk Challenge is on! This year we are walking for Osewan! We invite you to walk with us and help us give another community access to water! (Imagine not having direct access to water or walking at least 5 miles everyday just to get water.)
INSTRUCTIONS:
****************************************************************** (Copy & paste the entire text shown below): I accepted the #WILKWaterWalkChallenge for @WaterIsLifeKenya (re-type "@WaterIsLifeKenya" to activate tag) from Joyce Tannian (type who tagged you) to walk at least one mile and/or donate! Here in the US, we are lucky enough to consider going for a walk a leisure activity, but for many women in southern Kenya, it's not uncommon for them to walk nearly 5 miles to bring clean, viable water home to their families. To learn more about this fundraiser and to donate CLICK HERE: https://tinyurl.com/turnthewateron4OSEWAN Please copy & paste this entire text along with your selfie or video, then challenge and tag 5 of your friends! You have 48 hours! ATTENTION MOBILE USERS: You must first remove the link preview below before you can upload your selfie or video. Single tap and select "Remove Link." ****************************************************************** If you need assistance with getting started, please don't hesitate to reach out to us. You can message us here or email us at: info@WaterIsLifeKenya.com
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![]() Dear Larasha: You and your helpers have taken wonderful steps: by a large amount of your direct effort to help many PEOPLE in the Kimana and other markets. One way of looking at this is...well, why not do this/ all people know this was a good thing, to ask people to wash their hands and to tell them about the hidden danger of the virus. But who among us did or will actually take steps to do good for his brothers and sisters? What is and was needed is a community (WILK) of people to think, spend resources and be on the ground with water and staff. In my mind the actions you and Joyce took for the Game Scouts, and for the Big Land Use Conference last year and now for the Hand Washing are individual examples of Christian Charity in practice. In my technical field (economics) they are examples of delivering "public goods". That means organizing people and ideas and then spending resources (time, money) to deliver services or products that are valuable for MANY individual people. That value has a collective benefit (blocking community not just individual disease) for which individuals are not able to pay individually but the direct benefits secures the health of many as well as for me or you. The Game Scout service and the Amboseli Land Plans aimed to bring valuable community services which are also "public goods". One or two individuals stand to be better off...but more importantly the entire community for miles around can expect a better Maasai community benefit when wildlife and cattle (key dimensions of their group life) have better chances to prosper. Here in the U.S. our challenge is to explain this creative capacity of WILK so we gain financial support. In Kenya the challenge is to keep a staff who recognize how these costly steps of improved water systems and improved livestock allow their communities to prosper. Again, Larasha, God Bless you and the entire WILK (Joyce) team for great service. Water is Life Kenya provided critical training and hand washing stations for nearly ten thousand people at the Kimana and Rombo weekly open air markets in southern Kenya. COVID-19 is in Kenya and people from rural areas need the awareness training to know how to protect themselves and their families against the disease.
Maasai families rely on once weekly markets for selling livestock. They then use the cash to buy food for the week or the month. It also provides income for all the people selling vegetables, clothes utensils and all other life necessities. WILK organized a team of 25 people to staff hand washing stations, refilling the water and soap and instructing people in proper hand washing practices, social distancing and mask -wearing. Local leaders directed people to wash hands and wear masks. Failure to wash or wear a mask meant exclusion from the market. Thanks to all our hard-working team on the ground, led by Water is Life Kenya co-founder, Joseph Larasha. We still need donations to continue to providing the training and hand washing stations. Radio Citizen Kenya (below) highlighted our work last week on the air in Swahili.
Press Release:
Water is Life Kenya (WILK) launches virtual fundraising campaign for their newest clean water project “Turn the Water on for Osewan!” The Osewan community has been on the WILK waiting list since 2014. The campaign’s goal for April is to raise $40,000 to help jump-start this project (total cost is $80,000). Despite the coronavirus pandemic and the need to cancel in-person events, WILK is promoting and raising funds via social media with their fans and by weekly email blasts to their supporters. In addition to this, every Friday night at 7PM Eastern, Founder Joyce Tannian greets and updates her supporters on Facebook Live. To watch WILK Live show visit: https://www.facebook.com/WaterisLifeKenya Previous episodes can be found here. The live show begins with Joyce wearing and explaining a very colorful and traditional Kenyan outfit. She continues with updates on the pandemic in Southern Kenya, an informational segment called Wildlife Corner, and concludes with accepting additional questions. The show is twenty minutes long and is very educational. Joyce Tannian, Founder & Director commented, “Our work doesn’t stop and can’t stop now. Osewan people need us now, more than ever...finally it’s their turn! People have been trying to live in Osewan for a long time, but can’t. The area is very dry. It has ample pasture, but no water for cows or people. We want to make sure people in that area have enough clean water for themselves, for their families; enough water so they can build a school and build a hospital.” To find out more about “Turn the Water on for Osewan” and to make a donation visit: https://waterislifekenya.networkforgood.com/projects/96924-turn-the-water-on-4-osewan |
Joyce Tannian
Joyce lives most of the year in Kenya. She finds being on the ground and working with the communities intimately helps her to relate to their culture and needs. It also provides her with a comprehensive in-depth understanding so that Water is Life Kenya can properly come along side them and empower them without impacting their culture adversely. Archives
December 2020
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