school – Water is Life Kenya https://waterislifekenya.org Helping Kenyans Bloom Through Love & Water Thu, 13 Mar 2025 16:54:39 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://waterislifekenya.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/cropped-wilk-favicon-1-32x32.png school – Water is Life Kenya https://waterislifekenya.org 32 32 Partnership Announcement: Anderson Foundation https://waterislifekenya.org/2025/03/partnership-anderson-foundation/ https://waterislifekenya.org/2025/03/partnership-anderson-foundation/#respond Fri, 07 Mar 2025 18:53:30 +0000 https://waterislifekenya.org/?p=8745 This year, WILK has proudly partnered with Anderson Foundation to bring clean water to the Kimana Girls Secondary School. This foundation, which is the charitable arm of Zinpro Corporation, empowers girls through global initiatives. We’d like to tell you more about them, as well as the dire water situation in Kimana. All About Anderson Foundation Anderson Foundation, […]

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This year, WILK has proudly partnered with Anderson Foundation to bring clean water to the Kimana Girls Secondary School. This foundation, which is the charitable arm of Zinpro Corporation, empowers girls through global initiatives. We’d like to tell you more about them, as well as the dire water situation in Kimana.

anderson foundation

All About Anderson Foundation

Anderson Foundation, created by the Anderson family in 1999, honors the memories of Dean and Mary Anderson. Dean and Mary both believed in hard work, fair play, and giving back to those less fortunate. In 1971, Dean and Mary founded Zinpro Corporation, a company that supports animal health. Through the careful stewardship of Zinpro employees, a portion of Zinpro’s profits support the good works of Anderson Foundation.

Anderson Foundation empowers impoverished women and girls through education with the goal to eliminate gender-based inequality and gaps. They work with grassroots organizations that assist women and girls with the social and economic obstacles they face every day. It also has many partners, particularly in nearby Nairobi, Kenya, but also in Haiti, Guatemala, and other countries around the world.

Anderson Foundation has dedicated itself to uplifting women and girls, as “lifting up girls lifts the whole world.” Their mission fits perfectly with our own, and we’re happy to be working with them to help the students at Kimana.

Why Kimana Girls School Needs Help

The water situation at the Kimana Secondary School has been problematic, to say the least. More than 1,000 girls live and study there, but there isn’t enough clean water to accommodate them. Water levels are low during the dry season, so the school has to pay for expensive water deliveries. When it does rain, the water from Mt. Kilimanjaro is muddy and filled with sediment, making it almost impossible for the water pump to run without being overwhelmed with mud.

Kimana also has a lot of farms, and people who work on them clean their spraying tools in the river. The agrochemical runoff from the fields—including sprayed pesticides and herbicides—enters the river downstream. These chemicals in the water have led to increased illness as well as an uptick in cancer diagnoses in the region. There is clearly an urgent need for a clean, reliable source of water at Kimana Girls’.

The girls need water to eat, drink, take showers, wash their clothes, and wash the classrooms every day that school’s in session. Also, clean water ensures girls can continue attending school during their periods, something causing absences. This issue is pervasive across Kenya and is what led Anderson Foundation to initially contact WILK with hopes of partnering on a clean water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) project.

Anderson Foundation has committed to funding an entire borehole (roughly $80,000) at Kimana Girls’ Secondary School. Because of their generosity and willingness to partner, WILK has already begun the process of bringing a deep borehole well to the school. In just a few weeks, their new clean water supply will improve students’ health and well-being. Not only will grades go up, tuition costs will go down, making the Kimana Girls’ School more accessible for families with scarce resources.

Kimana Girls School
Girls at Kimana by the river near the school. Chemicals from farms are entering the water, causing increased health problems.

What We’re Doing in Kimana

So far, we’ve visited the school for a needs assessment, then we performed the hydrogeological survey to locate where to drill. Once drilling happens, we’ll conduct test pumping then start construction on the well and its accompanying infrastructure.

We’ll have more updates as we continue to work on solving the water problem for the girls in Kimana. We’re so grateful for the support from Anderson Foundation for making this project possible. We look forward to helping the girls complete their education with this gift of clean water.

Kimana Girls School
Joshua Mwendwa Mutinda performs a hydrogeological survey to determine where we should drill.

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Women Helping Women: How WILK Empowers Women in Kenya https://waterislifekenya.org/2023/03/how-wilk-empowers-women-in-kenya/ https://waterislifekenya.org/2023/03/how-wilk-empowers-women-in-kenya/#comments Wed, 29 Mar 2023 17:06:35 +0000 https://waterislifekenya.org/?p=5952 As we wind down Women’s History Month, we’d like to highlight the ways WILK empowers Maasai women.

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Water is Life Kenya (WILK) has always supported women in Kenya. In fact, it was participating in a walk for girls’ education that showed co-founder Joyce Tannian the many disadvantages Kenyan women face. As we wind down Women’s History Month, we’d like to highlight the ways WILK empowers Maasai women in an otherwise patriarchal society.

Life for Maasai women has never been easy. Even now, many women will remain uneducated, marry young (without choosing who they will marry), bear an average of six children, have full responsibility of their household and family, and stay fixed in a cycle of poverty. Because Maasai value cattle more highly than women, this is not an easy cycle to break. That’s why we’ve developed several programs and services specifically for those who are most in need of help.

Specifically, WILK empowers women by teaching them skills to develop into business people and diversify their business opportunities. By switching away from a reliance on livestock—which, during a drought, causes tremendous challenges—our programs help women by giving them entrepreneurship skills and teaching them to work collaboratively. In this way, the cycle of poverty can be overcome and, one day at a time, women can be uplifted.

women in Kenya

First Comes Water

The most direct way to help Maasai women is to bring the water to them. One of the daily duties for a woman is to collect enough water for the day. Water is used to clean bodies and clothes, prepare meals, make tea for guests, and feed the animals. But finding water is a problem in such an arid region. Often women must walk for hours just to find water, and then they have to turn around and carry it back to their settlement. Water is found in low-lying areas, so that journey home literally is an uphill climb.

Our WASH projects bring water to these women, saving them hours of time and labor. This gives women a chance to start their own businesses (more on that later) so that they can make and, more importantly, save money. Also, girls who used to accompany their mothers on these water-seeking trips have a better chance of going to school. The water collected from the boreholes is clean, which prevents water-borne diseases in people and their livestock and controls the spread of diseases through handwashing. Because “water is life” for the Maasai, we can help these women have a better quality of life by reducing their burdens.

women in Kenya water

Taking Ownership Through Building Businesses

Men in Maasai communities have been far from home with their cattle as they search for water during a three-year-long drought. Therefore, the onus of taking care of children falls on the women left behind. That includes paying both borehole and school fees. Widows have a more difficult time generating income since they’re at the bottom of the social totem pole. Fortunately, some women can build on Maasai cultural strengths, like livestock-keeping and beadwork. They also learn to think like business owners and generate more profit based on their location and circumstances.

We started our LAB (Livestock as a Business) program to help Maasai learn new strategies for raising livestock, including cows, goats, and sheep, and managing the drought cycle. We also provide loans and teach them to manage their money and create higher earnings. That money can be used to reinvest in more cattle as well as pay for education costs. We have trained more than 400 women in our LAB program, empowering many of them to own and manage their own livestock for the first time.

Maasai also have a tradition of making beaded handicrafts. Our artisans can make paper beads or glass-beaded jewelry, ornaments, and accessories. When we buy beads directly, artisans are paid upfront—they don’t need to wait for tourists to stop at their villages. When we sell beads on our website, the money goes back into future water projects and other programs we have to support women in Kenya.

We began the Hope for Widows Program specifically to help widows start businesses that help them pay for daily expenses they cannot afford. These businesses range from selling clothing and beads for tourists to preparing and selling food to people in their community. This provides widows with greater autonomy so that they aren’t begging for food and money like they used to do.

women in Kenya LAB

Special Cases

In spite of all the ways we try to help, we can’t overcome every obstacle. With a prolonged drought, Maasai women had more obstacles to overcome. Without water, people and animals can’t thrive. The search for water gets longer, which prevents women from generating income through business. Tourism stalls. Schools are empty. The cycle of poverty remains intact.

Until the seasonal rains come back, women still need our help. We’ve started the Special Faces, Special Cases sponsorship program to help as many women and children get through the drought. The best way out of poverty is through education, and donors can sponsor children by covering school expenses that Maasai women can’t afford. Eventually, those children will grow up with a renewed sense of self and purpose as well as knowledge they can use to rise out of poverty.

women in Kenya children

Women Helping Women

When we help women, we support each other. It doesn’t matter if those women live down the road or in Kajiado County. It’s important for us to empower each other in whatever ways we can. We at WILK will continue to think of new ideas that support Maasai women and encourage them to gain skills and gain confidence in order to improve their lives.

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The Challenge of Feeding Students During Drought https://waterislifekenya.org/2023/01/feed-a-brighter-future/ https://waterislifekenya.org/2023/01/feed-a-brighter-future/#comments Tue, 31 Jan 2023 19:28:33 +0000 https://waterislifekenya.org/?p=5561 food for a brighter future

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What if your child’s college fund grew when it rained and shrunk when it didn’t? That’s been the situation for livestock-keeping communities across Kenya during the ongoing drought. For communities like the Maasai, their cattle herd is a bank account that they use for: savings, expenses, school fees, weddings, dowry, and a good future. We call it the “cow bank.” This system is based entirely on rainfall and pasture. When it doesn’t rain, grass doesn’t grow and cattle starve to death. With them, the income and savings of entire families die, too.

The short rains, which are supposed to fall between November and January, have failed, representing the 5th consecutive failed rainy season in Kenya. Whatever the cause, the situation has become desperate.

food for a brighter future
Empty bunks at Olmoti Primary School. Many students haven’t returned to school because the drought has impacted their family income.

The Effect of Drought on Learning

January 23, 2023, was opening day of the school year. The Kenyan school year includes three terms, from January through December, with breaks in between. Tuition is free at government schools, but fees for boarding, books, water, and meals aren’t.

At Olmoti Primary school, only 25% of students have shown up to school, most of them without enough money to pay their school fees. Those who didn’t arrive likely have no money at all. The “cow bank” is empty. Many who have arrived haven’t paid in full, making it difficult for the school to buy the necessary food and supplies to board students. When students don’t have enough to eat, their only option is to sleep.

Education, and thus the progress of an entire region, has been halted in Kajiado County.

feed a brighter future
Many students haven’t returned to school in January, leaving classrooms with empty desks. Students who have arrived are weak due to a lack of food.

What We’re Doing

We know that if these schools receive food, some parents of boarding students will have a grace period to scrape together money. If food is provided for several weeks, head teachers can grant parents more time to send the first installment. If nothing is done, many students will stay at home this school term, a dangerous situation that could result in education disruption, starvation, pregnancy, and early marriages.

Drought is blocking access to education, the key to development in Kenya. We’re planning to remove this barrier by providing meals to school students through the Food for a Brighter Future Campaign.

This Water is Life Kenya donor community has supported drought relief before, raising over $30,000 in 2022. Can you help us inch towards $15,000 more this January and February?

food for a brighter future
Bags of maize and beans transported during a Water is Life Kenya-sponsored food relief effort in October of 2022.

What Your Donation Will Do

Money will purchase maize and beans for 3 schools in the most drought-affected areas: Olmoti, Imisigyio, and Imurtot Primary Schools, all schools that have benefitted from our nearby water projects.

Note:

Below is an estimate of current prices. Due to inflation and the drought, prices have increased since our last drought relief campaign. Our Co-Founder, Joseph Larasha, will confirm the prices in late January. He even doubts that maize is available at all. We may have to buy rice instead. The difficulty remains the same for agricultural communities in Kenya—there has been no harvest due to prolonged drought.

The only good thing for us is that the dollar has more buying power in Kenya due to a weak shilling.

  • 7,500 Kenyan Shillings, or $62.50 – cost for a 90 kg bag of maize
  • 15,000 Kenyan Shillings, or $125 – cost for 90 kg bag of beans

Though we can’t make it rain, we can help these children and their families ensure a future to look forward to with Food for their First Term of the school year. Will you help us bring them food and hope by donating to this Food for a Brighter Future Fundraising Campaign?

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