service – Water is Life Kenya https://waterislifekenya.org Helping Kenyans Bloom Through Love & Water Fri, 17 May 2024 15:51:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://waterislifekenya.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/cropped-wilk-favicon-1-32x32.png service – Water is Life Kenya https://waterislifekenya.org 32 32 Project Update: A Kenyan Family Brings Hope Back Home https://waterislifekenya.org/2023/09/kenyan-family/ https://waterislifekenya.org/2023/09/kenyan-family/#comments Tue, 05 Sep 2023 00:00:00 +0000 https://waterislifekenya.org/?p=6482 Here's how this Kenyan family—Charity, Michael, Michael Jr., and Nathan—brought hope back home.

The post Project Update: A Kenyan Family Brings Hope Back Home appeared first on Water is Life Kenya.

]]>
On August 21st at Country House—a retirement community in Wilmington, DE—Charity, Michael, and their sons, Michael Jr. and Nathan gave an incredible presentation about a recent project they completed with us. Charity and Michael, who are both Kenyan, have been living and raising their family in Delaware for several decades. With great love for their home country, they wanted to connect their sons with Kenya in a real, meaningful way. Here’s how this Kenyan family brought hope back home.

The boys sharing about their previous project to refurbish an orphanage library.

About the Project

A few years ago, this desire to help Kenyans evolved during a family trip to Kenya. On the trip, they visited an orphanage whose library was in disrepair. When they arrived home, Michael Jr. and Nathan started collecting books for the library. In just a few months, they collected hundreds of books, as well as funds to refurbish the library. They were so happy when they got to see the transformation at that orphanage—a result of their hard work and determination.

Charity is a key staff member at Country House and first learned about WILK back in 2022 when our board members, Dr. Tannian and Mark, visited to give an Armchair Traveler experience of Kenya. Several months ago Joyce and Charity came together with hopes of beginning a new project for Michael and Nathan to help Kenyans in need.

Joyce invited the boys to participate in phase 3 of the Esukuta Community Borehole, established by WILK in 2015. This phase would consist of installing toilets and planting trees for the community.

Nathan receiving a handmade beaded bracelet as a sign of the community’s appreciation.

Toilets & Trees for Esukuta

With a clear vision and goal, this remarkable family got to work. From bake sales to knocking on doors to talking at church, Michael Jr. and Nathan inspired over $9,000 in donations, enough to fund the construction of toilets and showers, as well as the planting of 500 trees!

When they visited Kenya earlier this summer, everybody chipped in to help plant these 500 saplings in Esukuta. The community was so grateful for the family’s support that the elders offered the boys a traditional Maasai blessing. They got to sit on a 200-year-old ceremonial stool, drink from an ancient vessel, and were even gifted some nifty beaded shirts!

As far as growing trees in an arid climate—the chief and principal at Nasipa Primary School agreed that every tree would be tended by a student. They would use the borehole to water the trees daily and make sure they stay alive.

Charity helping dig holes to plant trees in Esukuta.

A Kenyan Family’s Story

In front of a packed room, the family shared about their trip and what they were able to accomplish thanks to dozens of generous donations. Through Charity, Michael, Michael Jr., and Nathan, a tremendous amount of support was mobilized for the Esukuta community (who has been plagued by the drought and have not received rain in over 3 years). They were all moved by the dryness and dustiness of Esukuta, as well as the dire importance of water. Those in attendance were intrigued, astonished, and impressed at the devotion of this family and the scope of WILK’s projects.

After seeing for themselves how one of our boreholes changes a community, Michael Sr. encouraged Country House residents to consider supporting Water is Life Kenya in the future. We look forward to making new friends as they enter our generous community in support of Kenyans in need!

After the presentation, one resident said, “This was the best entertainment we’ve had in a while!” We couldn’t agree more—Michael and Nathan brought the (Country) House down! We believe generous acts like this are worth sharing with others, and we’re so happy Michael and Nathan were willing to share this experience with us.

We are so grateful to this Kenyan family for supporting our communities and inspiring so much goodness. They have truly made a world of difference for Esukuta!

The post Project Update: A Kenyan Family Brings Hope Back Home appeared first on Water is Life Kenya.

]]>
https://waterislifekenya.org/2023/09/kenyan-family/feed/ 1
The Nooriro Borehole: A Gush of Hope https://waterislifekenya.org/2023/02/nooriro-borehole/ https://waterislifekenya.org/2023/02/nooriro-borehole/#comments Wed, 22 Feb 2023 00:38:59 +0000 https://waterislifekenya.org/?p=5647 Under normal conditions, Nooriro was paradise for the Maasai, with plenty of rain, grass, and healthy cows. Like most Maasai communities, it doesn’t exist on a conventional map. It’s located in a valley between two mountains which, after the rainy season, turns into a reservoir. However, these are not ideal times: there hasn’t been a […]

The post The Nooriro Borehole: A Gush of Hope appeared first on Water is Life Kenya.

]]>
Under normal conditions, Nooriro was paradise for the Maasai, with plenty of rain, grass, and healthy cows. Like most Maasai communities, it doesn’t exist on a conventional map. It’s located in a valley between two mountains which, after the rainy season, turns into a reservoir.

However, these are not ideal times: there hasn’t been a rainy season in over two years. Many Maasai from Nooriro now live far away from home—the women up to twelve hours away, forced to sweat on other people’s land; the men hundreds of kilometers away in the direction of Chyulu Hills, where a little grass remains. Most people have lost all their cows due to the drought. Many bright children can’t go to school because their parents can’t afford the fees. There’s no food growing.

We found out about Nooriro’s water shortage when our co-founder, Maasai elder Joseph Larasha, was with his herd in search of pasture near Nooriro last year. He met community members who shared how the drought has been hurting them. We decided we needed to help. Nooriro is now WILK’s most western program—the first in Kajiado Central (all the others have been in Kajiado South), so we’re in the process of breaking ground, literally and figuratively, in new territories with new groups.

The climate’s so dry in Nooriro that people are surrounded by dust.

The Digging Days

In partnership with Paul, a longtime donor and friend, the Pike Creek Lions Club, the Lions Club of Greater Nairobi, and the Lions Club International Foundation, we planned a borehole project that we hoped would bring the Maasai back to Nooriro.

Our hydrogeological survey team estimated that we would hit substantial water at 220 meters, so when we started digging we had high hopes. The entire community gathered to sing, dance, and pray for water. Dirt then dust flew out. After several hours, and about 140 meters of drilling, there was no sign of water.

Not until nightfall did the wet sand show itself. It was a huge moment of celebration and relief, and our friend Paul, who was in Nairobi for the Lions Worldwide Week of Service in Sight and Lions Day with the United Nations, was there to see it. However, we couldn’t drill anymore until daybreak.

No water yet, but we hit wet sand!

The next day, the waiting continued. When the drill reached 220 meters, we tried cleaning the borehole. Still no water. Our team contacted the geologist and had a long conversation about whether we should continue. Based on the rock samples we showed him, he suggested we had reached the top of the water table and only about 30 meters more would produce water.

On the third day, at about 238 meters, we finally tapped into the aquifer—and water gushed out. We had to keep drilling, though, because a borehole needs adequate pressure to bring the water to the surface with regularity. We finally stopped at 260 meters, which means the Nooriro borehole is the second-deepest we’ve drilled.

nooriro borehole drilling
The moment we found the water source.

What Comes Next

We still have tests to run. We first have to be sure that the Nooriro borehole will produce drinkable water. Once that happens, we’ll build a concrete tank and, hopefully, pipe the water into the village.

More importantly, we have hope for the Nooriro Maasai. With this borehole, their lives will change—for the better. Women won’t have to walk ten hours a day for water or leave the village because there’s no water to collect. Families can move back to their homeland. A village elder plans to donate his land to the community so that a school and a church can be built. In spite of the seemingly endless drought, people will have a chance to live on their ancestral homeland—the land they legally own a title to.

nooriro borehole drilling
Everyone in Nooriro will benefit from having a direct water source.

Finally, Hope

We at Water is Life Kenya have made it our mission to help as many Maasai in Kajiado County as we can. It’s a relatively small section of Kenya, but it has important history for the Maasai that deserves to remain intact. We can’t control the weather—life would be easier for everyone if we could make it rain!—but we can give the Maasai the best chance to live their lives fully. Thank you for helping us serve the Maasai in so many ways.

nooriro borehole drilling
Singing, dancing, and praying for water.

The post The Nooriro Borehole: A Gush of Hope appeared first on Water is Life Kenya.

]]>
https://waterislifekenya.org/2023/02/nooriro-borehole/feed/ 4