As much as we know here at Dig Deep that providing clean water is just part of the battle of improving community health, its tough to talk about crap. 2.5 billion people lack access to a toilet. Just 1 gram of faeces can contain 1,000 parasite cysts, 1 million bacteria, 50 diseases, 100 worm eggs and 10 million viruses. The problem is breathtaking and it is small wonder 50% of the hospital beds in the world are taken by those suffering from water borne diseases. Building toilets saves lives and wherever we can we invest in sanitation alongside our projects in Kenya. Do take a moment to watch this fabulous TED talk from Rose George.
Sunday, 8 December 2013
Thursday, 21 November 2013
Lion Roadblocks - by Ben Skelton
Hi everyone,
It’s been a few years now since I was
doing the final year of my degree and attempting to avoid writing my
dissertation by reading an email that had landed in my inbox from ‘Dig Deep’ – a
small water charity looking for volunteers to fundraise for and manage projects
in Kenya. I liked the charity’s approach to Development – using appropriate
technologies and education programmes to help local people transform their own
lives – so I sent them a quick email asking for some more info. As it turned
out, this 5 minutes of procrastination has had a significant impact on my life.
18 months later - after having
persuaded a close friend to take on the challenge with me and juggling
countless hours of fundraising with finals/full time work – I found myself
living in the Kenyan bush with Dig Deep’s Maasai partners, helping to fund and
manage two large scale water projects. It was unforgettable seeing first-hand
the complex social and political challenges of operating in the field, as well
as experiencing the serious practical obstacles to development in communities
with no paved roads, no utilities of any sort and a serious - and at times
surreal - wildlife presence (you never really get used to missing a
meeting due to a pride of lions blocking the track).
The experience has driven me on to
keep the charity growing so that we can support more and better projects. The
reason I love my work is summed up in this recent video interview with
Jacob. He’s a teacher at Endonyo Rinka Primary School, the school that I
first worked with in Kenya over two and a half years ago. Like all of our media
posts this video is very simple – we just turned the camera on and asked Jacob
to describe in his own words life since the project’s completion.
What comes across is the impact that
a small intervention can have. All we did was work with the school to install
appropriate water technologies that are simple and cheap to maintain, as well
as supporting Jacob and other staff in improving the sanitation and hygiene
education available to their pupils.
The result? Students and staff no
longer have to walk miles to collect water from contaminated dams shared with
livestock and wild animals. This has improved the health of everyone at the
school, where previously water borne diseases were taking a serious toll. Also,
thanks to the hard work of Jacob and his colleagues, the student’s academic
performance has increased and the school has been able to open boarding
facilities, so that now over 700 children can reap the benefits of an
education. In short it has made a tangible and sustainable difference to their
lives.
I’m now looking forward to working
with our volunteers, partners and supporters in Kenya, the UK and across the
world to help hundreds more schools and communities to achieve the same
success.
Friday, 8 November 2013
Introduction from our Country Director - by Anna Banyard
Currently Dig Deep is a young,
strong, developing organisation which makes it a very exciting place of work.
Being the only international member of staff permanently based on the
ground in Kenya it is for me to spend time living with communities in which we
work, in their schools and villages to build long lasting links with these
people and the organisation. It is my task to encourage and engage the local
people, at the household level to drive our projects in order to reach the most
sustainable and appropriate solution to their water and energy needs. My role
is to guide the community through the processes of project planning, community
fundraising, implementation and construction and crucially, monitoring and
evaluation.
The wide range of technology
options Dig Deep consider to relieve the challenges faced by rural Kenyan
communities ensures that the communities benefit from the most appropriate
solutions. Dig Deep work to communicate sufficient information on different project
infrastructure options or water supply sources so that the community are able
to make an informed decision that coupled with our experience and advice leads
to the optimum solution.
To date Dig Deep have carried out
many different types of water source supplies and considers each community as a
case by case. Rainwater Harvesting, Filtration, Boreholes, and Shallow wells
are all types of water supply that we have developed in partnership with the
community. Together we are planning to implement a shallow borehole and spring
catchment project in the future coupled with sanitation provisions and hygiene
promotion.
My academic background as an
engineer assists the technical aspects of project planning and comes in to play
to carry out calculations to size pipe distribution networks, design flow rates
and tank elevations amongst other things. Using land surveying techniques that
I work with both literate and illiterate community volunteers to implement, we
plan the project very precisely to be certain that the investment we make using
both our donor’s money as well as the money contributed by the community will allow
the system to operate in the way it is expected to.
A lot of my interaction with the
communities are through an elected board of members of a Water/Project
Committee, and I speak through volunteer interpreters who live at the sites of
our projects, however I am currently undergoing Swahili language training every
week to strengthen my interactions with project beneficiaries, contractors and
suppliers.
The scope of my work is very
diverse and is difficult to summarise in one blog post, so I hope to provide
better insight by regularly posting to discuss what is happening on the ground
out here in Kenya.
Tuesday, 29 October 2013
Why Dig Deep? - by James Haughton
James Haughton |
I took up the post of Executive Director in May this year to work with Ben Skelton who had almost single-handedly nurtured the Dig Deep we know now. For the best part of two years prior to that I had the privilege of being a Trustee of Dig Deep and overseeing the transformation of the organisation from a student enterprise to the strong organisation it is today. I'm going to take a few moments to explain why Dig Deep has become a life passion for me. It answers a question I get asked a lot by old friends and new acquaintances: Why Dig Deep?
Dig Deep is a young charity, established in 2007, but also youthful in terms of the staff that drive it. All of our full time staff are under 30 years old, as are three of our trustees. It is reflected in our attitude to innovative development solutions such as wind and solar pumps and biogas as a solution for fuel poverty at institutions across Kenya. Additionally it breeds an exciting and energetic environment to work in.
For me personally, it is our shared ethos as development professionals, borne of our educations in institutions rife with charity scepticism (much of it justified) and observations in the field, that has captivated me and drives us on. The tangible benefits of clean, safe drinking water and hygiene education are well established but the crisis of water poverty is still chronically under reported. Every project completed by Dig Deep and charities like us, and every thousand people we alleviate from the scourge of disease, compromised education and economic disadvantage is a worthy part of a global struggle.
Our "ethos" is simple but distinctive; a heart-felt belief that the people we work with in Kenya are the experts in their communities, not us. By partnering with locally elected water committees and local partner organisations we listen to the communities, engage them in critical decision making, learn from them and offer support where they identify they lack skills-typically with sustainable business models to allow the community to maintain the projects themselves. In charity jargon it's called 'Community Led Development'-in our eyes it is common sense!
Before and after at Kagasek Secondary School, Kenya, with many of the 1,000 attendees of the opening ceremony in the background. |
I always come back to the mantra "give a man a fish and feed him for a day, teach him to fish and you feed him for life". Charities have understandable concerns about their own survival as organisations but, in my opinion, good development is about identifying the end game as early as possible and working to make yourself redundant as quickly as is responsible to do so. This is best for those we work with and the most efficient use of our donor's money. It is done by developing the capacity of our beneficiaries to solve their own problems. It comes down to building relationships that are equitable and not hierarchical, sharing resources so as to leave knowledge behind, treating each community based upon their own character rather than using a one size-fits-all approach and setting out to learn as one empowers and builds capacity. It is this approach and the positive way in which our partners respond to it that gets me jumping out of bed each morning for Dig Deep.
The supply of water has been reduced by its ease of access in our lives to a conception of infrastructure; engineering, pipes, taps and plumbing but, as with all development, it is as much about effective human relationships as it is nuts and bolts.
The supply of water has been reduced by its ease of access in our lives to a conception of infrastructure; engineering, pipes, taps and plumbing but, as with all development, it is as much about effective human relationships as it is nuts and bolts.
James Haughton is the Executive Director of Dig Deep, with primary responsibilities for fundraising, policy and governance matters. He can be contacted on james@digdeep.org.uk
UPCOMING ON DIG DEEP'S BLOG: FURTHER INTRODUCTIONS FROM THE TEAM
Welcome to Dig Deep's Blog
Welcome!
Thank you for visiting our new blog. We have set this up to keep our supporters abreast of what we are upto and to give an insight into the characters that make up our team. Let me introduce them to you now:
Executive Director James Haughton (front left), Director Ben Skelton (3rd from right) and Challenges Programme Manager Jessica Wood (front right) |
Country Director Anna Banyard |
We will also have guest posts from the masses of volunteers Dig Deep is blessed to be supported by and from time to time our trustees and advisers. We are most excited by the prospect of guest posts from the inspirational people we work with in communities in Kenya. Please be sure to follow us today.
Leave any questions or comments you may have on the posts and we will do our best to answer them.
Leave any questions or comments you may have on the posts and we will do our best to answer them.
James
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