Today, it’s a day marked to celebrate water and Dig Deep would
like to celebrate this day by reflecting on the achievements of the schools we
have partnered with in Ndanai, Bomet County.
To those who have access to clean and safe water that think about no more than walking across the room and turning on a
tap, that was not the case for thousands of students in Ndanai. They walked six-
eight kilometres each day to collect water from unreliable sources– time which
could be spent in school.
In the 12 schools we installed Rain Water Harvesting systems
in Ndanai, teachers and students recognize that water is a problem for more
than 1 billion people and they were part of the affected. Today they recognise
water as their hub and recognise the transformational changes they have
seen as a result of clean water.
Water is a hub to many students because it has been an entry
point to all areas they need to consider to create the future they want. Regular
attendance to school, improved education, improved health, clean sanitation and
improved hygiene practices.
Every day is a world water day for them.
Caoline inspects a tippy-tap in Ndanai. A simple and hygienic way of dispensing water for cleaning. |
One of the Head teachers at Rotik Secondary highlighted that
‘Unclean water and a lack of basic sanitation are undermining efforts to end
extreme poverty and disease in our community, water is fundamental to improving the livelihoods and well-being of
the poor’. He shared students at his schools have maintained personal cleanliness
since they got access to clean water and one-thirds of the students reported with
diarrhoea episodes in the school due to unsafe drinking water every week is now
to zero.
In a different school the head teacher relayed that the
disparity of water and sanitation hygiene-related knowledge, attitude and
practices among student’s compared to the past has changed due to access of
clean water in their school and the impact of Hygiene education. ‘Positive
behaviours and hygiene practices are observed, applied at all times by the
students. These positive behaviours are not left at the school gate, they are
practised in the community by the students, which has also driven the community to accept such
changes’ he added.
A Dig Deep latrine block with a rainwater harvesting system |
Millions of children across the world today, access to safe
water is still a struggle. Providing better water, sanitation and hygiene
(WASH) services in schools reduces hygiene-related diseases and can help claim
the 272 million schools days missed every year due to diarrhoea.
In Bomet, where schools and communities have access to clean
and safe drinking water represents a small percentage. Thousands of other
schools in that area the story is different, the tap stands are not across the
other room or next to a kitchen. What would it take to ensure that the
thousands of students still losing 272 million school days and six hours have
access to clean water? Join Dig Deep fundraising team and let’s start the
journey together, to reach that goal. One student at a time.