...when life seems dark, stinky and unfair

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Kotido continued...

8/5/13
Today was our first day in the field. We spent the morning with MAP having a short devotion and then going over the days plans. The village we visited first is where we will be constructing the Sand Dam.  Their crops are already struggling and it is still wet season so a Sand Dam Is extremely necessary. The people were fairly primitive but organized and very curious about us. They call us muzungas (white people) haha. The children are sweet but obviously malnourished with big bellies protruding and prominent cheek bones. Many of the women have scarification on their faces in beautiful patterns. We are told this means they are married. After the meeting we went to the site of the river where the Sand Dam.  The people had agreed to the Sand Dam with MAP weeks earlier but all of a sudden we were mid argument with them over the dam. Apparently an old women across the river was concerned that her maize would be destroyed by flooding. Another woman was wailing and crying for reasons that still remain unknown. After about 2 hours we finally came to an agreement to build the dam. Thank God!  MAP is really amazing with the villager and so patient. After finishing up at the new Sand Dam site we visited a completed one and then were off to dinner to eat and eat and eat some more. Starved!

8/7/13
For the last two days we have been visiting villages that will receive either water filters or a Sand Dam. Yesterday we spent the morning drilling holes in 30 of the buckets for the filters by hand. We all huddled in the tiny kitchen in the back of the MAP office and heated the plastic enough to make it easier to drill. We all have blisters all over our fingers ha!  So worth it today though when we met the village who received the filters. They were so kind a grateful to receive them! They clapped through Carrie's entire presentation and posed for pictures with their buckets and filters after we were done with the distribution. It still amazes me how little the villagers subsist on!  It really makes one feel like a glutton. :(  I wish there was more we could do for these people and it just makes me feel even more convicted to keep supporting the work that For One Another is doing. 

Before going to the village receiving the filters, we stopped by the village receiving the Sand Dam to help them start building. I swear those women are the hardest working people I have ever seen. They carry these enormous rocks on their heads half the size of their bodies like it is nothing!  Even the pregnant ones! They made small grass head cushions for us and we were able to carry rocks on our heads as well. I have so much respect for them after all the work we did and it was great to interact with the villagers. I feel like we were able to form a strong bond with them and earn their respect. Tomorrow we head back to the Sand Dam site and hopefully another village to distribute more filters. I hope to be able to post more pictures soon.

8/8/13
After dropping off Livingston (the Sand Dam engineer) and other MAP staff at the Sand Dam site, we headed to a village Carrie had distributed water filters to last year. Our main goal was to clean out the filters that may have become clogged and also see how the clean water solution was working for the villages and if their health had improved. We were greeted by the villagers under their meeting tree and proceeded down to the village.

It is truly amazing how fortified their homes are. They have these thick branches all intertwined and anchored into the ground to protect their individual houses, creating a very sturdy fence.  Each hut is constructed out of mud and sits low in the ground to keep it cool. The roofs are made from layers and layers and layers of stacked grass so thick it keeps the rain out. They are really quite beautiful. We were even able to go in one! I didn't think I was going to be able to squeeze through the tiny opening that served as the entrance haha. Once inside, as our eyes adjusted, we began to look around and spotted a bat hanging from the roof! Needless to say, we filed out as possible. 

We spent the remainder of our time in the village cleaning out all the dirty filters and reeducating the villagers on proper care and maintenance of he filters. It was good to hear from them that the diarrhea had lessened in the children after using the filters. 

About 4pm we departed and headed back to the Sand Dam site.  They had made quite a bit of progress and were just waiting for the trench they had dug to drain before pouring the concrete. Then we were off to Brenda's for dinner and showers. Perhaps tomorrow we will have water at our place!

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