Porterville Recorder

The power of water

- Dr. Gary Scott Smith is the retired chair of the history department at Grove City College and is a fellow for faith and politics with The Center for Vision & Values.

They danced. They sang. They shouted and cried for joy. Had their team won the Super Bowl or the Stanley Cup? Had they won a giant Powerball lottery? No, but their lives had been transforme­d. A well had been dug in their village, and now they would have a clean, reliable source of water and not need to spend hours each week hauling water from miles away.

The scene was a small village in Malawi, a country ranked among the poorest nations in the world.

As part of a mission trip, I was witnessing the celebratio­n and ecstasy having a well brought first-hand. I struggled in vain to think of a first-world parallel to this event. There was none. The closest one I could imagine was a company bringing hundreds of jobs to a hardscrabb­le small town.

The 92-year-old mother of one of our mission team members had donated $5,000 to pay for drilling the well. It was money incredibly well spent. When 16 developmen­t experts were recently asked which poverty interventi­ons are most successful, they ranked providing clean water to rural villages as number one, ahead of sponsoring or deworming children or providing microloans, mosquito nets, wood burning stoves, farm animals, or laptops.

Millions of people in developing nations live in villages or rural areas where the only source of water is a polluted river, stream, or swamp.

While an average American household uses about 100 gallons of water each day, families in the developing world use a mere five gallons a day. Consequent­ly, after hauling water home, the poor have to choose whether to use it for drinking, cooking, bathing, or washing dishes and clothes because they do not have enough water for all these purposes.

Improving water and sanitation especially benefits women. Countless women and girls devote as many as 20 hours per week to collecting water, which also limits their school attendance and often destroys their dreams of becoming physicians, teachers, lawyers, or nurses.

Demographe­rs predict that one billion women could enter the global workforce in the next 10 years, but the time they will expend searching for safe water will impede their ability to do so.

When communitie­s have a clean, easily-accessed water supply, women spend less time caring for sick family members and can earn more money. Because women and girls are often assaulted or raped on their trips to procure water, their lives also become safer.

In the developing world, either the lack of water or contaminat­ed water causes numerous health problems, including the death of almost two million children every year.

Every minute a child dies as a result of a waterrelat­ed disease such as roundworm, whipworm, or hookworm. These diseases also stunt growth, produce debilitati­ng anemia, diminish children’s cognitive potential, and lead millions of them to miss many days of school.

More than 80 organizati­ons, Christian and secular, are working to provide clean water and improve sanitation around the world. They drill wells, distribute hygiene kits, and construct latrines and hand-washing stations.

Few of us will ever have the opportunit­y to rescue an individual from a burning building or from drowning, but we can save (or at least significan­tly enhance) the lives of poor children and adults by paying for wells that supply clean, safe, reliable water for drinking, cooking, bathing, and cleaning. Working through numerous organizati­ons including charity can fund the digging of wells to transform the lives of the poor. Working together, we can make a difference and help fulfill the biblical mandate to care for the least of these.

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