3 THINGS WE LOVE AT SAVE THE RAIN
All the things we are loving at Save the Rain: Full rain tanks, new partnerships and lending cooperatives.
All the things we are loving at Save the Rain: Full rain tanks, new partnerships and lending cooperatives.
From supporting Māori youth in New Zealand to enhancing rainwater storage in Nigerian communities, we're sowing seeds of change.
Lifted from a life on the floor, these girls began to venture outside. The sun began to shine upon them. No one could imagine what would come next.
Our history is sprinkled with moments culminating into puddles of service – all of which were fueled by harvesting the rain for people in need.
Poverty has a disconnecting effect. It narrows your world. But all it takes is a single act of generosity to break the cycle.
Poverty has a disconnecting effect. It narrows your world. But all it takes is a single act of generosity to break the cycle.
Save the Rain is distributing tons of food to feed communities in response to the drought in Tanzania and global inflation.
The rains haven't been the same and crops have failed this year. But residential greenhouses are providing stability and prosperity even during a drought.
A single raindrop can create a ripple. Something so small can change everything. And that’s what gives us hope. We see the evidence every day.
Meet the Kimandafu Primary School children, who are healthier and attending more school because of access to clean water. This is how communities transform.
When the walk for water doesn’t enslave women, they can turn their capacity into extraordinary things. Where days are not swallowed by scarcity, they are now filled by fulfilling pursuits.
The women of the King'ori Group choose laborers from each village to assist them to build rainwater harvesting systems to bring clean water to new communities.
Sophie makes Save the Rain products. She has built a business training at-risk women to sew. Her beautiful products give back three times over.
Save the Rain is celebrating 16 years of clean water, food security, gender equity and healthy communities.
If the walk for water takes you away from your kids up to ten hours a day, clean water at home lets you be the mother you want to be.
Walk in the footsteps of a girl who followed elephants to find a new home. On this journey, she learns the importance of trees and the choices of her people.
Save the Rain built Lazaro's family a rainwater harvesting tank. They now listen for rain and count their blessings with every drop.
Rose was the first child in her family who never had to walk for water. Rose has big plans for her future, for her family and for her country.
Eliaremisa never went to school, but she knows things far older than schools. She remembered when there were trees, shade and room. Now the earth can’t breathe.
For these fathers, Save the Rain is more than a job. They see all Tanzanian children as their own and work tirelessly to provide opportunities for them.