December is a magical month of renewal and vitality. In Tanzania, rain washes in, heralding fresh starts and new life – and we begin the month with our birthday, celebrating 19 years of catching blessings from the sky.
Since we entered their lives nearly two decades ago, the women we serve have become mothers and grandmothers. We have witnessed the transformation in the life they bring their daughters into, and it has got us thinking about generational change.
Our birthday gift to you is Elizabeth’s story – a lens through which we tell the tale of how water ripples across a mother’s life, and out across daughters and daughters to come.
It’s a story that’s been a decade in the making.
Elizabeth starts her day before dawn, making milky chai for her daughter Aviela as she prepares for school. Solomon, Aviela’s little brother, is four, and fast asleep. Aviela, who is nearly 11, pulls on her uniform and gathers her books. Before she leaves the house, Elizabeth ties her shoes and straightens her collar. Nkoansiyo Primary is just down the road, Aviela joins her classmates for the walk.
Next, Elizabeth prepares her husband’s lunch – she will be away all day, building rainwater harvesting systems, while he stays at home with Solomon and their livestock. The kitchen she cooks in is part of an old structure. Their new home was built with her Save the Rain income. She picks greens from her greenhouse and draws water from her tank. Her cattle and goats provide milk. She farms corn and beans to feed her family.
Elizabeth is both the breadwinner and the breadmaker.
She has been building rainwater harvesting systems since we first arrived in Nkoansiyo in 2015. She is a member of Anna’s team, a group of women whose day job it is to deliver transformation through strength, love, and the medium of water. Each tank they build is a bridge from scarcity to abundance – bridging that gap enables their own rise to greater abundance. They are a testament to the exponential power that is unleashed when the natural forces of women and water are combined.
When we arrived in Nkoansiyo, our work brought us into people’s homes and into their lives. Building tanks builds trust. Disabled children who had been hidden in shame and secrecy came to light for the first time. We had already constructed a 150,000-liter system at the school, so we added ramps and wheelchairs to pave the way for their education. As a result, Aviela and her peers unlearned the stigma that traditionally surrounds disability. She was among the students who celebrated the graduation of Nkoansiyo Primary’s first disabled students last year. Each of those graduates now attends secondary school on a scholarship provided by Save the Rain.
Nkoansiyo Primary School’s rainwater harvesting system was built in 2015 and provides water for thousands.
Every dollar you donate directly supports our life-saving work. Together, we can turn the tide of the global water crisis and make clean water a reality for those in need.Donate today!