Transforming lives
WaterAid has continued to make progress in improving the health and
livelihoods of poor and vulnerable communities in Malawi.
Increasing vulnerable people's access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene
education has resulted in a great transformation of lives.
"Take me to the new well, I want to see!" Those were the words of an elderly,
visually impaired woman from the Salima District in Malawi who insisted on being
taken to a newly constructed WaterAid water point. Using her fingers to feel the
brick lined well, she exploded into a sharp cry of celebration with her arms up
in the air.
People who used to travel long distances, often two to three hours before
daybreak, in search of potable water, now have so much more time with a safe
water source only a few meters from their houses. Women, who feared crocodile
attacks when fetching dirty river water, can now turn on a tap and watch clean
water collect in their containers.
Our human
dignity was almost non existent, as young and old would squat under small bushes
to relieve themselves, often colliding with one another in such places.
"Our village was one of the smelliest areas you could never go to," said
village headman Mtakuleni at a community meeting aimed at reviewing the
sanitation projects in his village.
"We used to breathe air saturated with human fecal matter because children
would defecate anywhere. One needed to walk along designated footpaths always
else you would trample on fresh fecal matter with your bare feet.
"Our human
dignity was almost non existent, as young and old would squat under small bushes
to relieve themselves, often colliding with one another in such places."
Over the past year WaterAid has also worked on building the capacity of its
six partners through a series of training courses aimed at the transfer of
relevant knowledge and skills. These include better planning, budgeting and
transparent financial management, designing of contracts, water quality
monitoring and using participatory hygiene and sanitation tools.
Communities have been trained in how to cast sanitation slabs, shallow well
construction, financial management, the importance of hygiene and sanitation in
improving health, maintenance of facilities and protecting water catchment
areas.
A number of WaterAid's activities are aimed at influencing other
organizations to ensure those villages without access to water and sanitation
are targeted for assistance first. Other activities aim to influence government
policy to meet the needs of those living in poverty.
The Government of Malawi estimates that four million Malawians, almost a
third of the population, still don't have access to safe water, especially in
rural areas.
WaterAid is continuing to improve this situation. With WaterAid's
involvement communities can see a ray of hope. They no longer consider
themselves as victims but victors.
WaterAid in Malawi will continue to
improve the health and livelihoods of marginalized and vulnerable
communities.

Sanitation and hygiene education has resulted in a great transformation of lives.
Credit: WaterAid
Yéréfolo Mallé, WaterAid's Country Representative in Burkina Faso, explains why the need for good water resource management is growing in West Africa, and describes some of the techniques used - including small dam construction and rooftop rainwater harvesting.
Visit our audio page to download the mp3
In the Singida District of Tanzania, children are having fun learning about sanitation in their school health club. Sixteen year old Amina, a member of the school health club, learns about sanitation issues through songs, games and drama.
Read Amina's story on our Tanzania page