Post by Oriana Galardi-Este
Another overwhelmingly humbling day in the Chitala village
on day two of the water tower installation. The second our van pulled into the
village, the throngs of children we had befriended yesterday greeted us with
their heart-melting, beautiful smiles, shouting “Addie! Addie! Oriana! Oriana!
Natalie! Natalie!” – I swear this is what celebrities at home must feel like
when they step out onto the red carpet. I don’t think anyone has ever been that
excited to see me. The love and pure joy these children feel for us is
palpable.
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| Ladies help Natalie tie her skirt |
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| Touching Ori's hair |
We spent the morning helping dig the trench leading up to
the solar powered water pump that was installed later on in the day – a mattock
and a shovel – two tools I became very well acquainted with when digging my own
trench connecting my house to its well in North Carolina. Same activity, same
tools, and the same deep red clay. And yet two completely different experiences
– how does one adequately express the humility one feels when working towards getting
the first reliable source of clean water to a village of 12,000? A village
where the children fight over our empty water bottles, just so they can have a
container to fill with their currently brown-tinted, coliform bacteria-filled
water? A poignant reminder of just how easy we have it over on our side of the
pond.
While digging the trench, a beautifully dressed woman walked
up to the site – Honorable Jessie Kabwila, a Salima district Member of Parliament
– who had caught wind of our project and wanted to learn firsthand how it
worked. This incredibly bright woman who earned her doctorate in Philosophy back
in the US, was standing in the mud with us asking us all sorts of inquisitive questions:
How does the water system work? How is it powered? Once it’s installed and
working, what happens when it needs maintenance? Do we train local villagers so
as to make this a truly sustainable system? When we pointed to the two local
men who were helping with the installation and being trained, she then asked if
any women were being trained as well, reminding us of Malawi’s equal
opportunity gender equality law. Mind blown.
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| Sam with the Honorable Jessie Kabwila and staff |
Once the trench was dug, Addie and I walked through the
village surrounded by our myriad sweeties, as they fought over who got to hold
our hands. Gracious, Martin, Jenny, Gavin, Marvelous, Clement, Ishmael, Nume…..too
many to name here….all marched through the village with us, showing us their
local tailor, fishmonger, vegetable stands, and little shop stalls – while intermittently
begging us to take more pictures of them, fascinated with our cameras and seeing
themselves on the screen. In the background, No Woman No Cry played on the
village loudspeaker.
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| A walk through town |
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| The village tailor |
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| A clothing shop |
The grand finale of the day was watching the water tank being
raised up onto the 30 foot platform. The whole village gathered for this,
everyone anxiously watching on, mouths agape. The second the tank was lowered
onto the top of the platform, cheers erupted – all the children started
dancing, screaming with joy, singing, and I swear my heart exploded with joy.
The word that best encapsulates this trip so far, is ‘humbling.’ The
juxtaposition of the village’s extreme poverty with the children’s
unadulterated pure joy and zest for life has left me re-examining my own life
and way of being in the world – and the feeling that continues to linger about
my being…..is gratitude.
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| Water tank is set on top at dusk |
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| Children celebrate with us when the tank makes it to the top! |
What a wonderful thing that's being done. It's great to see that this basic need, water is being supplied to these beautiful people. Air, water, food and shelter are needs that are afforded to people in this country other countries not so much. This is life giving forces at work here.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful day this must have been! I've read this about 5 times now. Still can't believe how incredible everything must be in real time. Keep it coming,
ReplyDeletebecause I can't get enough of it. Foot note: I think there's something special about South African music. It moves me. That is in no way a hint. Just an outloud thought. You can ask Pete, he knows I love the music from there.
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ReplyDeleteCheck this out:
Deletehttps://playingforchange.com/videos/stand-by-me-song-around-the-world/