The average human needs 50 liters of water per day for drinking, cooking and sanitation.
The average North American uses 600liters
The average African has access to 6 liters
Make a difference globally! For only $3500, a new well can be provided to a needy African village. Currently, we have raised approximately $1500--we need you to give!
If you'd like to give financially toward this project, please email us.
As we do every week, we spent time together in "family time" this past Saturday night in my home. Usually, we read and pray as a family. This time my daughter Shannon had us discuss the water project and do something creative to help us realize the importance of it.
She had us write down how much each of us was planning on giving. Then she dropped a stack of magazines on the floor and we cut out faces from magazines--one for every dollar we were going to donate to the project. We taped the faces together and hung them on a wall in our home. Now every day we walk passed over 300 faces...and we're adding to the number each day.
Realize how much impact your involvement will make! For only $3500, a new well can be provided to a needy African village. Currently, we have raised approximately $1500--we need you to give!
If you'd like to give financially toward this project, please email us.
For more info, read the "introduction" below or go to the water project. -
Water is basic to life and health. Unfortunately, over 1 billion people worldwide have no access to safe drinking water. According to World Resources Institute, 80% of all sickness and disease worldwide is attributed to unsafe drinking water. According to the World Health Organization, a lack of safe drinking water takes a greater human toll than war, terrorism & weapons of mass destruction combined.
Here are some quick worldwide facts...
--1.1 billion people don't have safe water to drink
--a child dies every 15 seconds from a lack of clean water
--the number one killer in the world is unsafe drinking water
--1.8 million die every year from illness linked to unclean water
Having no safe water leads to:
--water-borne diseases (cholera, typhoid, Hepatitis A)
--water-related diseases (malaria, yellow fever, river blindness)
--water-based diseases (dysentery, guinea worm)
--water-scarce diseases (trachoma, scabies)
--common diarrhea
The crisis is worst in sub-Saharan Africa where 2 in 5 people lack safe water. A baby here is almost 520 times more likely to die from diarrhea than one born in the U.S. or Europe.
Drilling a fresh water well is a relatively inexpensive, yet permanent solution to this epidemic. For only $3500, a new well can be provided to a needy village or school.
Our hope is that we can join the movement ending the global water crisis through partnerships with organizations like The Water Project (www.thewaterproject.org).
If you'd like to give financially towards this project, please email contactus@pathwayonline.org for instructions.