Monday, April 12, 2010

Walking For Water

Heard about The Ride for Marale and wish you could play a bigger part? If you live near Reading, PA, Walking For Water is your chance.

We are putting on an event that will place you in the shoes of someone from Marale and raise money to help them construct a water system in their village. We have filled up hundreds of gallon jugs and we will carry them around a sidewalk loop to get a little taste of what their life is like. This is Saturday, May 1st at Albright College, Kelchner Field (the baseball field) from 10AM to 4PM. The event will aslo include food, music, softball, frisbee, home run derby, manicures, pedicures, and men's haircuts.

Come out and enjoy the festivities while learning about the water crisis and being part of the solution!

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

New Team Member Morgan Jones



A wise man once said that "a cord of three strands is not quickly broken." In keeping with such a philosophy, we decided to make an addition to our travelling party. His name is Morgan Jones. Morgan is a sophomore at Albright College and is Andy Friedlund's next door neighbor in Mohn Hall. Morgan first got involved with The Ride for Marale when Andy asked him to design a logo for our project. He did an awesome job with that and has since designed our brochure, a Walking For Water flyer, and all the other media we have used. It seems that all the writing and designing he did wore him down. Morgan finally broke down and decided he had better just come along. Matt and Andy are excited to be able to share this adventure with Morgan.

Isn't he cute!

Friday, January 15, 2010

The Philosophy of Ubuntu

I first learned of Ubuntu when reading a book called Like Breath and Water by Ciona Rouse. She says that Ubuntu means "I am who I am because of who you are" and that living this way "suggests that our well-being depends on the well being of others."

Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa calls Ubuntu "Me, We" and describes it like this:
Ubuntu speaks particularly about the fact that you can't exist as a human
being in isolation. It speaks about our interconnectedness. You can't be
human
all by yourself, and when you have this quality- Ubuntu- you are known
for your generosity. We think of ourselves far too frequently as just
individuals
separated from one another whereas you are connected and what
you do affects the
whole world. When you do well, it spreads out; it is for
the whole of
humanity.
The Zulu people say it like this, " A person is a person through other persons."

Ciona concluded by noting that her "ability to thrive depends on their ability to survive." This seemed so counter intuitive to me for a while. Can your success really be linked to my success? What good can having you around really do me?

Then I thought about the movie Cool Hand Luke. What is the punishment for doing almost anything wrong in that movie? "A night in the box" A night in total isolation from humanity. With extended periods of isolation from humanity I would go crazy. My whole existence as a human is really validated by the people around me. I finally realized that I really do affirm my own humanity by acknowledging yours?

By putting myself in the shoes of someone else, stopping to feel their pain and engaging in genuine relationship with them, I am truly being human.

I think this really gets down to the core of how we are made as human beings. We experience the greatest source of life from the people around us. If not for our interaction with others, what makes us human? Can we be anything at all without friends, family, and people that love us? Can we be anything at all without others?

So Christ does have it right when he says "Unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed . But if it dies, it produces many seeds." In the same way in order to experience any life we must die to ourselves in order to become a source of new life. Rob Bell says that, strangely enough, "Death is the engine of life."

May we all begin to practice a little more Ubuntu. Each day realizing the joy that comes from dying to ourselves so as to be made alive.





Monday, January 11, 2010

Marale Profile

Language:The people of Marale speak a local language called Lumasaba. The name Marale was given to the village because of a large rock that lies near the main road that runs through their village.

Economy: The people here are mostly subsistence farmers. They grow beans, maize, cassava, millet, and sorghum. A major problem for the people is preserving and selling the food they grow. This keeps them from progressing much as a village.

Climate and terrain: The region experiences a long dryspell from November to March and then has intermittent rainy and dry periods throughout the rest of the year. The terrain is largely short grass savanna with a small forrest to the west. The lack of cover from the savanna provides the area with lots and lots of sunshine. Despite this, the heat is typically mild, rarely reachin more than 90 degrees Farenheit.

Community: There are many local gatherings in the community including the market, the football (US soccer) pitch, the borehole (water source), and the curches. There are three local churches including two Christian Churches, and a Seventh Day Adventist church. There is no health center or school system in Marale.

Monday, December 7, 2009

New Pictures








Meet some people from Marale!



Some women and children gathered around their main water source.

A water system that Food for the Hungry recently supported in Kulu Ilyak, Uganda. Something like this will be constructed in Marale.


Sunday, November 22, 2009

In The Beginning


Thanks to the wonderful people at Food for the Hungry, Matt and I have now officially been introduced to a village in the Mbal district of Eastern Uganda called Marale. The people of Marale are desperate for clean water. Each day the women of the village must spend several hours fetching water from a distant borehole that is not clean and often nearly empty. The water supply is estimated to provide one fourth of the necesary water for the amount of people in the village. To add to this, drinking from this water source is giving people cholera, bilharzia, malaria, and parasites. The people of Marale are trapped in a devastating cycle of dehydration and disease. They need water to survive, but the only water they can get makes them sick. But since the water makes them sick, they have the energy to do little more than fetch enough food and water to survive. This is hopeless, poverty filled, and lethal. In cooperation with Food for the Hungry, the plan is to work WITH the people of Marale to give them a chance at a different life experience. This starts with facilitating the formation of a nine member committee of Ugandans from Marale to oversee water issues from now on. Mostly women will make up the committee because mostly women collect water. Additionally, the village will be expected to contribute 10% of the total cost of constructing a water system. This is where we come in. We hope to raise the other 90% of the funds ($5300) for this water system. We are not simply giving a handout to these people, we are working with them to help them out of a situation they cannot get out of by themselves.