Rainwater Harvesting, Rwanda, Water Access Rwanda Missy Olivia Ngabire Rainwater Harvesting, Rwanda, Water Access Rwanda Missy Olivia Ngabire

St Jean Bosco Primary School: Water for Schools Project

Located in Kamonyi district, in the southern part of Rwanda, St Jean Bosco Primary School has 1,350 students who are now receiving safe drinking water, which will also allow the school to save a lot on water bills, after all, rainwater is free water!

Water For Schools project

STATUS: Completed
Project cost: $3,328.28
Impact: 1,350 students now have safe drinking water

Located in Kamonyi district, in the southern part of Rwanda, St Jean Bosco Primary School has 1,350 students who are now receiving safe drinking water, which will also allow the school to save a lot on water bills, after all, rainwater is free water!

Water Access Rwanda is a social enterprise with the mission to establish reliable, affordable and convenient water infrastructures across Africa.

Through their new initiative Amazi for Schools™ they are providing their innovative water filtration systems to public schools who otherwise do not have the funds to establish such systems.

our role

Feeding Mouths, Filling Minds together with our strategic partner Strides for Africa, have partnered with Water Access Rwanda St Jean Bosco Primary school.

Full System includes Filtration System & Booster pump. Rainwater collection on each school building, gutters with First Flush Diverter feeding tanks and drinking Station for students. Water Access Rwanda will also provide ongoing service after setup:

  • Quarterly water quality monitoring, system repairs and cartridge replacement

  • Annual User survey

  • WASH (Water, Sanitation and Hygiene) training for schools to improve overall safety and protection from Water Borne Diseases. 

  • Live dashboard on the functionality status of each system

  • Monitoring of filtered water and water quality through a live dashboard

Partner organizations

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St Jean Bosco Secondary School: Water For Schools Project

Located in Kamonyi district, in the southern part of Rwanda, St Jean Bosco Secondary School has 2,226 students who are now receiving safe drinking water, which will also allow the school to save a lot on water bills, after all, rainwater is free water!

Water For Schools project

STATUS: Completed
Project cost: $4,226
Impact: 2,226 students now have safe drinking water

Located in Kamonyi district, in the southern part of Rwanda, St Jean Bosco Secondary School has 2,226 students who are now receiving safe drinking water, which will also allow the school to save a lot on water bills, after all, rainwater is free water!

Water Access Rwanda is a social enterprise with the mission to establish reliable, affordable and convenient water infrastructures across Africa.

Through their new initiative Amazi For Schools™ they are providing their innovative water filtration systems to public schools who otherwise do not have the funds to establish such systems.

our role

Feeding Mouths, Filling Minds together with our strategic partner Strides for Africa, have partnered with Water Access Rwanda St Jean Bosco Secondary school.

Full System includes Filtration System & Booster pump. Rainwater collection on each school building, gutters with First Flush Diverter feeding tanks and drinking Station for students. Water Access Rwanda will also provide ongoing service after setup:

  • Quarterly water quality monitoring, system repairs and cartridge replacement

  • Annual User survey

  • WASH (Water, Sanitation and Hygiene) training for schools to improve overall safety and protection from Water Borne Diseases. 

  • Live dashboard on the functionality status of each system

  • Monitoring of filtered water and water quality through a live dashboard

Partner organizations

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Rainwater Harvesting, Rwanda Sarah Fracek Rainwater Harvesting, Rwanda Sarah Fracek

Rwandan Orphans Project Rainwater Harvesting

The Rwandan Orphans Project (ROP) is a residential care center in Rwanda that houses up to 100 former street children. Feeding Mouths, Filling Minds is helping ROP to obtain more consistent access to water throughout the year by funding the construction of rainwater collection and storage systems at the center.

Rainwater Harvesting

STATUS: FUNDRAISING
FUNDRAISING GOAL: $2,250

The Rwandan Orphans Project (ROP) is a residential care center in Rwanda that houses up to 100 former street children; and an elementary school that provides completely free education to an additional 120 vulnerable boys and girls from their local community’s poorest families.

Water is a vital resource, but ROP is located in an area of Rwanda that has inconsistent access to it throughout the year - especially during the country’s
two dry seasons, which take up about seven months of the year. Without water, ROP struggles to maintain health, hygiene and provide nutrition to
the children they serve.

our role

Feeding Mouths, Filling Minds is helping ROP to obtain more consistent access to water throughout the year by funding the construction of rainwater collection and storage systems at the center.

Phase I will include construction of a 50,000 liter (approx. 13,200 gallons) sealed underground tank, filter and pump to distribute usable water.

Phase II will include the addition of a center-wide water catchment system to
collect rainwater to fill all of their storage tanks.

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Huruma Children's Home Farm Pond

FMFM's role is to provide Mama Zipporah's team with the financial resources it needs to research, plan and develop an alternative water source: a farm pond. 

RAINWATER HARVESTING & SUSTAINABLE FARMING

PROJECT STATUS: BUILD & FUNDRAISING
FUNDS RAISED TO-DATE: $10,000
TOTAL FUNDRAISING GOAL: $15,000

Huruma Children's Home is a children's orphanage located on the undulating slopes of the beautiful Ngong Hills which is about 25km from Nairobi, the capital of Kenya in East Africa. This is, unfortunately, also a relatively poor area where most people have to struggle every day to make ends meet. Poverty, poor health, HIV/AIDS and massive unemployment are the main challenges people meet. Many children are orphans or live in families that are not able to care for them.

All of the households around here walk about 17 kilometers (10 miles) each way to fetch water. For these women and children, it takes like the whole day just to fetch water. They don’t have time to concentrate on other issues that would uplift their standard of living.
— Ronald Kamadi, Engineer, Water Tech Innovations Kenya

During a recent visit to Kenya, the FMFM team learned that the children's home founder, Mama Zipporah, was gifted a plot of land in the community of Ndeiya.

FMFM worked with Mama Zipporha to create a vision for the land's future - sustainable farming. This would provide the children of Huruma with a reliable and cost-effective food source. But farming requires water. And the land is located near the Great Rift Valley - an area so dry that digging a well was not an option. 

OUR ROLE

FMFM's role is to provide Mama Zipporah's team with the financial resources it needs to research, plan and develop an alternative water source: a farm pond. 

Project funding covers the cost of the following:

  • Excavation of the 120-square meters of farm pond (completed)

  • Construction of silt trap and other masonry works (completed)

  • Dam liner, ultraviolet resistance plastic (completed)

  • Metallic roofing structure (fundraising)

  • Shade-net roofing material (fundraising)

  • Establishment of drip irrigation systems (fundraising)

  • Technical support and training (ongoing)

  • Provisional for survey and design (ongoing)

Additionally, FMFM volunteers from the United States traveled to the farm plot's land in 2012 and 2015. Our work there included:

  • Meeting with local engineers and project partners to review project plans, finances and progress

  • Hauling boulders for farm pond walls

  • Installation of pond liners

  • Masonry work on farm pond walls

This project will cut the cost of food production. It will also provide an opportunity for our kids to learn about rainwater harvesting. We are raising these children to be productive citizens of our nation. Going forward, this will be a learning center for the entire community.
— Peris Muchina, Projects Coordinator, Huruma Children's Home

THE OUTCOME

This project affects Huruma Children's Home and the Ndeiya community in several ways.  

  • It will provide the community with broader possibilities for food and water and set an example of access to water in the semi-arid land.

  • It will allow Mama Zipporah (the orphanage founder) to develop sustainable food systems for feeding her 160+ children.

  • Over time, it can serve as a catalyst for Ndeiya’s children to have access to food, increase school attendance, and hopefully, break the poverty cycle.

  • Once the water and food systems are developed, children will not have to turn to medial work to help the family survive. This will also serve as a best practice and collaboration that can be scaled throughout Kenya and other countries

PARTNERS

On behalf of Huruma Trust Fund, and Mama Zipporah, I would like to say thank you so, so much. The community has been very, very impressed. They are saying that a bright star has come to our community, and suddenly, everything seems to be opening up.
— Peris Muchina, Projects Coordinator, Huruma Children's Home
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