Clean water, living water

By Anonymous | South Asia

Recently I had the chance to meet a man named Jalal*, who has lived in his small, rural village all his life.  As a younger man he had once worked as a seasonal day laborer harvesting crops in the nearby fields, and also as a rickshaw puller - both jobs requiring stamina and muscle.  Now, as a 65-year-old grandfather, he has only one leg and struggles to get around on crutches.  How did this happen?

Six years ago, after decades of drinking water with a dangerously high concentration of arsenic in it, Jalal's body finally began to succumb to severe symptoms of arsenicosis, or arsenic poisoning.  When he went to the hospital the doctor told him that he had gangrene on his right foot due to complications from excessive arsenic poisoning.  Shortly thereafter a surgeon amputated one of his toes and eventually, a year later, his entire right leg had to be amputated in order to stop the spread of gangrene.

Arsenic contamination of groundwater is a naturally-occurring geological phenomenon which is unfortunately widespread in this area, but it's found in many other parts of the world as well - in both developed and developing countries.  Poverty, high population density, and other contributing factors have made it such a major public health crisis here.

Since no villages in our area have water treatment plants, the local people drink untreated well water (groundwater) which unlike water from ponds or rivers is generally free from bacteria but unfortunately has lots of arsenic in it.

Two years ago, one of our field workers met Jalal when they went to his village in order to test water and look for arsenicosis patients.  In addition to ensuring that he has access to a safe drinking water source, we have also accepted Jalal into our patient management program in order to help prevent any further arsenic-related health problems.

Our programme's activities include raising local awareness about the problem, testing water sources to determine the amount of arsenic present, distributing simple filters at a discounted rate to people whose water source has too much arsenic, and helping arsenicosis patients by giving them access to a doctor and needed medicines.

Jalal’s situation underscores the urgent importance of our efforts to help people stay healthy by drinking arsenic-free water. It’s our desire to see everybody in this area drinking water that is fit for life.  We work towards this vision every day so that in the future, thousands of people like Jalal can start drinking safe water from an earlier age and therefore avoid the serious health problems that he has faced in the past few years.

*Names have been changed.


Pray for:

• sustainable water and sanitation programs like these across the world and in South Asia that will bring not only clean water but Living Water and the hope of Life to people who thirst.

If you think God could use you to minister in this way overseas, contact SIM today.

 

SIM Asset Publisher Portlet

Publicador de contenidos

SIM Asset Publisher Portlet

Publicador de contenidos

Related stories

Zimbabwe new stories

short summary

The mountains have burst: Zimbabwe under Cyclone Idai

When the floods came to Chimanimani, it was as if the mountains exploded. "The people said, ‘the mountains have burst,’” said SIM Zimbabwe Director Caiphas Ngarivhume.

An audience with Angola’s president

SIM Canada’s Dr Stephen Foster, who has served in Angola for 42 years, shares about an opportunity for collaboration between the government and the church.