“You have nothing to draw with and the well is deep. Where can you get this living water?” –John 4:11
COMPELLING WITNESS SUMMER 2011
SC Ministry Foundation Mission
SC Ministry Foundation is a public grant-making organization. The Foundation promotes the mission and ministry of the Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati. www.scministryfdn.org
Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati Mission
Urged by the love of Christ and in the spirit of our founder, Elizabeth Ann Seton, we Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati strive to live Gospel values. We choose to act justly, to build loving relationships, to share our resources with those in need, and to care for all creation. www.srcharitycinti.org
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Revolutionizing Sanitation in Madagascar O
ne of the greatest challenges to food security, livelihood, and educational opportunities throughout the world is disease caused by poor sanitation. Poor sanitation causes millions, mostly children, to die each year from diseases transmitted through contaminated water. Worldwide, four out of ten people do not have access to simple sanitation1. In Madagascar, approximately 14 of 17 million people do not have access to safe water or sanitary toilets, causing diarrheal illnesses that contribute to Madagascar’s high infant mortality rate, low average life span, and about 24 percent of work and education productivity lost each year. Ultimately, these conditions keep the Malagasy people from pulling themselves out of the poverty trap. In 2002, Caring Response Madagascar Foundation (CRMF) joined with several non-governmental organizations and foundations to find a way to
Caring Response Madagascar Foundation (CRMF)
Africa
partners with the poor in Madagascar to enable them to improve their own lives. Madagascar SC Ministry Foundation supported CRMF’s Sanitec sanitation project, the first sanitary wares production facility of its kind in Madagascar. Sanitec meets the critical need for sanitation in Madagascar, makes sanitation more affordable, and creates local employment opportunities for people through the production process.
Lack of safe water and sanitation is the world’s single largest cause of illness. In Madagascar, approximately 14 million people do not have access to safe water or sanitation.
revolutionize sanitation in Madagascar. What resulted was the Sanitec sanitation project, the first sanitary wares production facility of its kind in Madagascar. CRMF’s sanitation efforts began with education outreach. CRMF partnered with local artists to perform puppet shows and host dialogues about good hygiene and healthy living practices, including the need for family latrines and handwashing. As a result, the desire for affordable sanitary facilities skyrocketed, and thousands of residents began asking for the installation of a modest family latrine. But because essential component parts—chiefly ceramic sanitary wares—were unavailable locally and must be imported, the cost of a latrine remained outside the reach of most poor families. Over the course of two years, CRMF pioneered Sanitec, an environmentally friendly process for developing latrine components from locally available raw materials. Sanitec reduces the cost of latrines by 70 percent and makes them affordable to low-income families. Continued on page 2
www.un.org/waterforlifedecade
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