Water Wells for Africa founder Kurt Dahlin discovered decades ago how harmful the generational impact of contaminated sources was in Southeast Africa.
In 1994, he visited the country of Malawi as part of a humanitarian mission regarding refugees who were fleeing there from Mozambique, which was embroiled in a civil war.
“I discovered the terrible scourge of water poverty where women, girls, and whole families where were all suffering from contaminated open water sources,” he told The Epoch Times.
That discovery led to Dahlin’s founding of Water Wells for Africa two years later.
The Manhattan Beach, California non profit’s mission is to drill water wells to provide clean, fresh water to communities and villages in some of the world’s most remote areas.
Doing so not only prevents illnesses, but raises entire villages of families out of destitution.
“Water [wells are] the first step out of poverty. There can be no community development and no hope for a better future without water,” Dahlin said. “Water allows families to build homes and start businesses. Water helps children go to school and stay in school. Water helps women and girls be set free from the slavery to water they must gather instead of being in school.”
He also said the nonprofit has been focusing on building water wells in schools. Some, he said, have since seen a “dramatic and immediate” impact.
“Attendance has improved, along with the health and retention rate, academic performances, graduation rates, and even dreams for the students’ futures have risen,” he said.
About $8,000, Dahlin said, provides funding for a single well for an entire village for decades.
Recently, like many non-profits seeking donations for GivingTuesday, a global holiday held each year on the Tuesday following Thanksgiving, Water Wells for Africa is funded entirely by donations. Additional funding is awarded to the organization, and others, through Global Giving, a nonprofit that connects other nonprofits to donors.
Dahlin’s organization has received high rankings from Great Nonprofits—an organization that shares and the work of non-profits and allows them to be rated by internet users—for providing safe drinking water to African villages.
Dahlin credits the success of the organization to its large group of volunteers.
Megan and Travis Anderson of Inglewood, California, went from volunteering with the organization to becoming donors after witnessing, they said, the positive impact wells have provided for Malawi villages.
“Seeing the need for clean water and medical care in that part of the world firsthand changed my life, Megan Anderson told The Epoch Times. “The prevalence of waterborne illness and preventable death due to contaminated water and lack of medical care was staggering and heartbreaking.”
The couple recently donated funding for a water well, which was dedicated in one of Malawi’s villages last year.
“I cannot put into words the feelings of joy and excitement I felt when I received the word [and video footage] that my first well had been completed in Khombe Village,” she said.
Since its founding, the organization has installed more than 400 water wells in Malawi, which it estimates has provided safe drinking water for over 500,000 people.
To make a donation, visit https://waterwellsforafrica.org/support-us/