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Shenandoah
Living Waters Team
Installs First System - Baja
By Mac Sterrett
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The first Living Waters for the World
water purification project by the Highland-Augusta
Mission Community of Shenandoah Presbytery of Virginia was installed
on the Baja California peninsula of Mexico during the week of July 19-23,
2004. The system provides clean water for the Oaxacan Indian community
of Las Missiones, located just outside of the town of Vicente Guerrero.
Las Missiones and other nearby colonias support a population of some 6,000
- 8,000 villagers primarily employed as seasonal agricultural field workers.
The municipal water system is sporadic and unreliable, and though bottled
water is available for purchase in the community, many do not have the
financial means to purchase clean drinking water. Our ecumenical
partner, an established local mission group known as International Disciple
Training (IDT), is providing the water to residents at no charge.
Our installation trip was combined with a previously scheduled trip
to build four houses in the community, so the three Clean Water U graduates
trained others to help with the installation and the health & hygiene
training. The system was installed at The Dome, the central presence
of IDT in the community. The Dome serves as a house of worship,
community center and fellowship hall. Located within a small walled
compound which also includes the ministers home and a day care center
currently under construction, The Dome also served as the classroom for
health & hygiene training.
The water source is a municipal water system supplied by a series of
deep wells drilled into a dry river bed several miles outside of the
community. The area is desert and receives only three or four inches
of rain annually, and because the area relies so heavily on agriculture,
crops take priority over humans. During periods of low water availability,
the water is diverted from the municipal system to the farmers for irrigation,
and the municipal water system literally is “turned off” for days at a
time. Residents of the colonias, if they even have municipal water
connections, have a single hose bib on a pipe in their yards. Because
the water may come on at any time of day or night (it usually only runs for
a few hours at a time), residents leave their taps open and wait for the
water to begin flowing, a signal for all to grab containers of any sort
to store water in barrels for use for the next several days.
Our week was filled with many challenges, not the least of which was
that there was no water or electricity to run the system! Our
survey trip five weeks earlier had led us to believe a power drop would
be in place by the time we arrived, but we made temporary arrangements
by running a 100-foot extension cord to a neighboring home. We
also had counted on the new municipal water connection that was to be
installed right next to the water treatment building, but that didn’t happen,
either. One hundred feet of garden hose from the local hardware
store connected to a neighbors outdoor spigot solved that problem, and
modifications were made to the system input line to accommodate the changes.
Construction progressed smoothly… up to a point. Upon our arrival
Monday, we learned that only one of the two water tanks had been delivered;
the other tank was promised “by Wednesday.” The board was assembled,
connections made and the one tank installed, but by Wednesday we were at
a standstill… and still no tank. As members of the install team
went about helping the house-building teams on other projects, the water
system sat unfinished and dead in its tracks.
Late Wednesday afternoon, a cloud of dust heralded the arrival of a
truck bearing our second tank! We were back in action, and by
Thursday afternoon it was time to turn on the water. Surprise!
No water! The municipal system was turned off! Arrangements
were made for a water truck to deliver a load early Friday morning, and
as the primary tank was being filled the municipal water supply came back
on. With the primary tank full (we upgraded the system by installing
600-gallon tanks at this site), the system was dedicated even before our
first batch could be completed. That happened Friday afternoon,
and our full mission team of 58 celebrated communion with water from the
first batch on the beach as the sun set over the Pacific Ocean.
We give thanks to God and to all our brothers and sisters in Mexico
and the U.S. who helped bring Living Water to our Oaxacan friends.
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