Where water means more than drinking

By Dave Stell, Communications Manager, Canada

children collecting clean water

The small farming community of El Zapote is learning what hope feels like again. Home to just over 400 people in 114 households, this rural village lies within the Central American Dry Corridor, a region hard hit by climate change. Prolonged droughts and degraded soil make survival a daily struggle.

Most families depend on small plots of corn and beans. When crops fail, parents leave for harvest work or day labour. For years, the local school — serving 77 children — lacked safe water.

Deforestation and unpredictable rains had dried up local springs. Mothers carried heavy buckets from distant sources just so children could drink or wash their hands. Women and children spent hours searching for water.

Everything changed earlier this year, when the community, supported by Children Believe and its local partner, installed a rainwater-harvesting system at the school.

"We now have a rainwater harvesting system — something we had needed for a long time. We used to face constant water shortages, but now we can collect rainwater. It has also allowed us to grow gardens. As a community, we feel motivated and are now reforesting the area," says Aura Sanchez.

For Maria's family, the difference is deeply personal.

"Before, we had to walk one kilometre to fetch water. We carried it back in buckets, sometimes on horseback. Now, the children can practice better hygiene, and we all have more access to water."

The water system is just part of an interconnected approach by Children Believe in El Zapote where we’ve worked alongside the community and local partners to address the interconnected challenges families face. As donors support each solution, they help unlock many others — from nutrition and education to economic resilience.

"Our moms now don't have to walk long distances to get water and we can wash our hands," says Crisly. Her classmate Alfredo adds: "Now we have water and can grow our own gardens and have food. Our moms don't have to risk their safety carrying water anymore."

In El Zapote, the new water source has done more than quench thirst — it has restored dignity, opportunity, and hope.

For more stories like this, check out our latest edition of ChildVoice.

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