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Conservation and Drought Management in Kenya’s Narok District
Masai Chief of the Narok Community with Ephraim Kiragu, CWS East Africa.
Photo: Ann Walle/CWS
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By Ann Walle/CWS
"If you want to help improve the conditions of a pastoral community, the most important investment is water."
So instructs CWS's Disaster Mitigation expert Ephraim Kiragu (pictured) on the outset of a journey to Kenya's Rift Valley and the Narok District.
"The valley is made of volcanic soils rich in minerals. It just needs water," Kiragu continues. Indeed it does. The land is dry and gets drier when as a group of visitors traverses nearly 30 miles in from the main road to visit a Masai community who has benefited from a project of Church World Service's program Water for Life.
![]() The water tanks which make up "the mother of all oases." Photo: Ann Walle/CWS |
This community had "missed out" on any help, says Kiragu, until a member of CWS partner National Council of Churches of Kenya visited to appraise its situation. "This area was not favored by the big NGO's," remembers Kiragu. "There were no relief operations. We found 102 churches struggling with the situation.
"Everywhere were dead carcasses. DanChurchAid funded a full assessment and the report caught the eye of CWS-East Africa Director Daniel Tyler. The office prepared a proposal for recovery, and not for simple food distribution. This is the CWS key to sustainability.
"Sheep and goats were re-stocked in order to restore the community to a status where it didn't require ongoing help. The community was engaged to leverage partnerships."
![]() Joseph Paneiyio of Narok Conservation and Drought Management, with community. Photo: Ann Walle/CWS |
Joseph Paneiyio (pictured), with CWS partner Narok Conservation and Drought Management, is the secretary of the steering committee, and he is a force of enthusiasm and gratitude. He says the community describes its new borehole as "an oasis in the middle of its radius, the mother of all boreholes," he says with a laugh.
"The community had been marginalized because they are traditional Masai," he explained. "It's hard to move the Masai" to where water might have been more readily available. "God has created an oasis with CWS," Joseph said. "Thank you – long live CWS!"
The beneficiaries, who have worked out a schedule of days for various settlements to visit the well, clustered in different spots to greet the visitors along their journey. "Since you came faces are shining!" Joseph said. "You can see our women are happy."
![]() CWS East Africa staff Ephraim Kiragu and Mary Obiero with the Masai community chief, at the water trough. Photo: Ann Walle/CWS |
At the well, a crowd waited in the shade of acacia trees. The site consists of two boreholes, a well covered by branches to protect it from elephants, and a pumphouse.
At Lokumukumu, Joseph explained that the efforts had begun in 2004, with testing by the Kenya Ministry of Water. They drilled to 110 feet.
The site supplies 3,642 households and over 10,000 head of livestock. It is managed by the steering committee of 15 members, who raised the money to pay for the government permit to drill. The committee includes seven women. Said one, "If it were not for CWS, there could not have been a well like this. A well like this …," she paused, and continued, "Water is life. Long live Kiragu and Mary!" CWS East Africa staff member Mary Obiero (pictured) heads sustainable development programs.
![]() Honoria Naylishu, member of the steering committee. Photo: Ann Walle/CWS |
An important result of not needing to migrate is that girl children, responsible for fetching water, can now attend school. In another CWS program, a nearby school has been established and supplied, resulting in two national student honorees.
Honoria continued, "Even when we were hungry, we could not cook the food – we had no water to cook it. People used to die. If people wanted to suffer, they would come to this area.
"So we pray for you and feel for you in our hearts, and we know as days go by, soon the water problem will be a gone issue."
The steering committee chairman gave his remarks. "My joy is to find assistance in this desert – because we have really gotten something that has lifted our living standards. On behalf of the community we thank you because you have helped us. Very long distances we used to travel to get water.
"God is great and is an almighty God that there is water here today. We see water coming from this rocky place."
Media Contact:
Lesley Crosson, CWS/New York, 212-870-2676;
Jan Dragin, 781-925-1526;
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