Viewpoint: Clean water is a necessity that millions of people don’t have

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We turn on our facets and out comes water – clean, refreshing, plentiful, life-sustaining water. But we rarely give it a thought. We just tend to take for granted that it will always be there. We even forget to thank God, the well-spring of life.

But for 768 million fellow human beings, clean plentiful water is a distant dream, cites the United Nations. For them, the water they drink, cook with, and bath in, is polluted and often disease ridden, and must be carried long distances in many cases.

Kukama families prepare breakfast in the community of Dos de Mayo, Peru. Water, soil and sediments in the Amazon tributary contain heavy metals and other residue from more than four decades of oil production. In all 17 communities tested, the rivers, lakes or wells that provide drinking water were deemed unsafe. (CNS photo/Barbara Fraser)

According to figures released by the United Nations Children’s Fund in 2013, lack of access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene is a leading cause of death from diarrhea in children under five, amounting to approximately 1,400 children dying each day.

For those of us who have nice bathrooms, we simply flush the toilet, and that’s that. But according to the U.N. approximately 2.5 billion people do not have access to toilets or even latrines.

March 22 is World Water Day, a time dedicated by the United Nations to learn about the extreme importance of protecting this priceless gift from God and to motivate us to work for that day when every single person has access to adequate safe water and sanitation.

CRS helps

According to Catholic Relief Services (CRS), in the war-torn Democratic Republic of the Congo, communities often use rivers as a drinking fountain, swimming pool, laundry and public toilet. Yet, every day, women fill old fuel cans with the contaminated water and take it back to their families. But with the help of kind-hearted donors families in an eastern Congo village are healthier  because they are now able to sanitize the water they collect.

You can contribute to water programs like the Congo village project by sending a check to Catholic Relief Services, P.O. Box 17090, Baltimore, Md. 21203-7090 or you can donate online http://crs.org/donate/.

Also, please email and call your congressperson (Capital switchboard: 202-224-3121) urging him to co-sponsor the Senator Paul Simon Water for the World Act 2013 (H.R. 2901).

According to CRS, this legislation is designed to help ensure that many of the world’s poorest and most vulnerable human beings receive the clean water they need in a sustainable, equitable and conflict-free way.

Since there is no similar bill in the Senate, it would be helpful to contact your two U.S. senators asking them to introduce a companion bill to H.R. 2901.

While the U.S. is by some standards the richest nation on earth, there are many of its residents who lack easily accessible clean water and sanitation.

I once worked at a parish in western Maryland, part of Appalachia, where I became familiar with people who lived in shacks with no indoor plumbing. They would have to haul water from mountain springs. And some folks did not even have outhouses.

To provide help in your area, consider connecting with Habitat for Humanity www.habitat.org.

A little reminder: During Lent we are called to improve our prayer life, fasting and almsgiving.

If we pray, fast, give and work to ensure that everyone has access to adequate safe water and sanitation, when we stand before the Lord Jesus we will rejoice in hearing him say to us, “I was thirsty and you gave me drink. … Amen, I say to you, whatever you did for one of these least brothers of mine, you did for me.”

 

Tony Magliano is a syndicated columnist who lives in the Diocese of Wilmington.