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The 2012 Winter Fellows!

CWS is very excited to announce the newest members of our team, the 2012 Winter Fellows:

Alex Browmwell
Anthony Kuzma
Ashley Williams
Asia Stuerznickel
Boyd Stith
Brenna Saucier
Brianan Kiernan
Brittany Bieber
Caitlin Mitchell
David Massey
Emma Suojanen
Hannah Staiger
Janelle Pelli
Janelle Tensley
Janna San Juan
Jasdeep Singh
Katie Hites
Kelly Petterson
Kristen Felicione
Larissa Ruckl
Laura Simmons-Stern
Lindsey Dukes
Luke Lavin
Mark Hrdy
Matt Gilstrap
Melissa Allardyce
Michelle Butler
Nathan Jones
Patricia Welling
Peter Massoud
Sarah Curzon
Sarah Jordan
Tim Bernica
Walter Bromwell
Whitney Millegan
Zander Rounds

This January, this amazing group of students and young professionals will be traveling to Ghana to implement 9 (yes, 9!) new CWS water businesses in rural villages. We are thrilled to have these 36 new Fellows join our team!

But thats not all….

Due to the overwhelming amount of interest in the Fellowship Program, CWS has decided to offer a THIRD Fellowship Session this spring! This session will take place in Tamale, Ghana from April 2nd – 23rd. Applications are available now and are due on December 12th at 5pm EST. Apply now and join us as we work eradicate the need for safe drinking water in Ghana!

CWS Bookshelf

I am always looking for a good read. So now that a new batch of fellows are trying to wrap their minds around their upcoming Ghana experience, I thought I’d take the opportunity to recommend some reading material I find interesting or relevant to my time here in Tamale. Past fellows, please keep this discussion going with any books you loved and would recommend!

#1 most important book for traveling in Ghana

Ghana: The Brandt Travel Guide. Go for the most recent addition you can get your hands on – recommendations about where to sleep/visit/eat have been so essential to traveling here. CWS Field Staffer Wahab borrowed my copy from the office, and while he says some of the information is a little off, he is reading it cover to cover so it can’t be that bad!

Some background info on the global water crisis:

WHO/UNICEF’s Progress on sanitation and drinking water: 2010 update. Disclaimer: This publication is 60 pages BUT has some good visuals. There’s some great info here but if you read it cover to cover you will resurface speaking NGO-ish and referring to everything you love by acronyms.

UN Water’s Gender, water and sanitation: a policy brief. A more concise summary of the relationship between women and water in the developing world.

Good Reads:

The CLASSIC Things Fall Apart. It’s become the pillar of West African literature, so…

Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Ok, so this is about Nigeria’s Biafran war of the late 60s, (not Ghana – historically very stable and peaceful!) but I just love her colorful and nuanced descriptions of foreigners in West Africa, gender roles, familial relationships, urban vs rural spaces … well I just love it in general.

This book was so fascinating it inspired me to work on a book of my own. Although my book is still a work in progress I would love to have my writing published one day. I have a lot to say about my time in Africa and the people I have met along the way and I think writing a book would be the best way to document everything that I have learned.

Nowadays, you can even publish a book independently so getting your writing out there has never been easier. A lot of people have asked me ‘is self publishing a book a good idea?’ but I think that as long as you do plenty of research, you can easily make the best decision for your needs. What do you think? Have you always wanted to write a book?

Ok enough of my thoughts! Past fellows – what books or articles helped shape the way you thought about your CWS experience? Extra points if they are fun to read!

-Kathryn

A New Website For CWS!

Thank you to everyone who voted for CWS in Jack Rabbits’s Carrots for a Cause  contest! It was amazing to see all of the Facebook posts and tweets by you guys and we really appreciated your support! Although we didn’t win the new website by Jack Rabbit we have some exciting news:

Another web development company called Cloud Construct noticed all of the commotion we were causing on Facebook and graciously offered to take on CWS as their 2012 Community Service Project!

Cloud Construct does amazing work and we could not be more excited to work with them next year! We can’t wait to be able to better showcase our impact though a new and improved website!

Going Viral

When I think of the equipment CWS and partners use to deal with water-borne diseases, I think of those charismatic blue buckets, the polytanks and aquatabs and alum balls that we use to clean water and keep it that way. These are the “appropriate technologies” we’ve chosen; things that are cheap, durable and locally available that help with our problem of unsafe drinking water. This equipment is also pretty simple, because it has to last a long time and be easily and cheaply fixed by whoever has a problem. But it is a mistake to think that all the tools appropriate for our purpose need to so basic.

Looks good (and tastes good too)! A safe storage container gets filled at the center in Kpalbusi

Continue reading

Help us get $50,000 towards a new website!

This morning we found out that we made it to the finals for a chance to win $50,000 towards a new website. Jackrabbit’s Carrots for A Cause Competition is going to give this prize to the non-profit with the most votes.

Top 5 Reasons the CWS website needs a face lift:

  1. We want you, our supporters, to see the amazing effect you are having in Ghana.
  2. We want to inspire people to get involved in our work.
  3. We want every dollar raised to go towards bringing clean drinking water to more people, not a website.
  4. We have a ton of amazing pictures that need to be used to better showcase our work.
  5. We need a website that shows, not only how awesome the work CWS does, but also how amazing all the fellows are behind the work that we do.

Now let’s make it happen!

 Vote once every day from now until Friday!

Set your calendars and reminders!

Dagbani Basics

CWS’ winter fellows will soon be preparing for an awesome three weeks in Northern Ghana! To help ease them into the swing of things (and to jog the memories of past CWS Tamale adventurers) Mark and I put together a little introduction to Dagbani. Dagbani is the language spoken by the Dagomba people who are native to the area where we work. Though many people in town (and a few in the villages) speak some English, trying to communicate with people in the language they feel most comfortable with is always appreciated. Some words can be tongue-tiers, but give them your best shot! And when in doubt, say “Naaaa”.

– Kathryn

Good morning. Despa
Response. Naa

Did you sleep well? A gbihira?
Yes, I slept well. Gom be ni

How is your family? A yinnim be wula?
They are fine. Alaafee.

Mark, one of CWS' office gatemen, and his family

What is your name? A yuli?
My name is Mark. N yuli Mark

How is your farm, Mark? A puu be wula Mark?
My farm is fine. Naa/N puu be vienyela

What are you growing on your farm? Bo ka a kora?
I am growing rice. N kori la shinkaafa.

Mark is growing rice, or "shinkaafa", on his farm. It is just down the street from our office!

Thank you Mark! Taa paya Mark!
Sleep well Kathryn! Naawuni ni ti ti beyow Kathryn.