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Journal Entry: Spring Water, Speeches and a New Water System

February 19, 2016

Journal Entry: Spring Water, Speeches and a New Water System

February 19, 2016
(Feb. 19, 2016 - by Jody Arnold with Ralph Kurtenbach)  In the remote Ecuadorian jungle community of Santa Rosa, Reach Beyond missionaries and summer interns visited several times during 2015 after the community received government approval to have a clean water system. Wim de Groen, director of water projects in Ecuador, and his team worked with the local people who showed great willingness to better their situation. Together they erected a water tower, dug trenches for pipe, fixed an old tank and helped install underground wiring for an anticipated solar panel. Besides working with the villagers, the expatriates also worshiped together at church services in English, Spanish and Shuar. For some, opportunities arose for learning about the Shuar culture. Here is an account of one Reach Beyond missionary in Quito who recently visited the community for the dedication of the water project.

Led by community development nurse Miriam Gebb, missionaries hike through the jungle to the remote community of Santa Rosa.Some unpleasant itching from chigger bites reminded me of our visit to Ecuador’s Amazon region where we helped inaugurate a community water system.

Other than the itching, the visit was pleasant. My husband, Scott (an accountant), and I accepted an invitation from our mission’s community development staff in Shell to go to Santa Rosa on Friday, Jan. 29, for the dedication of the new system. Last September Scott had helped work on the water tower, so I was pretty interested in going.

Rather than making the entire journey on Friday, I opted for a $7 bus ride to Shell on Thursday afternoon, getting a good night’s sleep at the home of friends. At 1:30 a.m. Friday, Scott left Quito for Shell along with Dan Shedd (executive director of the Latin America Region).

Scott and Jody Arnold at the site of the spring captation.Our trip from Shell to Santa Rosa started at 7:30 a.m. Friday and involved highway driving, then taking an unpaved, very rough road for another 1½ hours. Finally we arrived at Chapintza where the road ends.

From Chapintza we took a 10-minute flight in a Mission Aviation Fellowship airplane to San Carlos. After trekking on a jungle trail for 15 minutes to Santa Rosa, we were met by community residents who greeted us with sort of a reception line of 40 to 50 men and women.

Nursing a baby, one of the ladies shyly asked if I were Scott’s wife as he greeted many of the men whom he had helped in September. Later we took our places in a mostly open-air community building. Sitting on benches against the half-walls, we heard lots of speeches.

Children providce a dance during the project inauguration.We watched a couple of guys do a Shuar greeting (or maybe dance) and saw some really cute kids perform a traditional dance with toddler siblings running out to join in and their moms running out to retrieve them. We were offered lots of chicha (typical drink made from manioc) and heard more speeches. The ice cream bars we had brought to share were distributed.

A ribbon-cutting ceremony by the water tower followed outside. After a while the community served us some plantain and a big piece of roasted fish—catfish perhaps—on a banana leaf. After hanging around, we walked to where the people of Santa Rosa, together with Reach Beyond staff members, had constructed the spring water captation system.

The 30-foot-high water tower in Santa Rosa.I (and others) also climbed the water tower ladder. Ascending the first leaning ladder wasn’t too bad, but the second ladder was attached to the tower and went straight up. It was a bit scary—about 30 feet high. But it was fun to see the view from the top.

About mid-afternoon, after the dedication, we said goodbye to the villagers and took the bumpy ride back to Shell in reverse, except we stopped at a restaurant for dinner. The food was good, everyone was tired and it was a good time to celebrate.

For me the most special aspects of the trip were seeing all the kids, realizing that the clean water could potentially improve their health, and seeing the pride that the community had in their new system. No longer do they need to drag filled water containers up a steep riverbank. I also enjoyed getting to see a bit of the Amazon jungle—both from the air and hiking through it—and seeing where Scott had helped with the project.

Along with the chigger bites, I was also very sore. I think that was from the wild rides on rough roads!

Source: Reach Beyond