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United Dioceses of Dublin & Glendalough

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08.12.2021

Climate chaos in South Sudan: Christian Aid Ireland’s Christmas appeal

Climate chaos in South Sudan: Christian Aid Ireland’s Christmas appeal
Adut with her three children Maria (6), Simon (4) and Charles (1) in Biet village, Northern Bahr el Ghazal, South Sudan. With the new borehole, Adut can give her children clean water to drink. Credit: Christian Aid/Silvano Yokwe

For a long time, 27–year–old Adut Mariu had no choice but to give her children water that she knew wasn’t safe.

“We were in desperate need,” Adut said. “To look after my children, they had to drink the dirty river water.”

People were frequently ill from drinking the water but the river closest to the village of Biet in the north–west of South Sudan was the community’s only water source.

To make matters worse, Adut is also on the frontline of the climate crisis. South Sudan suffers with drought and flooding and many areas have been badly hit for three years in a row. Locust swarms have also devastated crops. 

The river near Adut’s village dries up during periods of drought, forcing people to walk long distances in search of water. And it floods during the rainy season, polluting fragile water sources, killing crops and destroying homes.

But with support from Christian Aid, a new borehole was sunk in Adut’s village, bringing clean water for her children to drink, whatever the weather.

“The water from the hand pump is very good. It’s free from disease. We drink it with peace of mind.”

It means no more upset tummies from drinking dirty water.

Thanks to this borehole, Adut’s family was safe the last time the river flooded. “In the autumn it flooded but we were not going to the river. We drank the clean water,” Adut said proudly.

The borehole is life–changing but clean water is in short supply across the region and the borehole is being used by three times more people than it should be.

Your gifts this Christmas could help to build more boreholes, provide seeds and farming tools, and give mums the chance to set up small businesses to earn a cash income. With clean water, nutritious food and ways to earn money, mums like Adut won’t face such impossible choices.

Life for Adut has been tough, but so is she. She’s lived through displacement, conflict, loss and now the climate crisis. But she is still full of hope for her children’s futures.

We all do what we can for the children in our lives, especially at Christmas. To find out more and to donate, please visit caid.ie/Christmas or you can make a telephone donation by calling 01 496 7040.

Please stand with mums this Christmas and help the next generation grow.

 

·      €56 could provide a hygiene kit (jerry cans, water purification tablets, hand soap, detergent, nappies, sanitary items) for eight families displaced by floods, giving them dignity and clean drinking water.

 

·      €117 could provide food such as lentils, grains, cooking oil and salt for a family of five for four months.

·      €351 could support three women’s groups to start up tea stalls and bread–making businesses, so they can earn extra income for their families.   

 

Adut demonstrates how she used to collect water from the river before the Christian Aid funded borehole brought clean water to her village. Credit: Christian Aid/Silvano Yokwe
Adut demonstrates how she used to collect water from the river before the Christian Aid funded borehole brought clean water to her village. Credit: Christian Aid/Silvano Yokwe

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