Making play possible
Deep in the rural hills beyond Sullana, Peru families make their homes on the high grounds above the banana farms and rice paddies. Children walk a few kilometers down dusty dirt roads to attend classes, and at the end of a warm winter’s day, return home for chores and more importantly, play.
Off with the school uniform and backpack, the boys at Martina's house throw on blue jerseys, lace up their cleats, and rush out the front door for a game of soccer. After designating a goalie, they all warm up by taking free kicks.
Perhaps this sounds like an all too classic scenario of an age gone by, but for the families in Lancones, Water.org's WaterCredit empowers families to finance the construction of water taps, toilets, and bathrooms; simple solutions that give families the health and time for what many may take for granted.
Martina shared, "To have water and a bathroom in our home is a beautiful thing for my children...for their health, and safety, and privacy." Her children have big dreams. Of the six, two want to play professional soccer, and her youngest daughter Ana wants to be an artist.
Just as people around the world have financed a vehicle or house for their families, a loan to establish safe water or a toilet at home is the only way some people in need can get access to these basic necessities. Water.org’s WaterCredit puts the power of water directly into the hands of the people who need it. WaterCredit empowers people with access to small loans for household water connections and toilets.
For Martina and her husband, financing these solutions is an investment in their family’s health and time. Finance is helping them break the cycle of poverty and create a cycle of opportunity for themselves – an opportunity to enhance their health, education and economic position. And at the end of the day, access to finance is helping them remove the obstacles that stand between their children and making health, and safety, and time to draw, and time to play soccer...possible.
This story was made possible by a generous grant from the Caterpillar Foundation.