Blog Contributor:

Elizabeth Gore

scaling-kilimanjaro-for-water

The fight has just begun


the-fight-has-just-begun

Feb 2nd, 2010 5:22 PM UTC
By Elizabeth Gore

Here’s a final post from Elizabeth Gore, the executive director of global partnerships and Nothing But Nets for the United Nations Foundation. She recently hiked up Mt. Kilimanjaro with the Summit on the Summit team to help raise awareness about the global clean water crisis. To read about her trek, click here and here.

Instead of staying in bed to recover after conquering Mt. Kilimanjaro, Kenna, Jessica Biel, Santigold and I woke up early one morning and boarded a plane to Ethiopia to experience firsthand the effects of the lack of clean, safe water. Kenna’s dad (Dr. Zemedkun, the inspiration for the entire Summit on the Summit project) and his sister Emerald joined us on our journey.

Our guides for the day, UNHCR (the United Nation’s High Commission for Refugees and a beneficiary of our climb) showed us the Kebribeyah refugee camp in Jijiga, Ethiopia. The UNHCR is responsible for 40 million displaced people around the world, half of which do not have adequate access to clean water. The camps they run in Ethiopia are some of the most desperate anywhere.

Arriving in Kebribeyah, we viewed the Jarrar water supply system, which supplies water for both refugees and local Ethiopian people. Before UNHCR was here, these people lived on just a few liters of water per day. The current system (managed by UNHCR and the local government) now provides 12 to 15 liters per day. Even though this is a huge improvement, the Jarrar system needs an upgrade to reach the UNHCR minimum standard of 20 liters per person per day.

After leaving Kebribeyah, we then navigated the long, bumpy road to the Jijiga refugee camp. On our first stop, we visited a woman who ran the very first Somali refugee committee. She told us that the water sources in her camp are inadequate—and her words resonated with us: “I was never born to be a refugee. We are human beings, too.”

We then met with students at the primary school. They exuded hope and confidence for their future. We glanced at each other in that school room and knew that we had to give water to these kids, so that they could achieve their dreams, too. Seeing them was the highlight of the day.

Walking through the camp, Jessica and I also spent time with two women in their wooden stick, old t-shirt, mud floor homes. They told us how much better their life was now that a water source was within 200 meters of their home. Our entire team was overwhelmed by their resilience. All they have is each other and their hope to return home to Somalia some day. The least we can provide them is safe water.
After thanking the UNHCR, we loaded the plane. Our team members were silent. Then, one by one, we each began to express our commitment to helping support the people here.

So let’s bring water to 600,000 people in the most barren part of Africa. Send water today at www.summitonthesummit.com.

Scaling Kilimanjaro for Water


scaling-kilimanjaro-for-water

Nov 3rd, 2009 4:04 PM UTC
By Elizabeth Gore

Today we have a guest post from Elizabeth Gore, the executive director of global partnerships and Nothing But Nets for the United Nations Foundation:

I am a runner; I also swim and bike, but mostly I run. I like the repetitiveness, the solitude, and the opportunity to challenge myself. Being from the flat warm state of Texas, I’m not a climber and I do not dig the cold. When Kenna, Grammy-winner artist and the creator of Summit on the Summit: Kilimanjaro, approached me to climb with him to bring awareness and raise money for the clean water crisis, my body did not react with an obvious, immediate “Yes!” due to altitude and cold BUT, my brain jumped at the chance to talk about the world’s next major crisis.

Today 1 billion people around the globe have a hard time finding the 7 liters of water needed to survive, let alone the 50 liters needed to thrive. In the developed world we use 300 liters a day to drink, wash and cook – and that doesn’t take into account the thousands of liters our food needs just to get to the table. So it’s hard for us to understand the concept of literally NO potable water.

Picture a refugee camp in Ethiopia – a place classically challenged in this water crisis. The landscape is drier than ever due to climate change, the depth to which one used to have to drill to reach water is no longer viable so traditional well techniques have stopped working; the water must be trucked in from hours away. The other, sometimes more cruel, scenario is lots of water, but it’s filled with water borne disease. Infecting people with diarrhea, giardia and breeding mosquitoes that transmit malaria. Out of the 40 million people in the care of UNHCR, half of those do not have access to clean water.

There are solutions, many of them, but they are not yet widely funded and adopted. Things such as sachets to cleanse existing water, pumping systems that work more efficiently, pipelines, etc., can help us to remedy this very serious problem. But most of us have no idea that for the majority of people living there is no tap that delivers clean, safe water; that to exist one must carry 40 lbs of water up to six miles, every day.

So for all of these reasons, my brain is forcing my body into submission. Each day I run stairs and workout harder than I ever have before to get ready to ascend Mt. Kilimanjaro with the Summit on the Summit team — Kenna, Jessica Biel, Kick Kennedy, Lupe Fiasco, Simon Isaacs and Isabel Lucas and others — so that all of us can bring awareness to this dire and worsening issue. Join us at summitonthesummit.com.

-Elizabeth Gore

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