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Healthcare Club Grant Helps Bring Water to African Village

By Leila Heidari (MBA '07) and Robin Cherry Glass (MBA '07)

Issue date: 10/29/07 Section: News
Members of the Class of 2007 in Penyem
Members of the Class of 2007 in Penyem

The Healthcare Club, through its HC Grant Program, actively supports its members' healthcare academic and service projects outside of HBS. The following article is an example of a great student initiative that was made possible in part through the economic support of the club. If you are interested in learning more, please visit the HC Club's Grant Program website, at http://www.hbshealthcareclub.org /pro_development/grant_program.html. The next application deadline is Nov. 16th:

On the eve of graduation last May, a group of seven EC's and partners set off for The Gambia to continue efforts on the ailing water system in Penyem Village. The group's efforts began in 2006 when founders, Brae and Seth Blackley, formed a nonprofit organization, Friends of Penyem, and raised seed funding through the Class of 2007 Section E charity auction. Representatives from Friends of Penyem made their first trip in May 2006 to work on the system, but problems with the new pump stymied the group's efforts to bring clean water to the village.

Penyem Village, located in The Gambia, West Africa, had been struggling without a healthy source of water for almost three years, subsisting solely off a small hand-pump that drew water from 15-20 feet below ground. This shallow source provided unclean and unsafe water, resulting in digestive and other health problems for the villagers. Most days, the hand pump dried up by late afternoon, forcing the villagers to make do with limited water for cooking and cleaning. "The health and economic challenges that a poor water supply creates for a village like Penyem cannot be overstated. It causes a great deal of sickness-especially in children-and undermines the villagers' ability to farm and participate in other income-generating activities," explains founder of Friends of Penyem, Brae Blackley.

This May, Brae Blackley, Seth Blackley, Leila Heidari, Nathan Barbour, Sharmil Modi, Martin Gilkes, and Robin Cherry completed another round of fundraising and returned determined to finish their work. The time in Penyem proved challenging, as the group worked as an intermediary between the village and GAM-solar, a renewable energy and engineering company based in The Gambia, to help set up a new water system. On the second to last day of the trip, however, the student group finally saw the pump function properly as water began to flow for the first time since 2004. "We have been working on this project for over a year, so it was a huge sense of satisfaction and relief when the water started running," said Seth Blackley (HBS 2007, Section E) who serves on the board of Friends of Penyem.
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