Water is Dignity Campaign, Amandawe

Apr 2026
Community members organize bright green containers and equipment outside a building, indicating preparations for a local project or initiative.

In Amandawe, a simple delivery created a meaningful change in everyday life.

Through the Water is Dignity Campaign, 50 EcoRollers were distributed to households facing ongoing water challenges.

Before this, the reality was clear. Most families did not have reliable access to water, and collecting it often meant hours of walking each day—carrying heavy containers over long distances.

That routine is now different.

With EcoRollers, families can transport up to 70 litres of water at a time, rolling it home instead of carrying it. What once required multiple trips and significant physical effort has become simpler and more manageable.

The impact is immediate.

Households are saving time each week on water collection, and the physical strain—especially on women and girls—has been reduced.

But beyond the numbers, what stood out most was the response from the community.

There was a sense of relief, of practicality—something that just works. A tool that fits directly into daily life and changes how it’s experienced.

This wasn’t just about distributing equipment. It was about improving how water is accessed and moved, in a way that people can use every single day.

In Amandawe, that shift has already begun.

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