10/21/2010 if you would like an updated version of this story in a pdf that you can print,  please contact info@ammanimman.org!
Amman Imman - A Story
by Suzanne Carroll Stork
a special thank you
to the students, teachers and families
of the Aidan Montessori School in Washington, D.C.
for their support and encouragment
photos from the Azawak courtesy of Ariane Kirtley

Amman Imman - A Story


All people share one Earth.


All people share the same basic needs.

We all need food, water,
shelter, clothing and protection.

People are able to think and create
to solve problems and
meet these basic needs.



All people hope and dream and love.

This was true of the very first people to live on Earth
and it is true of all people alive today.



Yet, in all of human history,
there has never been,
nor will there ever be,
another person just like you!

(Even if you are an identical twin!)



Maria Montessori believed in children.
She recognized that every child
is born with unique gifts to discover.

Yet, she knew that many people
on our Earth struggle
to meet the most basic of human needs.



















Today, on the continent of Africa, in the country of Niger, more than 500,000 people of the Azawak Valley struggle daily to find the water they need to live.


For nine months out of the year,
children travel up to 35 miles every day
searching for water
to bring to their families.


If they find water, it is dirtier
than a mud puddle in New York City.


A woman named Ariane
visited the people of the Azawak.
She was touched by their warmth and kindness. She knew she had to help these beautiful people find a way to get the water
they desperately needed.

So, she founded an organization called
Amman Imman: Water is Life.


Like Maria Montessori,
Ariane believed in children.
She invited children
around the world to help.


And they did!
In 2007, the first Amman Imman borehole
was built in the Azawak in Tangarwashane.

Construction people had to drill
up to 600 feet below the Earth’s crust
to reach the needed water!


Now up to 25,000 people and animals
have access to clean water!


May all the children of the Azawak, and all people of the world,
be empowered to receive what they need and discover their gifts.

Please join students around the world
in helping
Amman Imman: Water is Life
bring water to the Azawak.


www.waterishope.org
montessori-amman-imman-project.blogspot.com
For more information write to: info@ammanimman.org

When Ariane Kirtley spoke to Montessori teachers at the International Montessori Council's Peace Academy conference in Clearwater Beach, Florida in 2006, students presented the project alongside her. Ever since that time, students around the world have been working as partners with Amman Imman. Students have made presentations within their own school communities and also taken the project to other schools. They have participated in collaborative fundraising activities like A Walk For Water, and also initiated their own fundraising projects. Not only is the Amman Imman project impacting children in the Azawak of West Africa who now are beginning to gain access to sustainable water sources, but it is also affecting students worldwide by providing an experience through which they can be activists and make change happen.

Student blogger Sophie M-D writes about her schools involvement with Amman Imman in her blog (http://kimanthoney.blogspot.com):
My school helps a program called Amman Imman. Amman Imman's goal is to bring water to Niger, West Africa. So far in 2007 we were able to raise enough money to build a borehole and help 25,000 people. A borehole is like a well, but it is deeper and is a shaft that brings the water up. In February I was lucky enough to go to The Hershey Farm School in Ohio with the other seventh graders in my class (Sarah Nia, Ashley, Sophie H-S, and Dylan) to present about Amman Imman. Also, on my own, I decided to present to some three to six year-olds at Manor Montessori in Bethesda, MD. I have enjoyed all that I have done for Amman Imman and look forward to the upcoming year to help even more.


Another student blogger, Louise, used her blog to tell about "My Life in the OFS Middle School". Amman Imman played a big role in shaping her experiences:
Our school is sponsoring a project named "Amman Imman." Ariane Kirtley is the founder and program director of "Amman Imman, Water is Life." Ariane speaks with such compassion about the children and adults in the Azawak, Niger's most remote and abandoned territory, covering 80,000 square miles and inhabited by 500,000 people. There are barely any roads, dirt paths, schools or health centers, and most importantly there are no permanent sources of water. Amman Imman's mission is to help the water situation by building permanent sources of water throughout the territory.Ariane came to our school in the beginning of last year's school year (2006) and spoke with such compassion about her experience and lack of help from world organizations. At first she tried to get support but was told that no help could be given. She did not take no for an answer. Instead she started traveling around in North America spreading her word about the lack of water, the people of the Azawak Valley and the need for financial support. She was very knowledgeable about her topic and convincing. She made us all feel we needed to take part in raising funds. She made me believe I can help change the lives for these people. My school helped spread the word to other Montessori schools around the country and the world and with their help we raised enough money to build the first bore-hole. There are still many bore-holes to build.
Experience changes the course of our lives. For these students, these experiences have altered their perception, and possibly their future choices. As they embark on the path toward adulthood, who knows what seeds of life Amman Imman will sprout?

If any of your students have written about their experience in working with Amman Imman: Water is Life to help the people of the Azawak, please write and let us know. We would love it if they were willing to share their work, ideas and experiences with the Montessori community.
Real Time Analytics