Dear Friends of the Azawak,

An exciting fundraising season that aims to fulfill a promise to the mothers of Kijigari - to bring pure running water to their children this spring - has begun.  At least six A Walk for Water events have been planned in cities across the United States! 

Even if you do not live in one of these cities, you can help Amman Imman finish the construction of the Kijigari borehole. YOU can set up take part in our campaign by setting up an online fundraising page. IT DOESN'T MATTER WHERE YOU LIVE, and it's simple!

All you need to do is go to http://www.active.com/donate/awalkforwater, click on "Become a Fundraiser" at the top of the page,  select "Fundraise as an individual", and then follow the instructions.  You can personalize your page with a message of your own and add a photo. Then you can send the link to friends and family, post it on Facebook, twitter, etc., asking everyone to support your campaign. 

Every little effort will bring us closer to raising the $50,000 needed to bring water to the people of Kijigari!  Please consider creating your page and joining our Heroes of Compassion who are hard at work helping Amman Imman: Water is Life finish this Well of Love.

Yours, in peace and hope for the children of the Azawak,
Debbie

p.s.  You can visit my fundraising page to see an example: http://www.active.com/donate/awalkforwater/DebraKahn
Special Contribution to the Blog: Paula Leigh-Doyle, head of Hershey Montessori School in Concord Township and Huntsburg, Ohio, wrote this letter to her fellow Montessori administrators:
 
Dear colleagues,

Hershey Montessori School shared in the energy of a butterfly ripple that is still resonating across Montessori Schools around the world. Regardless of affiliation, over 50 Montessori schools have already joined together for one humanitarian action. The movement has raised awareness about world water quality as well as funds to build wells in this vulnerable region of the Azawak.  Our relationship to this project began with a moving story told by a Montessori teacher in Maryland.  She recounted the visit to her school by Montessori alum Ariane Kirtley and her dedicated vision for the health of tribal people in Niger.  I invited some of the teacher's adolescent students to embark on their own long journey to Ohio and thus continue telling Ariane's story to others. In response to the story told by those visiting adolescents, our students and staff decided to take on this opportunity as our whole-school philanthropic work.

Perhaps you have time to follow this link to a short account of the Amman Imman project that bores deep water wells for the pastoral and tribal people of the Azawak region in Niger: http://montessori-amman-imman-project.blogspot.com/p/report-from-azawak-kijigari-montessori.html.

Ariane Kirtley spent much of her childhood in Africa while her parents were journalists there. Her father, Michael Kirtley, contracted as a photographer for National Geographic and was an active peace advocate.  Ariane also attended a Montessori School in Kentucky for a time when they lived in America. She ultimately earned a Fulbright scholarship for post graduate research in medical anthropology and public health through Yale University. Her work brought her back to the people of West Africa and thus she began her journey to help to a region where no other international agency support existed. Her story was featured on the cover of the Yale School of Medicine Journal but spread to over 50 Montessori Schools around the world (Yale Medicine › Winter 2007 )   The plot of this story centers around the work of amazing children who journey up to 30 miles a day to bring their community water but it is also about the story telling of our Montessori children and staff around the world who continue to pass along the news from school community to school community.

Ariane and her husband developed the Amman Imman initiative which raised funds, bored a deep well hole, and equipped and trained the Tuareg people of Tangarwashane on the management of their first well. Related progress quickly followed with the subsequent arrival of other aid organizations and soon other education opportunities for women, a forestation program and the construction of the village’s first school. Last month a second borehole well proved viable in Kijigari and in honor of the Montessori children and their communities who are primarily raising the funds, it will be named “The Montessori Well of Love”.  The borehole now sits capped and locked awaiting the remaining $50,000 needed to equip it with a tower structure and related plumbing.  Some of your Montessori schools have already joined in the story telling but I send this in case there are others who have yet to hear it. The heavy tread of our global warming depresses its footprint on this land as the rain season is measurably shortening and the dry season extends its duration in a region where life was once sustainable for 500,000 people.  I feel a great urgency for fifty percent of the children under the age of 5 years who will die without this clean water source during the impending dry season in the fall of 2010.

Amman Imman means Water is Life in Tamachek, the Tuareg language. Visit the web site at: http://www.waterishope.org and the Montessori Blog at http://montessori-amman-imman-project.blogspot.com.  If you are in the D.C area, between now and May 24, check out an exhibit of Ariane’s photography of the Azawak at the Bing Stanford art gallery. Her photographs also tell a story of the beauty of the people, stunning colors of clothing and intimate family interaction. Exhibit information will be posted tomorrow at:  http://bsiw.stanford.edu/art_gallery/exhibits.html

Within our own school, we have learned much about the challenges of presenting such a geographically remote need, in a meaningful way, to children in three different planes of development. We observed our children’s responses and re-discovered the inspiring value of both “student choice” and authentically student-directed activity in relation to proposing a whole-school community initiative Contact me directly if you would like to hear about some of the cultural presentations we explored as well as our successes and failures among these experiences at Hershey Montessori School.

Peace in action,

Paula Leigh-Doyle, Hershey Montessori School
The Amman-a-thon is a fitness fundraiser, designed for younger students to engage their intelligence on mulitple levels: physically through practicing their athletic skills, mathematically through counting and multiplying, emotionally by sharing their compassion, and socially through taking conscious action toward something they care about. 

Please take a look at the Amman-a-thon Planning Guide below.  Consider engaging your 6-9 year old students in practicing their skills for a greater purpose.  This is a really fun activity that the children will be excited about!

If you like what you see here, please contact me and I will send you the supporting documents including the Amman-a-thon Activity and Sponsorship Chart, a sample letter for parents, Hero of Compassion certificate and a Corporate Sponsor pledge form.


Please...help us raise $50,000 to finish the Montessori Well of Love this spring!



Amman a Thon Planning Guide
To Find out More about our 2011 events and to  Register 2011 A Walk for Water, Please go to:  https://www.firstgiving.com/ammanimman/

Dear Friends,

 Registration is now open for the 4th annual A Walk For Water to benefit the children and families who live in the Azawak of West Africa. For those in the Washington DC area, I invite each of you to register your school, yourself and your family for this fun and meaningful event! You will be be joining students from various area schools and their families who for the last four years have been raising funds for Amman Imman: Water is Life  to build a "Well of Love" in this region.  This spring their dream is being realized: the Kijigari Montessori Well of Love has been drilled!  
  • The Chantilly, Virginia Walk, sponsored by the Boyd School, takes place on Friday, May 14th at Ellanor Lawrence Park in Fairfax County.
  • The Lake Frank Walk takes place on Saturday, May 15th on the wooded paths around Lake Frank in Derwood, Maryland, a beautiful location about 10 miles from DC in suburban Maryland. 
Our goal this spring is to raise $50,000 by the end of May to equip the Kijigari Well of Love with the necessary infrastructure - water tower, pump, faucets and animals troughs - that will make the water flow for the people of Kijigari, and 25,000 people and animals in neighboring communities.  Walks and other events are being held in various locations around the country.  

This year registration will be online only (no more paper forms!), making participation accessible for many more people. Here's what you can do:

1) Go directly to the Lake Frank, Derwood, MD registration page  or the Chantilly, VA registration page and click "Register Now" on the top right.   Upon registration, you will receive all the necessary information, including how to raise funds, sponsorship forms, parking/driving information, etc., via the confirmation email. You can also create your individual fundraising page.

2) See the list of all our scheduled walks,  become an online fundraiser or make a donation by visiting our campaign page at www.active.com/donate/awalkforwater

3) Become a Corporate Sponsor by offering to match  funds raised by a group of students  or a specific school.  Contact info@ammanimman.org for more information.

4) Stage your own event - A Walk for Water, an Amman-a-thon, or another fundraiser.  Fill out our event registration form at www.ammanimman.org/walk

5)  Help us publicize A Walk for Water by forwarding this email and/or posting these links on your community calendar, listservs, website, blog, facebook page, etc. 

Thank you for your support as together we create something meaningful and practical for our children - our "Heroes of Compassion" who are making  it possible for children in the remote Azawak to have water.  If you have a chance, please read Ariane's compelling story of the driilling of the Kijigari borehole here: Drilling a Well of Love in Kijigari .

Sincerely,
Debra Kahn

--
Debra Kahn
Associate Director, Amman Imman: Water is Life
Wells of Love, Program Director
http://www.ammanimman.org

cell: 240-418-1143
We received a wonderful donation and the following letter from the 6th grade at the Barrie School in Silver Spring, Maryland.  Thank you, Bob and Barrie students!  And a special thanks to Matty!  We look forward to seeing all of you at the Lake Frank A Walk for Water on May 15! 
March 25, 2010
Dear People,
On behalf of the 6th grade at the Barrie School, enclosed please find four checks totaling $278 in donations to Amman Imman. Of this sum, $118 was raised by the 6th grade by means of a bake sale, a ‘taste test’ exhibition, during which contestants attempted in a blind taste test to pick out which cup was tap water from four cups filled with tap water and bottled water, and a dodge ball challenge in which the 6th grade took on teams from 7th and 8th grade, who paid for the chance to defeat the 6th graders and win a free pizza lunch. For the remaining sums, $60 represents a personal donation by one of our students, Matty Kessler, and $100 represents a personal donation by myself, Bob Esty. 

Thank you for all you do,

Sincerely,
Bob Esty, 6th Grade Dean,
The Barrie School

                                                           
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