Archive for September, 2010
Mobile Medical Unit
Tuesday, September 21st, 2010
When I first started Wells for Life® in 2001 I thought all God wanted me to do was bring water to needy villages in rural India and yet after traveling through different parts of India it became apparent that He had a bigger plan, after all, India is a needy place. Resultantly, the scope and mission of Wells for Life® was expanded to enable us to address any area of need or assistance such as medical and HIV/AIDS clinics, orphanages, homes for the elderly, or any other area that helps the poor and disenfranchised.
At different points in time I have had the opportunity to get involved in addressing needs outside of water in India, yet not to the extent that I have wanted. Ever since I started Wells for Life® I have wanted to make an impact, and one that had lasting results. After all, why get involved with something that won’t last or that doesn’t make a positive and lasting difference? Being involved in something that doesn’t last seems to me a waste of time, energy, and money; who wants to do that?
Making an impact is what I want to be about. After all, we only have 1 shot at this life so let’s make it count is something I firmly believe in. Plus, I also believe I have to give an account for what I did with my life (those gifts, talents and abilities that God deposited in me) and so I want to be known by God as a good steward and faithful with what was entrusted to me.
Here we are in 2010, fall is almost here and before we know it the year will come to a close; time for me is moving rapidly, maybe it’s my recent birthday which has reminded me of my days or maybe it’s just the fact that my back is sore from yard work and I am realizing I am not a spring chicken any longer, so it’s time to get busy.
Several months ago Vivek and Valerie Kumra approached me about starting a new work in India. These guys traveled with me to India last year along with their 3 kids, great travelers I might add, and Val tacked on another trip which turned out to be a fact finding trip of sorts for her. Swirling in their hearts and minds was this desire to make a huge impact for God in India, and so far their involvement was limited to some degree. They gave their time and money and yet, they wanted to give more. Within them was this idea that they needed to give back and in their giving to have it really make a difference in someone else’s life. Just investing money wasn’t enough and there had to be more, was something in their brain, and so being that Vik is a doctor, he and Val began to logically think of how they might put to use their every day talents and thus was born the idea of going from place to place providing basic medical care. Not a new idea in the least, after all, there are large successful nonprofit organizations out there doing just that in different parts of the world, but none in the rural places of India that we are operating in.
Enter the Mobile Medical Unit.
These 3 simple words in a nutshell is a dream come true for many people and right now Vik and Valerie are consumed with it and how God is bringing them to the forefront with this. Very briefly and simply put, Vik and Val want to invest 6 months of their life along with their 2 young kids in the rural places of India, specifically in the Trichy District, with a Mobile Medical Unit until it is fully operational. Vik’s father passed away a short time back and one of the things he was developing was a lightweight fuel efficient vehicle that could be outfitted for a medical unit and could traverse easily the roads of India.
The plans for this vehicle still reside with Vik’s family and to put this vehicle into production and into India with our DPWA partner Fr. Dhanapragasam will take time and work and yet the thought of finally being able to put in motion a plan to touch the unreached rural and tribal areas with basic medical services is inspiring.
The excitement that this project is generating in me and those who hear about it is incredible, especially those whom Vik and Valerie interact with day in and day out. There is a groundswell of support and yet there is much to be done, specifically logistical issues to work out, finances to raise – after all these guys are going to leave the US for 6 months to serve and aren’t being paid and yet they will have bills to pay back home, schooling for the kids, sabbatical for work, etc., but despite all the specifics to work out the underlying movement is God ordained and I believe will come to pass.
My belief is that the Mobile Medical Unit will be a tremendous vehicle in more ways than one; it will literally be a vehicle that arrives into a place needing medical care and it will be the mechanism for which those who want to serve the poor can utilize their gifts, talents and abilities to make a difference in a region that desperately needs a caring and compassionate touch.
Posted in Donors, Events, Fund/Awareness Raisers, News and Stories | No Comments »
Shawnee News Dispatch
Wednesday, September 15th, 2010
About a month ago I was given the opportunity to speak again to the Shawnee Rotary Club and update them on our work in India as well as give them another glimpse at what we are accomplishing in rural India. My time with them proved timely in that we were also named as one of their beneficiaries for their Sunset in the Park fundraiser that was held this past weekend. Prior to this event I received a call from the Shawnee Dispatch which is a local paper covering Shawnee KS and since Wells for Life banks and carries out much of its business in Shawnee, the paper decided to interview me.
For those of you interested in the article you can find it here for as long as they keep the link active and when the paper takes the link down you can contact me and I will send you a copy.
As far as the actual fundraising event that the Shawnee Rotary Club hosted, well, in my estimation it was a huge success. The weather was perfect, the venue was incredible and the food was perfect; how can you go wrong with Herford House, Oklahoma Joes and Applebee’s, oh and then Price Chopper provided incredible fruit and cheese trays as well as an ice cream bar. The entertainment was just as spectacular, especially the kid playing with fire, actually he was doing something with fire like what you might witness at a luau in Hawaii. The only down side to the event was that the ticket sales weren’t as strong as hoped and yet the upside to that is there was more ice cream for people like me!
As they say, there is always next year and hopefully Wells for Life will once again be chosen as one of their beneficiaries for this annual fundraiser.
Posted in Events, Fund/Awareness Raisers, News and Stories, Photos/Media | No Comments »
We want a Bore Well in our rural village
Tuesday, September 7th, 2010
Not even 1 month back I was driving a SUV through the crowded highways and byways of South India. I was trying to keep up with my friend Prasanna who himself was driving an SUV but doing about 15 mph faster than me which doesn’t seem like a lot but when you are already doing 60 -65 mph in posted areas of 35 and you are dodging kids, animals, motorcycles and hoping not to meet a bus or larger truck going the wrong direction, that extra 10 – 15mph makes a huge difference. Call me an idiot for wanting to drive in the first place but really, driving in India is fun and chasing Prasanna is even more fun; think NASCAR and your chasing Jimmy Johnson in your Toyota.
Ok, enough of this but I was driving fast and enjoying most of the experience primarily because I had the AC going full blast, music was playing and a cold 2 liter bottle of water resting in the center console. Having the opportunity to take a drink whenever I wanted was magnificent and never really thought about until I got outside and again experienced the rush of hot, humid, Indian summer heat.
We finally rolled into a village which Prasanna was taking us to because in this place they requested water and according to Prasanna it was a needy tribal area so I decided to shoot some video to give you the reader a glimpse of what I experienced. I have edited a lot out as who wants to sit through 20 minutes of video listening to people you can’t understand? So I give you just 5 minutes I think and in this 5 minutes you will see and hear the need. This place unfortunately is typical of many places requesting water. I will say though that at least they have water. Many places in which we carry out our work there isn’t water in the village suitable for drinking. The suitable water is some distance from their dwelling and a considerable amount of time is spent each day in water collection for that day.
My goal in capturing this video is to just bring awareness to how millions of people live each and every day. The reality for this is harsh compared to us. They struggle to survive, we, better yet, I, struggle to find something to drink cold enough to satisfy my whim. For these rural people, they struggle to find just plain water safe enough to use without fear of sickness.
Village needing water (Click on the link to watch the video.)
For this village and countless others, money is all that is needed and not much of it. For less than $2,000 I can outfit this village with a hand pump water project and villages just like it. All I need is your help, your money. Do you want to change a life and make a real difference? Give me some cash and I will change a village with something as simple as water.
Posted in Current Projects, Events, Fund/Awareness Raisers, News and Stories, Trip Updates, Uncategorized | No Comments »
Shawnee Rotary Club Event
Thursday, September 2nd, 2010
The Shawnee KS Rotary Club has an upcoming event on Saturday, September 11 called Sunset in the Park and Wells for Life® has been chosen as the club’s International partnering organization for a portion of the funds raised during this event.
I am inviting anyone and everyone to this event, see the attached flyer by clicking on Sunset in the Park and follow the links for purchasing tickets – it’s going to be a great evening!
Sunset In The Park
Posted in Events, Fund/Awareness Raisers, News and Stories | No Comments »