These Mothers Faced an Impossible Choice: Dirty Water or No Water

Thanks to WaterStep’s expertise and Ana Lorena’s compassion, a Costa Rican river community found dignity through safe water.

Ana Lorena - An Impossible Choice

WaterStep’s expertise and a mother’s compassion brought a Costa Rican community dignity through safe water

/ By Kristina Goetz

Ana Lorena had already been working for WaterStep for six or seven years as a translator in her home country of Costa Rica bringing safe water to those without. She’d been all over the country and seen many poor areas.

But in 2015, during her country’s rainy season, she visited a place that would change her forever.
She rode a bus south past beautiful homes in the capital city of San Jose to a small town called Alajuelita in a neighborhood called Las Gavetas, or the drawers, in English.
Ana stepped off the bus and walked two blocks to the Virilla River. There, near the river’s edge, were shacks, some cardboard, some corrugated metal. She’d never seen anything like it.

Though Costa Rica is an environmentally conscious country and a large portion of it is protected by law, people still illegally dump garbage in the river. She saw refrigerators, couches and plastic floating by. But Ana’s most vivid memory was the smell of the place.
People whose shacks lined the river openly defecated in the water. There was no way for anyone to be clean.

In Costa Rica, elementary school children wear a uniform – black pants and a white shirt. But all the children were filthy, and Ana knew they were ridiculed because of it.

The children smelled. Their clothes smelled. Everyone and everything smelled.

Mothers had to choose whether they’d give dirty water to their children or no water at all.
Either way, the children were at risk of dying.

BRINGING RELIEF

In this community, Ana served as one of five translators for WaterStep and helped with logistics to bring a safe water project to this community. That included a ChlorineGenerator, which meant the community would, for the first time, have safe drinking water.
Ana worked alongside a local minister named Miguel Alberto Rojas who brought food and played with the children, mostly on Saturdays.

Women cried when they realized their children would have safe water to drink.

TRAGEDY AND RESILIENCE

In 2020, Ana worked with Pastor Miguel again to bring chlorine bleach to the community using WaterStep’s BleachMakers so mothers could disinfect their humble homes during the COVID-19 pandemic. Families were already vulnerable to constant diarrhea because of bacteria in the water.

He and members of his church, Iglesia de la Ciudad, brought bleach to 100 families for a long time. Then, tragedy struck. Mexican and Colombian mafias took over the area, and families the church had served for a dozen years fled overnight, Pastor Miguel said.

Today, it’s too dangerous to visit. So, there’s no way to know whether the ChlorineGenerator is still producing safe water because mafia members seized the home where it was stored.
But the church still has WaterStep’s BleachMakers, and members are providing chlorine disinfectant to 30 families every other month in a neighborhood called La Verbena. Most of the people are immigrants from Nicaragua who’ve fled their home country for a better life. They don’t have insurance so if they get sick from dirty water, they don’t have any way to seek treatment.

MORE THAN JUST WATER

Despite the poverty and tragedy, Ana knows lives have been changed.
Children in the new community can wash themselves and go to school without smelling. Their uniform shirts can be clean and white because of the bleach. Ana knows they won’t be made fun of or ostracized because they’re dirty.
And that has to mean something.
Ana reflects often on how she lives compared to other people in her own country.

Ana knows she can’t fix every problem, but her efforts have meant more than safe water access.