Volunteers Reflect on Sister Water Project Trip to Honduras

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By Jessi Russo, Communications Director

On a Friday night out with her girlfriends Erin McGrane of Cedar Falls asked her friends to let her know of any mission trips they might hear of.   Two days later she spotted a flyer for the Sister Water Project service trip to Honduras posted in the back of her parish at Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church in Waterloo.

“I saw it and thought, ‘OK, I guess here’s my sign,’” said Erin. “I was talking about it on Friday, and there it was on Sunday.”

The trip scheduled September 23-30 was sponsored by the Dubuque Franciscan Sisters and was to help make potable water accessible to people in rural La Iguala as part of the Sister Water Project. Dubuque Franciscans initiated the Sister Water Project in 2006 as a way to address the lack of potable water in Honduras and Tanzania, areas where sisters from the congregation ministered. To date, the project has supported 18 water systems in Honduras, and over 130 wells in Tanzania. Volunteers were needed in rural La Iguala at the end of September to help locals dig trenches for the installation of PVC pipes, which would connect to a water tank high in the mountains.

Sister Water Project Committee Member Brian Gilligan was also one of the 14 volunteers on the trip. He explained that due to the high altitude of the water source in the mountains 10 miles from the villagers’ homes, locals in the area of La Iguala had been working for 23 years to plan and fund the complex water project.

“These people have never had running water,” said Brian. “They collect rain water off the roof of their homes. In the dry season, they rent a truck and buy water at a town two hours away.”

So when the 14 member service team arrived from the United States to help break ground on the project that would soon allow for water to flow into villagers’ homes, the joy was evident.

“The Hondurans were very happy and very excited to see us–it was almost like we were rock stars,” said volunteer Steve Kennedy of Waterloo.

Every morning the team, which also included Dubuque Franciscan Sisters Pat Farrell, OSF and Mary Beth Goldsmith, OSF who minister in Honduras, would be driven 45 minutes to the work site at the mountain.

“Then we would throw a shovel, pickaxe, or hoe over our back and walk another 45 minutes up the mountain to get to the job site,” said Steve.

The volunteers dug trenches alongside 60 Honduran men from the local villages.

“It was hard work but it didn’t really bother me. I was glad to do it and just kept on going,” said Erin.

Though the work was physically demanding, volunteers didn’t bemoan the conditions.

“We were challenged by that terrain but I never heard much complaining, “ said Steve. The Spirit rises to the occasion.”

For Mary Myers of Cedar Rapids, working alongside local villagers who would have ownership of the water project was special.

“At home you can donate clothes or money but to physically get in there and work with the people—it felt like instead of helping, you were actually serving,” she said.

The volunteers’ dedication to the project touched Sister Mary Beth Goldsmith, OSF.

“I was amazed and impressed with how the whole team entered into the experience and wanted to get the most out of it,” she said. “When I say this, it was not only how much work was completed, but in the interaction that I saw each team member make in a effort to form a relationship with the Honduran people.”

While the service team was in Honduras, 100 Dubuque Franciscan Sisters, associates, and employees participated in a Sister Water Project Walk on September 24 at the congregation’s motherhouse.

“It was important to show our solidarity with the sisters and volunteers in Honduras,” said Sister Kathy Knipper, OSF.

Participants of the walk wore Sister Water T-shirts which had the quote “thousands have lived without love, not one without water” in English, Spanish, and Swahili—the native languages of those connected to the Sister Water Project.

At the end of the week, the American volunteers found it difficult to say goodbye to the Honduran people who they had grown close to.

“It was hard to leave because you felt like there was more to do,” said Mary.

The project continues in Honduras and will take villagers another 5-6 months to complete.

Now back at home, the volunteers hope the people they served in La Iguala will soon know the joy of running water.

“While we worked, we were dirty and couldn’t wash our hands. We had to use hand sanitizer and wipes,” said Erin. “The first time I was able to wash my hands, I started crying when I turned the water on because I know the Hondurans never get to do that. That was an emotional moment.”