White Dog
and The White Dog Army
Wonderful World
Wednesday
White Dog
and the WDA routinely hear me say “I cannot complain about my blessed life. We
have a warm place to sleep, plenty of food, opportunities for fun, and running
water when we turn on the tap.” They know that in many parts of the world these
are not every day take-for-granted realities. One of the harshest problems in
the world is the lack of water…and its impact on health, education,
self-sustainability, and poverty. In some countries women and children walk for
hours in often unsafe conditions and through war zones to reach and tote
drinkable water for home use--every single day. It is a
global crisis that gets little press but affects millions.
Making water
accessible to every human would make a tremendous positive
difference. Helping to make that wish come true adds to the international
cooperation necessary to make the World REALLY Wonderful. And when the movement is led by two
children who clearly see the importance of One World, One Heart, it fills the
White Dog Army with an incredible sense of hope for not just tomorrow but right now.
Little
Sisters, Big Hearts and Incredible Charity
If you put
them together, Katherine and Isabelle Adams wouldn't be old enough to drive a
car. Yet these girls have managed, in the last 13 months, to reach across the
oceans and make life immeasurably better for villagers they've never met, in
lands far, far away from their own home in Dallas.
That's
because these young sisters, ages 6 and 9, have raised a remarkable amount,
more than $120,000 in total, for clean-water projects in Ethiopia and India,
all through selling origami Christmas ornaments that they make and by
collecting matching funds for their cause, Paper for Water.
Paper for
Water is barely more than a year old; though for the Adams sisters it isn't
their first charitable endeavor. They'd previously raised funds for Parkland
Hospital burn camp by selling hand-painted wooden cutouts of dogs, so they had
some experience with helping the less fortunate. Their father Ken, who's half-Japanese,
introduced them to origami, the paper-folding art that goes back centuries in
Japan. Once the girls started getting more proficient at it, the family decided
to hold a fundraiser to aid those in need by selling origami decorations. But
what should they do with the money they might raise?
"We'd
been talking about how people didn't have water, or didn't have clean water in
the world, and how kids had to spend their day hauling water and not going to
school," the sisters' mother Deborah Adams says. "And so the girls
wanted to do something about water. We just didn't know who we were going to do
it with. Because you just never know how much money actually gets spent on the
real project and how much on administration."
The Adams
family previously had rented an apartment they owned to a woman who had been on
mission trips with Living Water International, a Christian organization based
near Houston that's completed water-well projects in more than 20 nations.
That's ultimately what they settled on.
The family
arranged to have a display of the girls' origami at a local Starbucks in
November 2011. The exhibit opened with 35 ornaments, and the Adams family was
hoping to collect $500 to $1,000 to donate to the charity. "We thought
some would get sold opening night and the rest would get sold over the
month," Mrs. Adams says. Instead, they ran out of stock before the night
was over. After their opening night success, they went home to make more
origami decorations -- the Starbucks display was supposed to run for the month
-- and the next day saw the same result: All gone.
Told by
their parents they could choose to help pay for a well in one of around two
dozen countries where Living Water did work, the girls turned to a globe to
figure it out. "We didn't agree on any of them, and so we just picked
Ethiopia," Katherine says. In Ethiopia, a well could be constructed for a
total cost of $9,200. It ended up being a good decision.
Word spread
about these small origami wonders, and before long, their story appeared in
their hometown paper, The Dallas Morning News. That coverage, in turn, helped
lead into the next critical event. They'd gotten up to $3,400 in sales, which
meant they were closing in on covering the cost of half a well. Katherine and
Isabelle didn't have long to wait for the rest.
Curtis
Eggemeyer, the CEO of Envirocon Technologies, a Midland, TX, cleaning-products
company behind Lemi Shine, had been offering up to $50,000 of matching funds for
a clean water well project. He wanted his donation to go to Ethiopia and
specifically to Living Water International, the same country and organization
for which the Adams girls were raising money. He heard their story and promptly
sent them a match for the $3,400 they had already raised, thus doubling their
total.
With that
encouraging push, they increased their production. "We were actually also
folding in the car on the way to school," Isabelle says. "Folding
like crazy." It paid off. Through decoration sales and Eggemeyer's
matching funds, the sisters had collected enough to pay not for half a well,
but for an entire well.
After that
year-end flurry, the family was ready for a rest, but it didn't last long.
They'd soon set their sights on a well project in India, something that would
require $5,000 to build. Being old pros by now, they got there, and then some.
Ever since, they've continued spreading the word about Paper for Water and the
well projects they're helping to fund.
Most
importantly, they charted an ambitious 10-well goal. Selling their ornaments
generally at three prices, $20, $40 and $55, the family figured they would need
to fold about 37,000 sheets of paper to make that a reality. That meant
community involvement would be key.
That support
has enabled the girls to reach their extraordinary six-figure number to fund
the wells -- almost $70,000 through origami sales and donations and roughly
$53,000 through matching funds, for a combined $122,590. Every bit of it goes
to Living Water International.
“I just feel
like every day the whole universe is conspiring to help us -- that God's hand
is just in all of this."
To learn
more about Paper for Water, visit their Facebook page. If you would like to contact the
Adams family and the project through the mail, the address is: P.O. Box 720999,
Dallas, TX 75372-0999.
6 comments:
What an awesome and beautiful story!
Awesome!
I so agree with the others awesome.. Hugs GJ xx
What a wonderful family and heartwarming story=those girls are incredible!...Happy Thursday, sweet friends...xoxo...Calle, Halle, Sukki
We need more children like this in the world. That is an amazing story and great fundraising.
Stories like that sure make the heart smile.
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