Like many farmers in Senegal, Guilé Mané used to struggle through the dry season. Rainfall here can be very low and irregular, even in the rainy season.
“We were working in the fields during the rainy season, but we did not do anything during the dry season,” says Guilé, 39, who heads a farmers’ association called Diapo Ande Liggeye (United to Work) in her home area of Keur Bara Tambédou.
The lack of water meant crop and food shortages, more frequent illnesses, and insufficient income from the sale of whatever the farmers managed to grow.
“Sometimes parents could not even pay their children's monthly school fees.”
Guilé and the other women had to walk long distances to reach sources of clean water and use part of their income to pay for it.
Now, Guile’ says, her life has changed because of a new water-gathering and storage system put in place through FAO’s “1 million cisterns for the Sahel” programme, which focuses on vulnerable rural communities in arid and semi-arid regions of five countries affected by climate shocks.
Inspired by a similar programme implemented in Brazil through its “Fome Zero” programme, this initiative aims to give access to safe drinking water to millions of people across the Sahel. The idea is to improve families’ lives on a number of levels. The programme helps families to increase what they grow for nutrition and for income, helps to improve health and, ultimately, builds the resilience of millions of families, especially women.
“We started farming during the dry season barely two years ago. Now we can also produce vegetables for sale during the dry season, including salad, onion, chilli pepper, eggplant, mint and okra.”