QuartersForWater
Forrestdale Students Gain a Sense of Common Humanity
Mikey Murdock, James Melia and Patrick Kelleher, 8th grade students at Forrestdale School in Rumson, NJ, organized a successful Quarters for Water School initiative and raised $946 toward connecting our water pump and the water tower.
We know how water will change the lives of our children in St. Lawrence School, but how did the project effect the students of Forrestdale School?
Meet Mikey Murdock, James Melia and Patrick Kelleher
Did you gain any sense of the wider world?
Patrick: Yea, we’re really a lot more fortunate than most people in the world are.
How did it open your mind?
James answered: It gave me some respect for people
Mikey: Respect for the kids that have to walk miles to hold 40 pounds of water
All: Dirty water!
James: Not even clean! When we can walk five feet to get clean water.
Did you gain a sense of common humanity?
James: Yea, I guess it’s kind of like we’re all one. We’re all in this together.
Patrick: We all work together in this battle against dirty water.
Did you learn anything about the needs and rights of others?
James: Well, everyone should have the right to clean water.
Mikey: Yea.
James: And I feel like we made a step for that to happen.
Do you have a growing respect for difference or diversity?
James: I have a lot of respect for the kids who want to help their families and don’t go to school just to walk the miles just to get water that’s not even clean for their families…
Patrick: It’s survival… It’s to survive.
James: It’s like… it’s… There’s nothing that you can compare it to.
Patrick: Yea, we can’t complain at all.
James: It’s so bad. We shouldn’t complain.
Mikey: Cause they’re there, and we have no right to complain.
The children and families of Migyera remain grateful to you – individuals, families, groups and schoolchildren – who have made this “pipedream” a pipeline of clean water for them.
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