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In
the Tuareg camp of Tchintaloukan, 18-year-old Againakou gives her 10-month-old
son, Agoubouley, a drink of marsh water. Such water can be deadly—10
of 120 children in another camp visited by author Ariane Kirtley died
of diarrheal diseases caused by drinking the water.

While
in the Azawak, Kirtley stayed with families in their homesteads, camps
and villages. In January 2006, during a Muslim festival, she posed with
children of Tantigellay Teckniwen, a Tuareg camp.

Gonda
and Mohammed spent six years trying to dig a well, with money raised from
their Tuareg families and neighbors. They abandoned their efforts over
a lack of money and worries that the well would collapse.
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Most
of the inhabitants of Niger’s Azawak plains belong to the
Tuareg and Fulani ethnic groups. Pastoralists, they graze livestock,
driving them as far as 350 miles in search of water. Author Ariane
Kirtley describes the region as a “rich and diverse land
of extremes: extreme kindness, extreme heat, extreme beauty and
extreme challenges.”
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Tackawel,
a Tuareg woman who lives in a sedentary village called Intatolen,
pounded grain in September 2005. Many inhabitants of the Azawak
are turning to raising grain instead of livestock in order to feed
their families.
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Muddy
marsh water is all that’s available for drinking, bathing, cleaning
and washing dishes. In September 2005 in Tantigellay Teckniwen, a Tuareg
woman, Zeinabou, washed her bowls.
The Woodabe, a subgroup of the Fulani ethnic
group, move their camps of one or two families every two or three
days. Their homesteads include a wooden bed, which they cover with
a plastic sheet when it rains or the sun is too harsh.
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In the region of Inagar in January 2005, a Woodabe
Fulani family moved camp with their belongings carried on donkeys.
Throughout her travels in the Azawak, Kirtley captured
images of daily life and portraits of the Woodabe and Tuareg peoples.
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Water is life
The 500,000 inhabitants of the Azawak plains of Niger wage a daily struggle
to find enough water for their basic needs. Through her photographs, an
alumna of epidemiology and public health hopes to draw attention to their
plight and improve their lives.
A letter from Niger

Text and photographs by Ariane Kirtley, M.P.H. ’04

When I threw a pebble into Mohammed and Gonda’s well, I heard a
faint thump, not the splashing of water. “How deep is it?”
I asked. Two hundred feet, I was told, and no sign of water.

For six years Mohammed and Gonda’s families from neighboring
villages and camps in the Azawak plains of the Republic of Niger pooled
their resources to dig an adobe well. Then they abandoned their efforts.
There was no more money to dig deeper or to line the well with cement—the
adobe well threatened to cave in. Even if the families had had the resources,
it would take six more years to reach water. In the Azawak the first water
table typically lies 430 feet underground, and renewable aquifers are
at 700 to 1,400 feet. Because the people of the Azawak cannot afford pumps
and pipes, there are few sources of water, and none are permanent or reliable
because they dry up from overuse.

Finding water occupies the lives of the 500,000 members of the
Tuareg and Woodabe Fulani ethnic groups who make their homes in the plains’
200,000 square kilometers. Most of the year there is no water. During
the rainy season from July through September, the pastures turn green,
the animals grow fat, milk is plentiful and water overflows from marshes
that reappear after nine months of drought. The water, fouled by animal
and human waste, may be darker than coffee and dirtier than a New York
City mud puddle, but people drink and bathe to their hearts’ content.
Dysentery and diarrhea soon follow.

When the marshes dry up, people travel by foot or donkey to find
water. Prevented by local populations from settling near the few sources
of water that exist on the outskirts of the territory, they repeat their
search every day. The men travel up to 350 miles south seeking water for
their livestock, and the search for water becomes a daily chore for women
and children. Children as young as 9 or 10 may travel—with temperatures
topping 100 degrees—10 to 17 miles to the nearest well, only to
wait for hours for their turn to fetch water. Often their turn comes too
late, as the other people and their livestock sharing the well have left
it dry. The children may stay at the marsh as long as three days while
the water is replenished.

Water consumption in these plains, less than a gallon and a half
per person per day, is well below the World Health Organization’s
recommendation of 6.5 gallons. During the dry season, water is reserved
for drinking and cooking—personal washing awaits the return of the
rains. In the Azawak almost half the children die before their fifth birthday.

Despite the hardships, people stay in the Azawak. It is their traditional
home, but on a practical level, they have no place to go. Their numbers
are too large for relocation, and moving elsewhere could lead to strife
with other ethnic groups.

Finding water
Although I spent the first 10 years of my life in Africa, I had never
seen an area as poor as the Azawak. With my brother and our National
Geographic journalist parents, I lived among the nomadic Bozo fishermen
in Mali, the Ibadite Muslims of central Algeria, the animist Gueré
“panther men” of western Ivory Coast and the Inadan Tuareg
artisans of Niger’s Aïr Mountains in the Sahara Desert.

I studied public health at Yale and for my internship returned
to Niger to work on a hygiene and sanitation program with CARE. After
graduating in 2004, I went back to Niger as a Fulbright Scholar to build
upon my work with CARE. My Fulbright research revealed significant variations
in knowledge, attitudes, behaviors and resources relating to health and
nutrition among seven ethnic groups living in rural Niger. (For example,
of 700 men I interviewed in the Azawak, only three had heard of AIDS,
and all three believed it resulted from women having sex with dogs.) With
this information I created a database that allows health organizations
to tailor their programs to their target populations’ unique needs
and attributes.

During my Fulbright research I discovered the Azawak. My research
assistant, Moustapha, whose family had abandoned the plains during the
drought of 1974, persuaded me to visit his homeland. Little did I know
that my visit in September 2005, which was to last only a month, would
consume me professionally ever since. I spent October and November 2005
attempting to interest humanitarian organizations in the Azawak. With
a team of Nigerien employees from a large international humanitarian agency,
we wrote a proposal to fund a water and food program. It was rejected
because the Azawak is “too vast and remote”—the organization
did not want to risk its employees in a region without water.

Realizing that I had to take the first step if humanitarian aid
is to reach the Azawak, I have founded Amman Imman, which means “water
is life” in Tamachek, the Tuareg language. Amman Imman has been
raising money since February 2006, with a goal of $280,000 for a pilot
program to build two borehole wells, each of which could provide water
for 25,000 people. With more funding, we hope to sink even more such wells.
Once water is available, humanitarian organizations may safely send workers
to improve the lives of one of the most vulnerable populations on earth.
(More information about the project is available at www.waterforniger.org.)

The people of the Azawak
Most people of the Azawak are pastoral nomads of the Tuareg and Woodabe
Fulani ethnic groups. The Tuaregs of the Azawak have retained a nomadic
existence, herding cattle, camels, goats and sheep, and living in tents
of red-dyed goat hide in camps of 50 to 150 people. During the rainy season,
they move every three to four days in search of pastures. In the dry season
they move often within their “home territories,” land occupied
by their families for generations.

The Woodabe are nomadic cattle herders who live in camps of one
or two families and move frequently to greener pastures. Their homesteads
consist of a traditional wooden bed (covered with a plastic sheet when
threatened by rain or sun) and a wooden table covered with 20 to 30 calabashes—bottle
gourds hollowed out and dried for use as containers. Only a few of these
calabashes hold grain or milk—the rest are on display as a sign
of the woman’s wealth.

Sedentary villages grow more common as drought takes its toll on
livestock. Without animals for their livelihood, the nomads settle into
villages of between 100 and 300 people and try to survive through subsistence
agriculture, mostly growing millet and sorghum. But even they abandon
their villages to search for water during the harshest months of the dry
season.

Hospitality and hope
Sadouan was the first to greet me as my research assistant, Moustapha,
and I arrived at our Tuareg host camp in September 2005. She invited me
to her tent, prepared a traditional bed of large wooden poles and woven
mats, and gave me a mosquito net and elaborate leather pillows for armrests.

Late into the night her relatives came bearing bowls of camel milk.
Sitting on a pillow and sipping the frothy liquid, with Moustapha as my
interpreter, I had a conversation with Sadouan’s husband, Alhassan.
The camp and its herds, he said, had recently returned from salt licks
in the north. He lamented losing 80 percent of his herd to drought that
year. “Around 100 of my camels died because they didn’t have
enough food and water. When we ourselves had no more food, we also had
to eat some of them. I sold others to buy millet for Sadouan and the kids,”
he said. “Ten years ago, only the poorest families in our camp owned
fewer than 300 animals. With only 20 animals left, what can I count on
to survive? Maybe if I grow enough millet this year, we’ll have
enough to eat.” After putting her children to bed, Sadouan gently
ran her fingers through my hair. “Why haven’t you braided
your hair?” she asked, implying that she would never leave her hair
uncovered and unbraided. “If you want, I can wash it with ochre,
and give you the festivity braids.”

A wild harvest to fill empty bellies
The sun was setting as I arrived in the Tuareg village of Intatolen to
greetings from men and women returning from a day planting millet. Two
women waved me over to their thatched hut to share their supper of wild
squash and a grain I didn’t recognize. After several minutes of
silence, I introduced myself and asked their names. They giggled. I had
committed senti by speaking while eating. A faux pas in Tuareg
tradition, senti is nonetheless covertly appreciated as a sign
that the food was so good that it made your mind wander from matters of
etiquette.

“We would have liked to serve you meat, but all our animals
have died,” said Issibit, the elder of the two co-wives, after dinner.
“We ran out of rice a few weeks ago, and so now we are eating wild
grains until they too run out. And the lacada, we are very embarrassed
to have served you the wild zucchini, but we have nothing else to eat.”

I later learned that eating wild grains and vegetables is a sign
of famine—they are eaten only when every other food source has run
out. My research revealed that 71 percent of the households that I interviewed
went from eating one or two meals a day supplemented with milk to one
or no meals a day, sometimes supplemented with far less milk. And 91 percent
reported resorting to eating wild grains, squash and bitter berries.

From school to Guerwuls
Fada, about 14, adorned with charm talismans, a round feather-topped hat
and a Tuareg saber, came bouncing toward me as I struggled through prickly
burrs. “Hey, follow me, I’ll show you where it’s best
to step,” he said. “Come to my camp. It’s just over
that dune.” Two hours and about 2,000 prickly burrs later, with
a herd of long-horned cows following, we arrived at his home: a wooden
bed and a table covered with calabashes.

The camp was deserted. “Oh, I forgot—everyone has left
to prepare for the Guerwul tomorrow.” I had heard of Guerwuls, beauty
competitions held by the Woodabe people, a subgroup of the Fulani. “Can
you come?” Fada asked.

I asked Fada about life as a herder. Had he ever been to school?
At first he laughed and then answered that the Fulani reject formal education
because they believe that schools steal their children away from their
pastoral lifestyle. A child who attends school is considered dead because
he or she no longer understands magic or the art of herding.

This is how Fada’s uncle, Ali, came to go to school 35 years
ago. French colonists demanded that his grandfather, the chief of his
camp, send the children to school in Tchintabaradène, the capital
of the Azawak. He sent only his own grandchildren to their “death,”
Ali among them. Ali ran away and hid in the bush for three weeks, traveling
by foot through unknown prairies. When he reached his camp, the white
men were waiting. He ran away five more times before accepting his fate.
Ali never returned to life as a herder. Instead, he traveled to Morocco
and France to obtain a degree in sustainable agriculture. Ali now works
on crop productivity projects for a nonprofit organization in southern
Niger.

After I refreshed myself with a bowl of curdled cow milk and promised
to see Fada at the Guerwul, he said, “I’d like to go to school
someday and become like my Uncle Ali. Maybe when I have children, there
will be schools in the Azawak for them to attend.” YM

Ariane Kirtley, M.P.H. ’04, grew up in Africa and has founded
the nonprofit organization Amman Imman to build permanent water sources
in the Azawak region of Niger.
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