Plumbing Africa September 2020 | Page 40

38 HEALTH AND SANITATION Bringing hygiene to the homeless By Mike Flenniken ‘Love Sinks In’ delivers hand-washing stations to communities who don’t have the means to effectively mitigate the threat of Covid-19. As Covid-19 spread throughout the world earlier this year, health officials constantly stressed the need for people to wash their hands regularly as one of the main defences against contracting the disease. For the more than half-million people in the United States who are homeless, that is easier said than done. Terence Lester, who founded the Atlanta-based non-profit Love Beyond Walls with his wife, Cecilia, decided to bring portable sinks to the homeless population. Having slept on the streets as a child and an adult, he was intimately familiar with the challenges homeless people face. They formed Love Beyond Walls to raise awareness and mobilise others to help. “I came up with the ‘Love Sinks In’ campaign in response to the coronavirus,” he says. “As the rest of the world was talking about sanitising and washing their hands, there is an entire community of homeless people who can’t do any of those things.” the next morning. One night, he says he had nothing to eat and asked a friend if his parents would allow him to come to their house for dinner. They agreed, and while he was over there his friend’s father told him something he’d never heard before. “He told me I would be a leader,” Lester says. “Up until this point, I’d only heard the exact opposite – that I wouldn’t amount to anything, I was a troublemaker, and I had nothing to offer society. He really saw something in me that no other adult or teacher noticed and spoke life into my future. This moment was a seed that grew into the movement Love Beyond Walls is today.” After forming Love Beyond Walls in 2013, Lester says his family allowed him to spend a few weeks on the streets to understand the sufferings of those faced with homelessness and poverty. “I was put out of shelters, slept under bridges, ate handouts, begged for money, Love Beyond Walls orders the donation-funded sinks – each one costs about USD100 – through a manufacturer. Volunteers manage the assembly, and routinely clean the sinks and refill the water. The sinks are typically used about 100 times before needing to be serviced. GP Russ Chaney, IAPMO CEO In the spirit of the sharing of unique experiences that shape the plumbing industries in our respective nations, the following article looks at a non-profit organisation that sets up portable sinks for the homeless population as part of an effort to stave off COVID-19. Written by IAPMO staff writer Mike Flenniken, it is the next in a regular series of similar articles that will run in Plumbing Africa. “It is a public health necessity and basic human right for people to have access to properly wash their hands,” Lester says. There are now 51 portable sinks in the Atlanta area, with a goal of 100. His friend, Grammy-winning Christian hip-hop artist Lecrae Moore, donated 15 of them. “I jumped at the opportunity to get out here and do something,” Moore told CBS46 in Atlanta. “People care. People see you, you’re valuable, you’re no less valuable than anybody else who has four walls to live inside of. We see you, we care about you and we’re here to serve.” Lester knows what it’s like to be homeless. Due to a strained relationship with his mother growing up, he says he found more peace living on the street than he did inside their home. He would sleep on benches and still go to school IAPMO Love Beyond Walls delivered more than 50 portable sinks in the Atlanta area. www.plumbingafrica.co.za @plumbingonline @plumbingonline @PlumbingAfricaOnline September 2020 Volume 26 I Number 07