Plumbing Africa September 2020 | Page 41

HEALTH AND SANITATION 39 got put out of restaurants, stayed up countless days, and experienced every aspect of homelessness first-hand,” he says. “This gave me the perspective and insight to learn the realities and needs of those experiencing homelessness and how Love Beyond Walls can better focus to raise awareness and meet those needs.” In March 2019, Love Beyond Walls opened the travelling Dignity Museum, an interactive experience that provides insight into what it means to be homeless. The museum is a shipping container that has been divided into three rooms: the first has information about who is homeless and why; the second gives a virtual-reality experience of being homeless; and the third educates the visitor on how to get involved and help. In observance of the 50th anniversary in 2018 of Dr Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination, Lester participated in the 386-mile March Against Poverty from Atlanta to Memphis, Tennessee. “This march is a testament to the legacy of Dr King and to shed light on the millions of people across the nation from all walks of life and nationalities who experience the harsh realities of homelessness and poverty,” he says. “It is time for the next generation to pick up the baton and we are on the front lines to leading the charge.” Love Beyond Walls has also helped place portable sinks in Birmingham, Alabama; Columbus, Ohio; San Bernardino, California; New Orleans and Baltimore. He says they recently sent 25 to New York City. In order to expand its reach, Love Beyond Walls recently began a partnership with California-based non-profit LavaMaeX, which has designed a do-it-yourself handwashing prototype and toolkit for communities to build and deploy nationwide. Lester says the response to “Love Sinks In” has been overwhelmingly supportive. “We are grateful for all of our sponsors, partners and supporters who have given their time, money, resources and words of encouragement to really stand behind this cause,” he says. Lester offers a reminder to keep things in perspective during the pandemic. “As we are fighting over toilet tissue and complaining about having to stay inside, there are well over a half-million homeless people who would give anything to have a safe, warm place to lay their heads,” he says. “As we are talking about social distancing, there is a homeless population that have been social distancing by default — long before the coronavirus. My life’s work, and my past as a former homeless person, would not allow me to let the homeless population be an afterthought during this time of crisis.” PA “This march is a testament to the legacy of Dr King and to shed light on the millions of people across the nation from all walks of life and nationalities who experience the harsh realities of homelessness and poverty.”