As we walked about the village, we asked them to show us their materials and to show us their kitchens. Many women did not have a kitchen, with kitchen being defined as a place outside the house with shelter from the rains.
Then we came to the home of one of my hygiene and sanitation students, an elderly, frail woman we affectionately call Grandma. She told us that she is unable to made bricks for her stove. She can barely manage to collect enough wood each day to prepare meals. George has already talked to the men in the village about giving special assistance to widows and the elderly. George will enlist them to build her a lean-to porch to shelter her new stove.
These stoves save fuel and burn cleaner, but it isn't just about the environment. We care about deforestation and lung disease, but our primary focus is much more than that. It is about the people Jesus came to die for. We want to be expressions of the love of Jesus with each one.
Grandma will soon get her cookstove, but while she is enjoying it, we want her to know that the gift was motivated by God's big love for her.