By Jack Schwed
Imagine walking 40 laps around a track to fetch clean water.
During Kenya’s dry season, students at Ogiek Kwaanza Secondary School travel six to eight kilometers to do just that — a routine that disrupts class time. The school faces a high dropout rate due to the dangers students may face on these walks.
This past summer, four members of the Boston University chapter of Engineers Without Borders — Clara Armon, Chaney Finkeldei, Urvi Chakravarthy and Omar Elhussini — worked with the school, located in Tinet, Kenya, to help make clean water more accessible.
“Our mission is to provide humanitarian engineering solutions to underserved communities around the world and also to gain hands-on engineering experience,” said Finkeldei, president of EWBBU.
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