For Immediate Release contact:
September 5, 2006
|
For further information
1008 Wells Foundation
Jadeine Shives 407-460-7276
|
1008 Wells Foundation sponsors 90 Indian Tap
Stands!!!
The latest round of drinking water projects
serves over
754 villagers and 124 families.
From January through June, 2006 the 1008
Wells Foundation has been busy funding the construction of
the largest project
of its kind to date. This drinking water system was completed
in Samalbong, a remote community in the Kalimpong region of
West Bengal, and now serves 754 people, including 124 families
and over 700 students.
Through funding made possible by a grant
from the 1008 Wells Foundation, the largest system World
Neighbors has ever supported
in the region was completed. The distance from the source to
the reservoir tank is over nine kilometers (5.6 miles). Working
in partnership, 1008 Wells Foundation paid for the hardware,
World Neighbors provided a water systems specialist and KSWA
managed the construction work. Using an innovative approach
this time, instead of having one communal tap, 90 supply points
were installed throughout the communities so that the users
can have the water closer to their houses. Access to water
24 hours a day from their individual taps for drinking, washing,
cleaning and irrigating vegetables is a dream come true for
these families.
Clean Water in Rural West Bengal
The completion of the water system caught the attention of
Mr. C.K. Kumai, the Mayor of the Kalimpong Municipality, who
expressed his appreciation during the inaugural celebration
of the drinking water project:
"This Samalbong drinking water scheme
is very praiseworthy. It is appropriate, low cost and was
constructed in a very short
time. Those of us in the government must learn the underlying
philosophy and strategy followed by World Neighbors and the
Kalimpong Silent Workers Association to motivate and mobilize
community people to make it so successful. If this scheme is
to be constructed by the government, the cost might have been
at least four times higher."
For the above scheme a total of 9,510 meters of high density
pipe of different sizes was used. World Neighbors was not able
to find the quality pipe needed in Kalimpong, so the pipes
were purchased in Bhutan.
A total of four tanks were constructed. This included one intake
tank to collect water that was constructed by a spring that
served as the primary source. Another collection tank was constructed
about 200 meters further from the source to supply water to
reservoir tanks. And two reservoir tanks with capacities of
20 and eight cubic meters were constructed to supply and store
water to users. The tanks are made of ferro-cement, which are
molded into a round shape using rebar, chicken wire and cement
plaster as the main materials. This type of tank is not only
more durable than square shaped tanks but they are also less
expensive. However, they are more difficult to build.
The community members contributed to the
project through their own labor and locally available materials
such as bamboo, wood
and other materials. They paid cash for sand, stone and aggregate
too. Each of the 124 households contributed an average of
70 hours of their time for the construction of the system and
transport of the materials. Additionally, they have raised
approximately US$ 2,000/- within the community to fund the
future repairs and maintenance of the system.
The allocation of funds supporting the system is outlined
below:
| |
1008 Wells Foundation
|
WN Unrestricted
|
Samalbong Community contribution
|
Total
|
|
Cost
|
$8,000
|
$6,300
|
$4,690
|
$18,990
|
Determining Need in Bihar, India
1008 Wells and World Neighbors now seeks
to build on the successes of water systems in Kalimpong,
by extending them to ongoing
programs in Bihar. In February, a feasibility study and needs
assessment of tube wells were conducted in 10 different communities
in GPSVS's program areas in Bihar.
The study found that in five areas the water was not good
for drinking. The community people understand that the water
is not good because the well is not deep enough. They think
that many of those wells are only 80 to 100 feet deep. To get
good water for drinking, the depth should be at least 150 feet.
The need for water is very great in the communities.
Related Upcoming Activities
By the end of September, two or three communities
in Kalimpong will meet to discuss the drinking water projects.
They will
determine the most appropriate way to organize the communities,
including the responsibilities of the users. They will finalize
an action plan with full participation of the users. A similar
approach will be used in Bihar where five additional wells
will be constructed during the same period.
1008 Wells Foundation is proud to sponsor
the next round of drinking water projects. For further information
please visit 1008wells.org or write to info@1008wells.org.
# # #
1008 Wells in the News
ORLANDO SENTINEL – MARCH 29, 2006
DEBBIE BARR/ SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

PHOTO: (from left) Madan Gurdial, President of 1008 Wells,
presents winners Barbara Verchot of Winter Springs, Mary Elmendorf
of Sarasota, Nathaly Hewawasam of Celebration awards for their
global humanitarian efforts accompanied by Jadeine Shives,
Founder of 1008 Wells. Bringing shelter and aid to victims of natural disasters continents
away, providing accessible drinking water to parched areas
of Southeast Asia or offering blankets, food, clean water and
education to impoverished villagers in the remote hills of
Northwest Thailand.
These ideals are not beauty-pageant pipe dreams, but initiatives
by local women undertaking global outreach.
During an event this month called Passionate Pursuits, A
Celebration of International Women's Day, 23 women across
Central Florida
from 15 to 97 years old were honored for spearheading global
humanitarian initiatives.
The event at the Orlando Marriott Downtown in Orlando was
sponsored by the 1008 Wells Foundation, a nonprofit organization
based
in Champions Gate that helps build freshwater wells in India.
Nathaly Hewawasam, 15, of Celebration, Barbara Verchot, 52,
of Winter Springs and Mary Elmendorf, 88, of Sarasota were
presented with the organization's first Global Women's Humanitarian
Award for their international outreach efforts.
"
What the award is doing is recognizing local women doing global
things," said Jadeine Shives, founding chairwoman of the
organization. "We wanted to recognize these women that
considered their family beyond the borders of their backyard."
Nominees came mainly from Central Florida but also included
women from as far south as Fort Lauderdale and as far north
as Palm Coast.
Shives said the honorees came from a mix of cultural and
religious backgrounds and their outreach efforts were aimed
at countries
across the globe, including Israel, Thailand, Sri Lanka,
Africa and South America.
Nathaly, a sophomore at Gateway High School in Kissimmee,
took home the junior award for raising $4,200 last year for
the
construction of six homes for tsunami victims in her mother
country of Sri Lanka.
This year, she established a global student service organization
at Gateway High called the Kids Aid Society. The organization
raises capital for future global disasters and is searching
for sponsorship for 52 needy or orphaned students in Sri
Lanka.
Nathaly, who also recently published a book titled Waldo
to raise money for the student sponsorship project, said that
as global citizens, everyone can make a difference in the
lives
of others.
"
I think it's important because we can think of ourselves as
residents of the world, and that's how we should think of ourselves.
We're all humanity. We need to take care of each other," she
said.
Verchot, trained as an artist and an educator, is founder
and president of Wings of Peace International, a nonprofit
organization
with the mission of bringing aid to marginalized people as
a steppingstone toward world peace.
During the past 10 years, Verchot has been bringing blankets,
food, water and livestock to the mountain villages of northwest
Thailand. She has also raised money to help supply the area
with water systems and school dormitories.
Verchot said bringing humanitarian aid to these impoverished
tribes, who often lack the basics for survival, is a one-on-one
move toward international diplomacy.
"
When you bring peace to an individual -- giving them basic
sustenance for life and just looking into their eyes -- you're
fostering international relationships. People will always know
that there are Americans that care about them," Verchot
said. "It's not a political agenda, it's a peace agenda."
Elmendorf, winner of the lifetime achievement award, has
spent more than 50 years bringing people around the world
clean,
fresh water as well as education about sanitation.
Elmendorf was the first woman to become director of a CARE
overseas program. As director of CARE in Mexico between 1952
and 1960, she oversaw a pilot project to bring drinking water
to residents and designed a self-help and community-development
program.
The project became a model for what CARE is today, said Elmendorf,
who helped design the organization's first water supply and
sanitation project. Elmendorf also worked with CARE in Latin
America, where she was involved in Peace Corps training,
as well as in Haiti, where she negotiated a school feeding
program. In 1982 she won the Margaret Mead Award for applying the
principles of anthropology to human concerns, and in 1997 she
was one
of the first female delegates to the United Nations conference
on water resources in Mar del Plata, Argentina.
Shives said that she became motivated to raise local awareness
about global outreach when she realized that only about 2
percent of fundraising for charity in the United States goes
outside
U.S. borders.
Her own organization, which partners with the international
nonprofit organization World Neighbors, recently completed
construction of a drinking-water system in West Bengal, India,
which will give 120 people easy access to clean water.
"
Where the women before had to literally climb a mountain to
get to a water source at the top, now they're able to spend
more time nurturing their families, doing handicrafts and working
in the garden, which is irrigated by the water," Shives
said.
She noted that villagers are now able to buy extra food,
clothing and other basic necessities as well as start up
a community-run
savings-and-loan.
"
It really is amazing the difference that one well can make," she
said.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner.
For Immediate Release contact:
November 15, 2005
|
For further information
1008 Wells Foundation
Jadeine Shives 407-460-7276 |
1008 Blessings Pour Forth from Indian Well!!!
Hindu
University of America was there from the start.
New well in Sinji Gram Panchayat, West Bengal sponsored by
Hindu University of America, 1008 Wells Foundation and World
Neighbors
The village of Sinji Gram Panchayat in West Bengal,
India has a new source of clean drinking water for its 120
residents thanks to the combined partnership of the Hindu University
of America, 1008 Wells Foundation, and World Neighbors. A gravity
flow dinking water system funded by a $2500 gift from HU has
helped the villagers address one of the main causes of poverty,
hunger and disease in the village. 1008 Wells forwarded the
funding to World Neighbors for training and hardware while
the local residents proudly offered their talents and labor
during construction.
“It is amazing how a nightmare turned into a dream,
and then into real blessings,” bubbled Jadeine Shives,
author and founder of the 1008 Wells Foundation. Inspired during
a pilgrimage throughout India in 2001, Ms. Shives started the
non-profit 1008 Wells Foundation to raise awareness and funding
for freshwater wells in India. Seeing firsthand the polluted
water source of many rural villages, she vowed to make a difference
for those desolate communities who held her heart captive. “I
was haunted by terrifying nightmares reliving the heartbreaking
conditions which are the daily reality for thousands. I had
to do something, though at the time I didn’t have an
idea where to even begin.”
Ms. Shives eventually wrote a chronicle of her spiritual experiences
realized during that pilgrimage as a catalyst for change. Proceeds
from Digging a Well to Heaven (www.MysticalLotusPress.com)
are used to raise funding for the Indian well projects. Sharing
her dreams with others and building strong foundations on their
support, the 1008 Wells Foundation sprang to life. The Hindu
University of America holds the honor of funding the first
well project.
She goes further to state, “Lack of safe, accessible
water is one of the greatest health hazards facing these marginal
communities … especially the woman and children. Large
portions of the women’s day are spent in the back-breaking
work of collecting water from limited sources often hours away.
By offering the financial backing generously donated by sponsors
like Hindu University of America, 1008 Wells offers a hand
up in partnership with the villagers, not a hand out.”
“Partnerships are our source of strength,” adds
Madan Gurdial, President of 1008 Wells. We raise the funds
and direct it to other NGO’s, like World Neighbors, with
decades of experience in the affected regions. Working with
marginalized people, we help them help themselves. The village
council can now meet their basic needs and achieve sustainable
development in the fragile ecology surrounding them. More than
just a technical solution to the problem of insufficient safe
drinking water, the well project also provides a sense of pride
and is the spring board for other community development activities.”
Pooling together small amounts of their
own monetary resources, the village council organized a saving
and credit group to
generate needed funds for future repairs of the well systems.
Comprised of and led by women, these “water groups” also
use these funds as micro-loans to start income generating projects
or acquire health care possibilities. It is through World Neighbors’ training
and assistance that visionary actions like this replace the
previous day-to-day survivalist mode of the village. Past experience
shows that the income and overall wellbeing of these families
improve often leading to further development activities.
Yes, sometimes nightmares do lead to dreams and then to blessings.
In the village of Sinji Gram Panchayat, a gravity flow drinking
water system is testament to the 1008 blessings flowing for
the residents of this once thirsty village and the Hindu University
of America was their answer to their prayers!
For more information on how you or your civic organization
may sponsor a well project please visit www.1008wells.org or
call 407-460-7276.
More information on Hindu University of America may be found
at www.hindu-university.edu or by calling 407-275-0013. Further
information on World Neighbors may be found at www.wn.org or
by calling 1-800-242-6387.
###
Hurricane Wilma in Florida Fills Freshwater
Wells in India!!!
1008 Wells Foundation Joins Partnership with World Neighbors
Twenty-two Indian well projects pledged over the next two years
While the wind howled at speeds of sixty miles
an hour and over eight inches of rain fell on Central Florida
thanks to Hurricane Wilma, villagers in India probably never
guessed that one day a freshwater well would manifest in their
village from an agreement made in the United States on that
fateful day. On Monday, Oct. 24, the 1008 Wells Foundation
pledged over $32,000 in funding over the next two years to
World Neighbors for freshwater well projects in India.
“I’ve always heard that rain is a blessing from
the heavenly realms, especially in the drier regions of India.
Well today we are experiencing a multitude of blessings and
well wishes from above on this new partnership,” shared
Jadeine Shives, founder of the 1008 Wells Foundation, “Yes,
it is a joyous celebration with thunder as applause and bolts
of lightning for fireworks!”
The nonprofit, nonsectarian organization
based near Orlando, FL raises awareness and funding for freshwater
wells in India.
Motivated to make a difference in the lives of the outer villages,
her inspiration was born from a pilgrimage throughout India
back in 2001. “It was heart wrenching to see women traveling
for great lengths carrying heavy loads of water home to their
families knowing this back-breaking work occupied the majority
of their day. I made a vow that somehow, some day I would come
back and dig wells . . . though I really didn’t have
any idea how or when that might happen. I just knew I needed
to do something!”
After organizing a group of other like-minded
individuals who realized that they too could be a local person
making a
global impact, the 1008 Wells Foundation was formed. “We
had a purpose, a plan, and even funding. What we needed next
was another organization in India that could oversee the construction.
That’s where World Neighbors came into the picture.”
World Neighbors is a nonprofit organization with over fifty
years experience in India serving as a catalyst for positive
change through grassroots efforts in marginal communities.
As an international leader in participatory and integrated
development strategies, they assist village councils to identify
problems, take collective action and assess results. Rather
than doing the work for the beneficiaries, World Neighbors
helps participants form local groups to progressively take
on more responsibility for program activities as their capacities
increase. This way, participants become the driving force behind
the development initiatives and have a vested interest in continuing
the efforts long after the original financial support by 1008
Wells Foundation is received.
“World Neighbors is proud to be associated with the
1008 Wells Foundation,” said Melanie MacDonald, president
and chief executive officer of World Neighbors. “This
partnership is yet another example of how we are inspiring
people to help strengthen communities throughout Asia, Africa
and Latin America. Access to clean, safe drinking water is
so vital to a person’s – and a community’s – well
being. The wells provided through 1008 Wells Foundation will
allow villagers that access.”
Madan Gurdial, President of 1008 Wells
Foundation shared his determination in reaching the auspiciously
numbered goal, “When
we said 1008 wells, it was us giving our word to the Universe.
It’s a promise we made - a sacred promise to all the
faces in 1008 villages though we may never get the opportunity
to meet. Their souls know our souls and are counting on us.
This partnership with World Neighbors is our first major step
in keeping our word.”
Sharing how others can join the partnership
and bring those wells to reality, Madan went further. “Now here is the
truth. We cannot do this alone. We need you, your support,
your encouragement and your enthusiasm. I am sure that you
are aware that the best feelings you’ve ever felt in
your life were created by participating in something that had
nothing to do with you and everything to do with helping others.
So my request is that you jump in and treat yourself to some
good feelings. We’ll have fun creating the future together.”
With great enthusiasm, Ms. Shives shared
that the fist well project has been completed. The Hindu
University of America,
also in Orlando, FL, sponsored a gravity flow drinking water
system for the village of Sinji Gram Panchayat in West Bengal. “The
one hundred and twenty residents of this remote community now
have a real chance at making a difference in the war on poverty,
hunger and disease that is caused by the lack of clean drinking
water. It’s a great feeling being a part of something
larger than just our limited selves. You should try it. One
well can change hundreds of lives, not to mention your own!”
The 1008 Wells Foundation raises funds
through private and corporate sponsorships, fundraising events,
speaking engagements
and proceeds generated from Digging a Well to Heaven, the Founder’s
story behind the inspiration experienced on that now infamous
pilgrimage to India of 2001. For more information on how you
or your civic organization may sponsor a well project please
visit htt://www.1008wells.org or call 407-460-7276.
Further more information about World Neighbors please visit
http://www.wn.org or call 1-800-242-6387.
# # #
Hindu University of America Sponsors
First Well Project!
In May of 2005, Jadeine Shives had the wonderful
opportunity to speak with a few of the Directors of the Hindu
University of America concerning the fresh water wells project. Sponsorship
for the first well was embraced with a check for $2500.00 from
Hindu University written to World Neighbors for the purpose
of funding a gravity flow drinking water system in West Bengal,
India.

Upon completion of construction scheduled for
November 2005, the village of Sinji Gram Panchayat with its
160 residents will have a reliable and sustainable source of
clean drinking water. A press release was distributed on May
23, 2005 announcing the donation.
Heaven Discovered at Bottom of Indian
Well!!!
Hindu University of America Funds 1st Expedition.
The
soon to be release book Digging a Well to Heaven
. . . A Women’s Odyssey into the Heart of India and the Soul of her Self, a person journal of INTENSE
SPIRITUAL TRANSFORMATION, is raising awareness on a
global level for the need of fresh water wells in the
arid stretches of India. Hindu University of America
has sponsored the first of what is hoped to be one
thousand and eight drinking water systems by generously
donating $2,500 to World Neighbors, the non-profit
organization partnering with the author to bring her
heavenly dreams to an earthly realm.
“In the village of Sinji Gram Panchayat in West
Bengal, 160 people’s “LIVES ARE
ABOUT TO CHANGE DRASTICALLY,” gushed Jadeine Shives, author
and chief visionary. “People from multiple faiths
and spiritual practices across the globe are joining
the project and answering the prayers of tens of thousands
by helping them help themselves!”
So right about now you are probably asking
yourself . . .
- What the heck does heaven have to do with
water
in India:
- Has the Hindu University of America really opened
up the divine flood gates with their donation:
- What
in heaven’s name does World Neighbors and
the 1008 Wells Foundation have to do with a story
about a spiritual pilgrimage?
- Who in their right mind
could ever imagine 1008 wells
in 10 years?
- Do you really expect me to believe Divinity
can be found at a well in India?
Jadeine
Shives, Founding Chairman of the 1008 Wells Foundation,
and her project to raise funding for the
digging of fresh water wells in India through proceeds
from her book, Digging a Well to Heaven are proving to
thousands of individuals across the globe, just like
yourself, that you don’t have to be a saint to
experience Divinity.
To get to the bottom of these answers or to sponsor
your own heavenly well, contact:
|
Orlando Sentinel Announces 1008 Wells Foundation
Projects to World!
On July 7, 2005 an article appeared in the Orlando
Sentinel news publication describing the 1008 Wells Foundations
inspirational beginning, the immediate success since its inception,
and an intimate look at its Founder and Chairman, Jadeine Shives.
By Debbie Barr | Special to the Sentinel
Posted July 7, 2005
It wasn't your typical
graduation ceremony.
Before Jadeine Shives
of Davenport was handed a diploma for her master's degree in
Hindu Philosophies at Hindu University of America, Shives participated
in a prayer ceremony in which a flame representing the light
of knowledge was offered to Shree Vishnumaya Durga Ma, the
Hindu goddess of learning.
Ornamented for the occasion
in a traditional Indian sari and red bindi on her forehead
made of sacred red powder called kum kum, the blond, fair-skinned
Shives participated in the graduation ceremony June 25 along
with doctoral graduate Mona Khaitan of Wellesley, Mass.
It was the second graduation
ceremony at Hindu University of America's east Orange County
campus, which opened in 2001.
The degree is a spiritual
benchmark for Shives, 42, who earned a bachelor's degree in
marketing from the University of Central Florida in 1991.
"I got my bachelor's
degree to earn a living. I got my master's degree for love
of divinity," she said.
The new graduate
recently wrote and self-published a book, Digging a Well
to Heaven, which documents her six-week pilgrimage to India
in 2001, including her journey through rocky, water-starved
regions of the country where she saw women trekking for
miles with earthen pots on their heads to collect a trickle
of water for their villages.
Shives, who has
practiced the Vedic traditions of Hinduism for the past
15 years, said she was divinely inspired to write the book
in November to raise awareness about the need for fresh
water in parched regions of India.
In June, she and
her husband, Tony, initiated The 1008 Wells Foundation
in order to earmark book-sale proceeds for digging wells
in India.
Each wells costs about $3,000. Shives is coordinating the
project through the nonsectarian, nonprofit organization
World Neighbors.
Although her book
is not scheduled for release until the end of July, a private
donor gave Hindu University the funds to sponsor construction
of a gravity-flow drinking-water system in West Bengal
that will sustain a village of 160. The water system, the
first of many wells Shives plans to get off the ground,
should be completed in the fall, she said.
Shives said that
in a spiritual sense, digging a well is a metaphor for
persisting until enlightenment is reached.
"Once you reach
the waters, it is the sweet, spiritual waters that sustain
you," Shives said.
In her book, Shives
also describes her spiritual pilgrimage to India,
where she was among a stream of 70 million visitors at the
Maha Kumbha Mela, a festival in the northern city of Allahabad,
in January and February of 2001. The festival is a two-month
celebration of God.
As part of the journey,
she also visited Hindu temples, listened to swamis who came
out of seclusion to speak about their spiritual realizations
and bathed in the sacred Ganges River with 34 million other
celebrants on the high bathing day.
Although Shives' global
mission is to bring fresh water to the arid regions of India,
she daily taps into a wellspring of divinity in all its forms
through Hinduism.
Shives, who was reared
in Kissimmee and grew up as a Lutheran, discovered the Vedic
philosophy underlying Hinduism when a friend of hers "dragged" her
to a yoga class 15 years ago. She was immediately impressed
by the philosophy that accompanied the physical aspects of
yoga.
From there, she dived
into the study of meditation and the ancient Indian principles
of holistic health called Ayurveda. She then pursued self-study
of the religion for years before enrolling in classes at Hindu
University in August 2002.
"Once I started
taking classes, that whole knowledge base that I had been searching
for was right there," said Shives, who noted that students
from all backgrounds and cultures can enroll. "It was
like another world opened up to me. Something deep inside me
said, 'You found it; you found your home.' "
Shives, who works as
marketing manager at the university, said some days she comes
to work wearing a sari, and some days she wears office clothes.
Because of her knowledge of both Eastern and Western cultures
and religions, Shives sees herself as a link between the two.
"I'm like this
bridge between cultures -- having an American face but a love
of Hinduism," she said. Shives said she was drawn to the
ancient religion in large part because it acknowledges that
there are many paths to the one God.
"Hinduism is very
faith-accommodating and allows for the unique celebration of
the individual's preferred form of divinity. They [religions]
all have their place," Shives said. "I have a penchant
for all things in divinity. I am just at home sitting in the
temple, mosque, synagogue or under a tree -- it's all the same."
Shives explained that
Hindus believe in a universal, supreme divinity known as Brahman,
but that there are many aspects to this divinity that are expressed
through different gods and goddesses.
"That way, we can
have a relationship with God in the form that resonates within
us the best," said Shives, noting that her personal Ishta
Devata, or most beloved form of divinity, is the elephant-like
Ganesha, the lord of knowledge and remover of obstacles.
The Hindu philosophy
of Advaita Vedanta -- the idea that everything in creation
is created from divinity and is therefore divine -- also resonated
with Shives, who said her father had a similar life philosophy.
For more information
about her book or to donate to the well-digging project, call
Shives at 407-460-7276. For information about Hindu University,
visit hindu-university.edu.
# # #
The River of Great
News Continues to Flow
Numerous magazines and other news publications
have offered to review the book upon its completion providing
even broader coverage for the 1008 Wells Foundation. The benefit
of such generous opportunities for raising public awareness
with their readership is enormous.
Promoting the incredible changes the wells projects
make in remote villages across India is
inspiring many to participate in large and small ways. As the
articles appear, we will include them on this web site.
Creating New Worlds of Opportunities
One Well at a Time!

1008 Wells
Foundation
8297 Champions
Gate Blvd, Ste 127
Champions
Gate, FL 33896
407-460-7276
info@1008wells.org
|