Tuesday, March 3, 2026

MLP March Newsletter!

Seven Weeks for Water 2026 | Week 3 - Fields, Food, and Water: Women and Men, Agriculture, and the WASH Connection

The third week of Seven Weeks for Water reflection is authored by Musamba Mubanga-Mtonga, who hails from Zambia and works as a senior advocacy officer on food security and climate change at Caritas Internationalis, Rome. Her reflection addresses how women, who are usually key stewards of their families, land, and agriculture, continue to suffer from inequitable land ownership systems. She invites readers to draw connections between policy, dignity, and stewardship of God-given gifts.
02 March 2026
Farmers get advice from an agricultural specialist (center) as part of a community agriculture project outside Kamina, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Sponsored by the United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR), the project increases food security in poor communities, especially for women and children. Photo: Paul Jeffrey/Life on Earth Pictures

Text: 

Genesis 1:27; Proverbs 31:16 ; Isaiah 58:10–11

Reflection

In this season of Lent — a time of reflection, renewal, and renewed commitment to justice — we are invited to look more deeply at the interwoven realities of women and men, agriculture, and WASH (water, sanitation, and hygiene). These elements constitute not only the technical components of development, they are lived experiences shaped through relationships, power, dignity, and faith. In the holistic vision of integral human development, every person is seen as embodied, relational, and called to flourish in community and creation. However, for many women farmers around the world, unequal land rights and inadequate WASH infrastructure perpetuate cycles of exclusion, vulnerability, and environmental degradation.

An Unequal Terrain: Land Rights and Environmental Injustice

Around the globe, women contribute significantly to food production, especially in rural contexts. Unfortunately, they often lack secure rights to the land they cultivate. Without land ownership, women struggle to access credit, make long-term investments in soil health, adopt climate-resilient practices, or participate fully in agricultural planning and markets. At the same time, inadequate WASH infrastructure — distant water points, unsanitary latrines, and lack of clean water, compounds these disadvantages, forcing women and girls to walk long distances, compromising their safety, time, and health.

This convergence of insecure land tenure and poor WASH services is greater than an economic challenge. It is an injustice rooted in unequal relations between women and men and in environmental degradation, undermining human dignity and the well-being of communities. Women’s time is diverted from economic activities and education and, additionally, their bodies are put at risk. Without safe water, soil, and sanitation—the land itself, God’s gift entrusted to all—suffers erosion, contamination, and degradation.

Faith in Action: Anchoring the Principle of Integral Human Development 

The teachings of our faith provide a moral compass to navigate these intertwined injustices:

  1. The Dignity of the Human Person: At the heart of the teachings of the church is the conviction that every human being is created in the image of God, made for community and to flourish (Genesis 1:27). Unequal land rights and lack of water infrastructure deny women their full humanity and agency, undermining their capacity to thrive and to contribute to the common good.
  2. Preferential Option for the Poor and Vulnerable: This principle calls communities to prioritize the needs of those who are most marginalized. Women farmers without secure land or access to clean water are disproportionately vulnerable, while playing the role of key stewards of their families and ecosystems. To stand with them is to honor a Gospel call to justice that lifts the least and invites structural change.

Scripture further illuminates our understanding of human dignity and the right relationship with creation.

Proverbs 31:16

“She considers a field and buys it; with the fruit of her hands, she plants a vineyard.”
This image disrupts stereotypes. Here is a woman who assesses land, makes an investment, and cultivates life. In contexts where women’s land rights are restricted, this verse reminds us that women are rightful stewards of the earth, capable of economic decision-making and vital contributors to the flourishing of their households and communities.

Isaiah 58:10–11

“If you pour yourself out for the hungry and satisfy the desire of the afflicted, then shall your light rise in the darkness… and your wounds shall be quickly healed.”
This passage connects justice with tangible care — feeding the hungry, aiding the afflicted, ensuring that communities have what they need to thrive. Clean water, secure land, and hygienic living conditions should not be thought of as luxuries but essentials for life that reflect God’s compassionate justice.

Questions for Reflection 

  1. How do my daily choices, and those of my community, uphold the dignity of women farmers and respect their rights to land, water, and participation?
    (Where might I be called to change policies, practices, or assumptions that marginalize others?)
  2. In what ways can my faith community become a stronger advocate for just access to land and water, not only through charity, but through structural transformation?
    (Who within and beyond our community needs a voice at the table, and how can we accompany them?)

Action

In this Lenten season, we are invited not only to reflect but to act. Presented here, are two practical ideas for individual and community engagement.

1. Advocate for Equitable Land Rights for Women and Men
  • Learn and share about how land tenure systems affect women farmers in your region and globally.
  • Support local and national policy reforms that strengthen women’s legal rights to land ownership and inheritance.
2. Promote and Support WASH Improvements in Rural Communities
  • Educate your community about the importance of inclusive WASH design, ensuring that water collection points and latrines are safe, accessible, and dignified for women and girls.

Other resources:

Musamba Mubanga-Mtonga, from Zambia, works as a senior advocacy officer on food security and climate change at Caritas Internationalis in Rome.
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WCC News: Faith leaders and communities call for mining justice at 2026 AMI

The race for critical minerals is reshaping global economics. As the push for a green energy transition accelerates, communities across Africa are absorbing costs that rarely make the headlines. The 2026 Alternative Mining Indaba (AMI), held in Cape Town, South Africa, from 9 to 11 February, drew together those voices - mining-affected communities, faith leaders, civil society organisations and advocates - to insist that the continent's mineral wealth must serve people before profit.
Rev Illizwelonke Nyoni from the Church of Christ Zimbabwe Photo: All Africa Conference of Churches
2 March 2026

The gathering's theme, "Alternative Stories of Mining – United in Solidarity with the Mining-Affected Communities across the Continent," said something deliberate: that the stories told here would not be the industry's stories. The gathering drew faith leaders committed to mining justice in Africa, tracing a thread of advocacy running through recent national gatherings - the 2025 conference on human rights and extractive industries in Luanda, Angola, and grassroots AMIs in Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe - each one defending communities against land loss and building the case for accountability.

Community members described what mining has cost them: forced removals without adequate compensation, burial grounds disturbed, ancestral sites erased, rivers and farmland damaged. The AMI Declaration named dispossession not as historical memory but as present condition - "a continuous lived reality, disrupting livelihoods, ancestry, memory, and dignity."

Faith actors arrived at this year's Indaba with something to say. Dr Tinashe Gumbo, programme executive for Economic Justice at the All Africa Conference of Churches, said "the faith foundations and underpinning message of good stewardship of creation and natural resources have been diluted over time," and welcomed "the bold position taken by the faith actors in Southern Africa to reclaim the AMI space."

Admire Mutizwa, director of the Church, Peace, and Just Societies Programme at the Zimbabwe Council of Churches, put the economic imbalance plainly: "While mining companies are increasing their profits, communities in mining areas are incurring much more costs." The commitments made by faith leaders at this year's Indaba, he said, reflected a simple truth - "justice is a matter of faith."

The question of climate ran close beneath the surface throughout. Athena Peralta, director of the WCC Commission on Climate Justice and Sustainable Development, pointed to a tension that the green transition has sharpened: "Mining and climate change are very much intertwined. Mining activities contribute to greenhouse gas emissions. In addition, the transition to a zero-carbon economy has increased the demand for rare earth and other minerals, fuelling more mining." Under the Ecumenical Decade of Climate Justice Action, launched in 2025, churches are pressing for a just transition away from fossil fuels - one that does not trade one form of extractivism (the large-scale, export-driven removal of natural resources) for another.

On 12 February, delegates marched through Cape Town's city centre to deliver the AMI memorandum to the South African government and the mainstream Mining Indaba organisers. Their demands were specific: full disclosure of mining contracts, community benefit-sharing agreements, stronger oversight, and guarantees that mining revenues reach the schools, hospitals and infrastructure communities were promised.

Eric Mokuoa, AMI chairperson said, "Africa cannot afford another century of dispossession disguised as development. Our stories, our land, and our dignity must guide the future of mining."

The Indaba closed with faith leaders, civil society, and community representatives committing to maintain the AMI's national platforms, document losses - material and spiritual - and accompany affected communities through what lies ahead. The declaration's closing reference anchored it all: "The earth is the Lord's, and all that is in it." (Psalm 24:1)

Learn more about the Ecumenical Decade of Climate Justice Action

See more
The World Council of Churches on Facebook
The World Council of Churches on Twitter
The World Council of Churches on Instagram
The World Council of Churches on YouTube
World Council of Churches on SoundCloud
The World Council of Churches' website
The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

Media contact: +41 79 507 6363; www.oikoumene.org/press
Our visiting address is:
World Council of Churches
Chemin du Pommier 42
Kyoto Building
Le Grand-Saconnex CH-1218
Switzerland

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