Wells for Hope for South Sudan

Who We Are

Founded in 2014, we are a group of volunteers committed to raising funds to build wells to provide clean water to villages in South Sudan.

Our fundraiser for 2024 will be an online auction! If you'd like to donate items or services,  please contact us at wells4hope3@aol.com. We're looking for unique items, gift cards, event tickets, etc. We'll be collecting items through the end of August. Whether as a donor or a bidder or both, we thank you for your support!

Wells 7 & 8 Completed!

Our seventh and eighth wells, in the villages of Luak Mayual and Atiaba, have been completed! Pictured is the well at Atiaba, completed in the summer of 2023. The women of these two villages and hundreds more who will use these wells will no longer have to walk miles to fetch water - and now irrigation for growing food in small gardens will be possible! 


Please donate if you'd like to help us drill the next wells! 

Majok spoke at Druid Hills Middle School in March, 2024, telling the students about his journey as a Lost Boy of Sudan.

Above: Gardens planted around the well at Atiaba. Villagers are growing kuzuma, wiki, kedhora, pumpkin, okra, cabbages, mangoes, lemon and guarpa thanks to the irrigation that the well makes possible. A village well makes such a difference in hundreds of lives! 

Portion of the well request from the village of Wun-Yar, chosen for our next project:

About Us

In 1983, when the Second Civil War broke out in Sudan, thousands of children had to leave their villages to search for a safe place to live. They walked hundreds of miles to refugee camps in Ethiopia and Kenya. They are known as The Lost Boys and Girls of Sudan.

In 2011, as a result of the ending of the war, people in the southern part of Sudan voted to become a separate nation known as South Sudan.

Majok Marier was one of the fortunate “Lost Boys of Sudan” who was relocated to the USA. He settled in Clarkston, GA where he found work as a plumber’s assistant. When his sister back in his home village died in childbirth. Majok knew that he needed to do something to give rural villages in South Sudan access to better medical care. He wanted to raise money to build a health clinic but realized that no clinic could operate without clean water, which was very hard to get in these villages, so he wrote a book about his refugee journey to help raise funds for wells and with his co-author, Estelle Ford-Williamson and a small group of volunteers, formed the non-profit known as Wells for Hope for South Sudan in 2014.

South Sudan is at this writing the newest country on earth and one of the least developed. It is usually women and children who fetch water for their families in these villages, walking up to 12 miles round trip and carrying a full jug on their heads on the way back.

Every year, millions of African people die of diseases from unsafe water sources. More people die from contaminated water than from all forms of violence combined, including wars. One village well can bring clean drinking water to hundreds of people.

To date, thanks to many individual donations and funds raised with the annual Walk for Water and Health, Wells for Hope for South Sudan has provided eight wells, each costing $10,000 or more.

Where are our wells?

So far, we have raised funds to successfully build eight wells. Check out the locations of our wells on the map to the left. They are numbered in the order they were built.

Thanks to many contributors from all over, Majok brought a drilling rig to Billing Daldiar, Lakes State, east of Rumbek, in June 2015! Residents are able for the first time to have clean water in their village, and they have begun growing more crops in the dry season, resulting in income for their families. 

In spring and summer 2016, two more wells went in, at Mabor Koch, home village of former Lost Boy Stephen Chol Bayok, and Mading Thon. A fourth well was constructed in April, 2018 in the village of Majak. In the summer of 2021, two more villages received these ground water sources. And in 2023, we provided two more at Luak Mayual and at Atiaba.

"I Thirst" Event Featured in Georgia Bulletin

On Feb. 26, the St. Philip Benizi Church, Jonesboro, hosted an "I Thirst" event followed by a fundraiser walk. Check out the article in the Georgia Bulletin to read more about the wonderful day. To the left are some of our volunteer board members, from left to right: Darleine A., Majok Marier, Lois W., Kendrell P., Mary H., and Wendell P.

Majok addressing the International Convention of BBYO at the National Center for Civil and Human Rights, Atlanta, GA

Majok after speaking to the students of Inman Middle School, Atlanta, GA

Well in use with an honorary tile

Image from the book Seed of South Sudan: Memoir of a "Lost Boy" Refugee, a memoir written by Majok Marier and Estelle Ford-Williamson. Click the link above to purchase a copy.

In the news

Mama Gini Eagan honored on 11Alive

Check out the video to see this wonderful tribute to Mama Gini and her role with the Lost Boys.

Majok speaks at Creekland Middle

The Gwinnett Daily Post featured an article about Majok's visit to Creekland Middle School.

Majok's Memoir and Story

The Georgia Bulletin featured a story about Majok's journey and what led him to write a book about it.

A Path Beyond Violence

A Global Atlanta article also tells the story of Majok's path from violence to author and fundraiser.