Inside the Laindatang reservoir, a graduation scale measures every ten-thousand litres of stored water. This precise tool allows safe monitoring, controlled use, and long-term protection of clean water. In ultra-rural villages, measuring water accurately is not technical detail. It is prevention and survival.
Illness often begins long before someone arrives at the hospital. Our campaigns on smoking, waste management, alcohol, and sexual health display straightforward messages across schools and village walls in local languages. Through simple posters, talks, and games, we help protect thousands of children.
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Building strong partnerships with communities, volunteers, and other organizations for lasting change.
Laindatang Water Filtration System | Preventive Health
Before water reaches the tank in Laindatang, it is filtered by hand. Custom-built filtration modules remove debris, organic matter, and insects, reducing contamination risks. This system turns rainwater harvesting into preventive medicine for families living far from any medical infrastructure.
Clean Water Roof in Laindatang | Medical Water Safety
A light steel roof now protects the Laindatang reservoir, shielding filtered rainwater from heat, light, and contamination. Built with villagers by Fair Future and Kawan Baik Indonesia, this structure turns rainfall into safe drinking water and prevents avoidable disease.
Laindatang water reservoir work – sealed interior
Laindatang water reservoir work required transforming raw concrete into a sealed chamber through seven protective layers. Each layer prevents contamination, stabilises the structure, and protects the health of families. This technical process is essential for long term safe water in East Sumba.
Laindatang water reservoir construction improving access
In Laindatang we build a 115000 litre reservoir by hand with villagers, shaping steel, timber, and concrete on a remote plateau. This work brings clean water to families who have lived without it and strengthens community health for the years ahead.
Film gallery on field medical and social work
This film gallery humanitarian work shares nine essential films documenting our field actions. Each one captures medical care, water access, education, and community resilience in remote Indonesian villages. These stories explain the daily challenges and the solutions built together.
The Day Night Changed – Solar Light for Mbajik School
For five days, we lived and worked in Haray to create The Day Night Changed, a film showing how electricity reached Mbajik School for the first time. This is the story of before, during, and after, in a district where over 100 schools still wait for power.
Mosquito nets save lives every single night
This image depicts families receiving mosquito nets in extremely remote regions where malaria affects nearly half the...
The dangers of excessive alcohol consumption
Excessive alcohol consumption has a detrimental effect on lives, leading to fatal diseases, violence, accidents, and financial hardship. This campaign aims to raise awareness of its destructive impact on health, families, and communities. Breaking this cycle is imperative. Discover how alcohol abuse contributes to suffering and loss of life.
Bringing Solar Light to 24 Remote Schools in East Sumba
In East Sumba, nearly 12,000 students face the challenge of studying without electricity. Through Light Up the Future, Fair Future Foundation is distributing 2,224 solar lamps to over 2,000 children in 24 remote schools, bringing safe, renewable light to improve education, health, and daily life.
Fund Clean Water for Laindatang’s Last Four Reservoirs
For the past three years, Fair Future has been constructing water reservoirs in Laindatang to guarantee access to clean water. However, four remote families continue to face difficulties. With only four additional reservoirs needed, we can complete this important work. Help us take the final step toward providing every household in this community with secure access to water.
Mira a Health Agent Saving Lives in Rural Villages
Mira serves as a Kawan Sehat health agent, delivering medical care to thousands in remote villages. Armed with essential medical supplies, she addresses injuries, manages illnesses, and educates families on improving their health practices—ensuring that healthcare reaches those who need it most.






