Healthy Latrines for Extreme Poor Families: Restoring Dignity and Health from Tanah Merah and Oebelo

Amid rapid development, many rural families still lack access to proper sanitation. In Kupang District, particularly in Tanah Merah and Oebelo Villages, many extremely poor families live without healthy sanitation facilities. The absence of household latrines forces them to rely on open defecation in gardens, bushes, or even small rivers around the villages. This not only diminishes their quality of life but also increases the risk of diarrhea, skin infections, and even stunting in children. CIRMA believes that access to healthy sanitation is a basic human right, not a luxury reserved for certain groups. Through the Healthy Latrines for Extreme Poor Families program, CIRMA and local communities are working together to provide real solutions for extremely poor families in these two villages. The program goes beyond constructing physical latrines - it is a social movement to restore dignity, improve health, and build collective awareness of the importance of proper sanitation. The program is grounded in the philosophy of community-driven change, where residents are involved from planning to implementation. Beneficiary families are identified through community assessments and dialogues to ensure that interventions reach those most in need. Field facilitators provide intensive assistance, including education on clean and healthy living practices, the importance of handwashing with soap, and sustainable latrine maintenance. This intervention model does not only focus on providing physical facilities but also on shaping new Attitudes within the community. By recognizing that a healthy latrine is a long-term investment in family health, residents are slowly overcoming the stigma that sanitation is merely a private matter. The healthy latrine becomes a symbol of collective behavioral change, affirming that even extremely poor families deserve to live in health and dignity. In addition to changing attitudes, the program expands Access for extremely poor families to affordable sanitation technology. By partnering with local builders and community groups, latrine designs are kept simple, easy to maintain, and compliant with health standards. This ensures that poor families are no longer hindered by high costs or technical barriers when building sanitation facilities. Equally important is strengthening the community’s social and economic Assets. The program fosters a culture of mutual cooperation, where villagers help each other construct latrines. Local builders gain additional income, while women’s groups are empowered to educate fellow mothers about hygiene and healthy living practices. Thus, latrines become not only individual property but also part of the village’s collective assets that sustain better quality of life. Since 2020, this initiative has been supported by SELAVIP Chile, an international organization committed to housing and sanitation solutions for poor families across the globe. With SELAVIP’s support, CIRMA and local communities have built 300 healthy latrines in Tanah Merah and Oebelo, now serving nearly 500 poor households. This achievement is more than just numbers—it is living proof that cross-border collaboration can address the most basic needs of extremely poor communities.The initial impacts of the Healthy Latrines program are becoming visible. In Tanah Merah, beneficiary families no longer feel ashamed when visitors come, as they now have healthy latrines at home. Children are less frequently affected by diarrhea because their surroundings are cleaner. In Oebelo, villagers are inspired to build simple self-funded latrines after witnessing the changes experienced by program beneficiaries. Beyond physical infrastructure, the program has fostered renewed confidence and dignity among extremely poor families. They feel recognized and valued, no longer excluded from a decent standard of living. The presence of healthy latrines has become a gateway for wider change, including greater awareness of environmental health, improved family hygiene practices, and stronger social solidarity at the village level. For CIRMA, the success of the Healthy Latrines program in Tanah Merah and Oebelo is only the first step toward broader transformation. Healthy sanitation is just one small doorway in the long struggle against extreme poverty and social injustice. Yet through this small doorway emerges new hope—that change begins with simple, everyday interventions that touch people’s lives directly. Looking ahead, CIRMA envisions expanding this initiative to more villages across Kupang District and West Timor. Because sanitation is not merely about infrastructure—it is about human dignity, the health of future generations, and building the foundation for a more just life. Healthy Latrines for Extreme Poor Families is more than a program. It is a movement—a movement to humanize life, restore basic rights, and ignite hope from small villages at the nation’s frontier. From simple latrines, we are writing a larger story of humanity.

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CIRMA: Making a Real Impact for the Poorest Community
CIRMA(Centrum Inisiatif Rakyat Mandiri) is a civil society organization founded on May 18, 2018, by a collective of individuals deeply concerned about the persistence of extreme poverty in urban slums, peri-urban settlements, and rural communities across eastern Indonesia. From its early work in poverty enclaves, CIRMA recognized that the struggle of the poor is not merely economic—it is a daily struggle for dignity, equality, ecological justice, and the right to live well. This foundational view aligns with the global aspiration of achieving Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 1 (No Poverty), SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities), and SDG 5 (Gender Equality). CIRMA began by addressing one of the most fundamental human needs—water and sanitation. Through community-based interventions such as well drilling, the construction of healthy latrines, and the revitalization of village water systems, CIRMA works to ensure equitable access to clean water and proper sanitation facilities. This work contributes significantly to SDG 6 (Clean Water and Sanitation) while simultaneously strengthening health outcomes (SDG 3) and advancing equity for marginalized households. As its work evolved, CIRMA expanded its mission to strengthen climate justice and ecological resilience for smallholder farmers and rural communities in West Timor. The organization facilitates programs on climate-resilient agriculture, eco-enzyme–based ecological farming, climate information services, farmer-led cooperatives, and community adaptation to climate variability. These initiatives not only strengthen rural livelihoods and promote dignified work (SDG 8) but also support resilient food systems (SDG 2 – Zero Hunger) and responsible ecological production (SDG 12 – Responsible Consumption and Production) while contributing to SDG 13 (Climate Action) and SDG 15 (Life on Land) through ecosystem restoration and community-managed tree planting programs. CIRMA also engages in nutrition-sensitive and stunting prevention initiatives, particularly focusing on women of reproductive age, infants, and young children in low-income rural families. By linking food security, ecological farming, maternal health, and nutrition education, CIRMA advances a holistic approach to rural well-being that reinforces SDG 3 (Good Health and Well-Being) and strengthens gender-responsive community development (SDG 5 – Gender Equality). Since its establishment, CIRMA has initiated and maintained global partnerships with international institutions that share a commitment to social equity, environmental justice, and inclusive development. Among its international partners are Vitamin Angels America, New Zealand Embassy, Japan Water Fund, SELAVIP (Latin American, Asian, and African Housing Service) Chile, and the Climate Justice Resilience Fund (CJRF) USA. These collaborations demonstrate the growing international trust in CIRMA’s integrity, accountability, and transformative community impact. Through these partnerships, CIRMA contributes to SDG 17 (Partnerships for the Goals) and stands as a recognized local actor within the global network for climate justice and community resilience—representing the voices of West Timor’s smallholder farmers on a broader international stage. In all its work, CIRMA builds collaborative partnerships with local governments, universities, development agencies, cooperatives, indigenous communities, and grassroots organizations. It serves as a bridge—connecting knowledge, innovation, and compassion—to promote inclusive development and social transformation from the village level upward. CIRMA is officially registered under Indonesian law, holds a valid operational license, and functions as a charitable and development institution operating at the sub-national level. Rooted in West Timor, CIRMA continues to champion a just, sustainable, and dignified life for every person—from water to food, from soil to dignity—advancing a people-centered pathway toward a climate-resilient and equitable future.

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Testimonial

Victor Fernandez
Victor Fernandez

“Since our family received the Healthy Latrine support from SELAVIP and CIRMA, we no longer need to go outside to relieve ourselves, especially at night. I also learned how to maintain hygiene and care for our sanitation facilities in the right way. For us, this support is not just a toilet—it is comfort, health, and dignity for our family here in the Lospalos Resettlement, Oebelo Village.”

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“In collaboration lies the key to transformative change for the most neglected, disadvantaged and extremely poor communities. Partnerships bring together diverse expertise, resources and perspectives thereby amplifying collective impact.”
CIRMA

Centrum Inisiatif Rakyat Mandiri (est. 2018)

Jl. Thamrin Oepoi Kupang RT. 037. RW. 012 Kelurahan Fatululi Kecamatan Oebobo

Kota Kupang - Nusa Tenggara Timur NTT Indonesia

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