Ryan Hreljac
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Ryan Hreljac (Template:IPAc-en Script error: No such module "Respell".[1]) is a Canadian activist, who established the Ryan's Well Foundation to bring clean water and sanitation to people in developing countries. He has received numerous awards for his work, and he was the youngest person ever to be bestowed with the Order of Ontario.
Early life and education
Hreljac is the son of Susan and Mark HreljacTemplate:Sfn of Kemptville, Ontario.Template:Sfn He has three brothers: Keegan, Jordan and Jimmy.Template:Sfn Jimmy Akana was Hreljac's first pen pal from Uganda. Jimmy's parents disappeared during the country's civil war and he was raised by an aunt.Template:Sfn He used to get up at midnight so that he could fetch water for his aunt before school.Template:Sfn The two boys met during Hreljac's visit in 2000 to the Angolo Primary School in Uganda, where the first well that he funded was drilled.Template:Sfn Jimmy was later abducted by a rebel group, Lord's Resistance Army, and then escaped to the home of an aid worker. The Hreljac family paid for his schooling for a couple of years and then brought him to Canada. The brothers both graduated from high school in June 2000.Template:Sfn Ryan's family adopted Jimmy, and he became a Canadian citizen in 2007.Template:Sfn
After his graduation from St. Michael's Catholic High School in Kemptville, Ontario, Hreljac graduated in 2013 from University of King's College in Halifax, Nova Scotia;[2] his field of study was International Development and Political Science. Hreljac was employed by Youth Ottawa, a nongovernmental organization, after he graduated in 2013.[3]
Charitable fundraiser and activist
When he was six years old, Hreljac learned in school, during a lesson from his Grade One teacher, Nancy Prest, that many people in Africa have a very hard time getting access to clean water.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Hreljac began raising money for those affected by the global water crisis by doing household chores, which netted him $70 over a four-month period.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Doing more chores and fund-raising, within 12 months he had raised $2,000,Template:Sfn which turned out to be the actual cost to build a well at that time, according to WaterCan, a non-profit organization that provides clean water to poor countries.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In January 1999, he sent the money to WaterCan, who had the first well drilled in northern Uganda alongside Angolo Public School. It was built by the Canadian Physicians for Aid and Relief that year.Template:Sfn In two years, he raised Template:CAD.Template:Sfn The Canadian International Development Agency heard of Hreljac's efforts and matched $2 for every dollar that he raised.Template:Sfn He told his story in many appearances in local and international media includingThe Oprah Winfrey Show.Template:Sfn
In 2001, Hreljac founded Ryan's Well Foundation, a registered Canadian charity, to buildScript error: No such module "Unsubst". in Africa and educate children about sanitation and safe water.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
The foundation's objective has expanded to build wells anywhere in the world.Template:Sfn Millions of dollars have been raised for water and sanitation projects in Africa, Central America, and South Asia.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The foundation has brought clean water to more than 1,507,911 people in 17 developing countries, through 1,767 water and 1,322 sanitation projects.Template:Sfn It has partners in 12 countries, including Burkina Faso, Ghana, Kenya, Uganda, Togo and Haiti to identify the communities most in need of a water or sanitation project.Template:Sfn It has worked with Rotary Clubs on well projects.Template:Sfn By 2015, it completed 900 projects benefiting 824,038 people. Some of the projects were for rain harvesting tanks in areas—like Guatemala, Haiti, and India—where that was the optimal solution for safe water.Template:Sfn The 1,000th well was dug in the fall of 2015 in northern Uganda,Template:Sfn in a district neighboring the first well.Template:Sfn Supporters of the foundation include Matt Damon, Oprah Winfrey,[4] Jane Goodall, and Prince Charles.Template:Sfn
Hreljac became assistant project manager at the foundation in January 2015, in preparation for a June 2015 opening for project manager. His on-the-job training included trips to Kenya, Burkina Faso, and Uganda to train locals how to maintain their wells. He has also traveled extensively—including Brazil, Mexico, Qatar, and Argentina—to speak about the foundation.Template:Sfn
since June 2023[update]Template:Dated maintenance category (articles)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"., Hreljac is executive director of the Ryan's Well Foundation, a position he has held since 2019. He still appears in media and presents to organizations and school classes worldwide. [5]
Recognition
Hreljac received the World of Children Awards in 2003, and a second time at the Montage Beverly Hills in April 2016 as an alumni winner.Template:Sfn In 2004, he was named a Paul Harris Fellow.Template:Sfn Hreljac was made a Lifesaver hero by The My Hero Project by late 2010.Template:Sfn
He is the youngest person ever to receive the Order of Ontario. He has also been awarded the Canadian Meritorious Service Medal, the Duke of Edinburgh Gold Award, The Wolf Award, and Planet Africa's Nelson Mandela Humanitarian Award.Template:Sfn
In popular culture
Film
- Ryan's Well, directed by Lalita Krishna in 2001, tells the story of the first well.Template:Sfn
- Blue Gold: World Water Wars, a documentary in 2008 in which Hreljac appears.Template:Sfn
- Get Involved!, a television show in which Hreljac appears in 2008.
- Return to Ryan’s Well, a 2015 documentary, tells the story of Ryan Hreljac's return to his first well site at Angolo Primary School in Uganda and how the well changed the lives of the people in the area. The 27-minute film was also directed by Krishna. It was selected for the Planet in Focus Film Festival, one of the most significant environmental festivals that takes place in North America, that occurred in Toronto in October 2015.Template:Sfn
Books
- The Water Princess is a book about a girl, Gie Gie, who walks with her mother each day to collect water. It is based upon the early life of Georgie Badiel, a model, who grew up in Burkina Faso. She established a foundation that partners with Ryan's Well Foundation to bring clean water to African communities.Template:Sfn
References
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Sources
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