Water
Bangladesh’s southern coastal region, once
nourished by its countless rivers and canals, is now gradually surrendering to
saltwater intrusion. Surrounded by tidal rivers connected to the Bay of Bengal,
this fragile land is increasingly becoming saline due to rising sea levels,
cyclones, and tidal surges. The crisis has turned the very essence of life
fresh water into a rare commodity. In most coastal villages, particularly in
Khulna, Satkhira, and Bagerhat, women bear the heaviest burden of this
scarcity. Each day they walk 3 to 4 kilometers under the scorching sun to fetch
a few pitchers of drinkable water from distant sources. The physical strain,
combined with malnutrition and dehydration, deeply affects their health often
leading to joint pain, uterine complications, and chronic fatigue. Yet, their
daily struggle remains invisible to the larger world. During the dry season,
when rivers and ponds dry up and the land cracks open, the desperation
intensifies. Salinity turns every drop of water brackish, while rainwater ponds
evaporate. In these moments, the women’s journeys for water become acts of
resistance a quiet defiance against the slow violence of climate change. This
photo story documents not only the struggle for water but also the
resilience of women who continue to hold their families and communities
together despite the advancing threat of salinity and displacement. Each image
stands as a testimony to the unspoken human cost of a changing climate where
survival depends on every drop.