User:Chaudhary6525/sandbox

ABOUT
The Living Water Museum perceives the need to gather and order our rich and diverse conventions of water rehearses as a living and dynamic storehouse of pictured information, which can both honor the past, move the present and be a wellspring of learning for what's to come. The museum will work as an open access online stage, authorized under the Creative Commons, and housing both more permanent records (e.g. water files on traditions, laws) and periodic exhibitions diverse parts of water cultures, livelihood and ecology.

LIVING WATERS
The term 'Living Waters' mirrors the decent variety, dynamism, and continuity of water. Not exclusively is water the wellspring of life, the cultural services provided by water have molded human advancements crosswise over India, motivating arts and architecture, stories, myths, old stories, ceremonies, lyrics, melodies, movies, dance forms, and so on. Ageless in nature, from the Himalayas to the oceans, streaming crosswise over waterways and fields, water manages us, in our homes and groups, our religions and custom practices, through exchange and route - water is our elixir.

The Living Waters Museum looks to build an online learning vault that will remember our rich water history, rouse the youth to follow up on water challenges and in the long haul, encourage social venture around water-based livelihood or sacred water sites.

WHY MUSEUM
The word 'Museum' is normally connected with the protection of the past, old relics, stuffy and dusty spaces.

SARA AHMED
Professor Sara Ahmed has more than 25 years of applied research involvement on water, livelihood and social equity. She has been effectively occupied with teaching and coaching young development experts In India, overseeing vast and complex territorial research portfolios on water, food security and environmental change in Asia, and educating a range regarding advancement associations and water arranges all around. Sara holds a PhD in Environmental Sociology from the University of Cambridge and is at present on the leading body of WaterAid, India. She has distributed widely on water governance and her last co-edited book is entitled, Diverting the Flow: Gender Equity and Water in South Asia (2012).