" We made from water every living thing"
...The
Noble Qur'an, Surah, Al-Anbiya, 21:
30
The Nobel Prize
winner and discoverer of vitamin C, Dr. Albert Szent-Gyorgi said, "There
is no life without water. Water is part and parcel of the living machinery. "
Three
fourth of planet earth is covered with water and water is the most
abundant
substance on earth. If one analyzes the human body one finds that a
normal
adult has about 70 percent water. The water of this planet,
specifically the
algae in them, supplies some 90 percent of the oxygen we breathe.
Others
estimate that by themselves the microscopic phytoplankton of the oceans
provide
up to a third of the planet's oxygen. The oceans also moderate the
globe's
temperature, support an incredibly rich variety of life, and play a
crucial role
in global climate and rain cycles. In short, the oceans are a key to
life on
this Planet.
Water is essential
for the survival of man. Water is used to generate Electricity. Agricultural
crops are grown using water. Ancient civilizations flourished by manipulating
water resources. Simple irrigation canals permitted greater crop production and
longer growing seasons in dry areas. They maintained elaborate systems for water
supply and drainage. During the 19th and 20th centuries
due to population explosion, the demand for water rose dramatically. Monumental
engineering projects were launched to control floods, protect clean water
supplies and provide water for irrigation and hydropower. This resulted in
great benefits to billions of people living on this planet earth. Water related
diseases such as cholera and typhoid have largely been conquered in the more
industrial nations. Vast cities have bloomed in the desert with water brought
from hundreds and sometimes thousands of miles away. However despite our
progress, more than half of the world's population suffers from lack of access
to clean drinking water and adequate sanitation services.
WATER CONTENT IN
LIVING THINGS
The water content of
our food is considerable; it varies depending on the type of food. For example,
meat contains about 50 % to 75% water, whereas green vegetables may contain as
much as 95% water.
Water abundance in a
newborn baby is more than that of an adult (74 percent) and in the human embryo
the water content is more than 80 percent. After air, water is most essential
for our survival. Why is it on planet earth water remains in the liquid form,
except at the polar caps? The answer to this question is given elsewhere by the
author. If water is not in liquid form we will not survive. This is one of the
signs of God. One can live without food for a couple months, but without water
no one can survive for more than a few days
THE PHYSIOLOGY OF
WATER
Water is responsible
for our survival as it prevents us from dying by poisons produced in our
bodies. The metabolism in the human body results in the production of toxins
and waste products, which are removed by the kidneys. In order for the kidneys
to remove the wastes such as uric acid, urea and lactic acid, these wastes must
be dissolved in water. Kidneys will be damaged if the wastes are not removed
due to lack of water. Water helps in digestion and ±n metabolism. It acts as a
medium for several chemical and enzymatic reactions that take place in the human
body. Nutrients such as glucose, elemental ions, oxygen, etc. are carried to
the living cells in organs by water through the blood. Our body temperature is
regulated through perspiration by water. Perspiration removes excess heat and
cools the body. The water we drink lubricates the joints. Those suffering from
arthritis, or are athletically active or have chronic muskuloskeletal problems
should drink enough water.
Even for
breathing, water is required. In order to facilitate the intake of oxygen and
excretion of carbon dioxide, our lungs must be moistened by water. When we
exhale, we lose about one pint (1/2 liter) of liquid each day! Another 400 ml
(about 1/2 liter) is lost in the form of perspiration.
If enough water does
not enter our body by drinking then it results in the impairment of every aspect
of our body's physiological function due to lack of "fluid balance." The more
one exercises the more water one needs to keep one's body in "fluid balance."
Dr. Howard Flaks, a specialist in treating obesity, in Beverly Hills, California
says, " As a result of not drinking enough water, many people encounter such
problems as excess body fat, poor muscle tone and size, decreased digestive
efficiency and organ function, increased toxicity in the body, joint and muscle
soreness (particularly after exercise) and water retention." If one doesn't
drink enough water, the body starts retaining water to compensate for the
shortage. In other words, to eliminate fluid retention, one should drink
more water, not less.
Dr. Donald
Robertson, director of the Southwest Bariatric (medical study of obesity)
Nutrition Center in Scottsdale, Arizona says, "Proper water intake is the key
to weight loss, if people who are trying to lose weight don't drink enough
water, the body cannot metabolize the fat, they retain fluid, which keeps weight
up, and the whole procedure that we are trying to set up falls apart."
Dr. Flaks says, " I
would say the minimum amount a healthy person
should
drink is 10
eight-ounce (300 ml) glasses a day. A healthy 70-kg adult will require 2000 ml
(2 liters) of water daily. And you need to drink more if you are overweight,
exercise a lot or live in a hot climate. Overweight people should drink an
extra glass for every 25 pounds they exceed their ideal weight." He says one
should not drink more than four glasses in any given hour.
One should not
substitute pure water for other beverages, such as fruit juices, soft drinks,
coffee, tea, or alcoholic drinks. Because alcohol is a toxic substance which is
Haram in Islam and this command of prohibition has come directly from God. The
caffeinated beverages stimulate the adrenal glands, while fruit juices contain a
lot of sugar and thereby stimulate the pancreas to produce more insulin. Soda
contains sodium. Hence these drinks tax the body more than they cleanse it.
Another problem with these beverages is that we lose our taste for water.
Problems
Lastly we must
keep water pure and safe for drinking as contaminated water supplies kill
millions each year in the Third World countries including the Islamic countries.
Preventable water-related diseases kill an estimated 10,000 - 20,000 children
everyday, and the latest evidence suggests that we are unable to cope up to
solve these problems. Massive cholera outbreaks appeared in the mid-1990s in
Asia, Africa and Latin America. Millions of people drink water in Bangladesh and
India that is contaminated with arsenic. Arsenic occurs naturally in groundwater
and sometimes as a residue of mining and other industrial operations. At high
doses arsenic is a poison and at low doses it is linked to cancer, diabetes, and
other diseases. In many countries, big dams and reservoirs were originally
considered vital for economic prosperity, agricultural survival and national
security. However dams have destroyed the ecosystems in and around countless
rivers, lakes and streams. Tens of millions of people have been forced to move
out from their homes, frequently with no warning or compensation-to make way for
the reservoirs behind dams. More than 20 percent of all fresh-water fish
species are now threatened or endangered because dams and water withdrawals have
destroyed the free-flowing river ecosystems where they thrive. In 1958 Egypt
and Sudan sent troops for water from the Nile. In the 1960s and 1970s Israel,
Jordan and Syria clashed over allocation, control and diversion of the Yarmouk
and Jordan rivers. In 1990 a pro-apartheid council cut off water to 50,000 black
residents of Wesselton Township after protests against wretched sanitation and
living conditions. From 1991 to present an estimated 50 people die in violence
that continues to erupt between the Indian states of Karnataka and Tamil Nadu
over the allocation of irrigation water from the Cauvery River, which flows from
one state to the other. In America Arsenic in ground water occurs in
Albuquerque, N.M., Norman, OK and in many towns throughout the Southwest. US
National Academy of Sciences Report says as little as 3 ppb (part per billion)
arsenic carries a far higher bladder and lung cancer risk than do other
substances regulated by EPA (Environmental Protection Agency). Sewage discharges
and farm runoff can introduce pathogens such as E.Coli bacteria,
cryptosporidium, and other harmful microorganisms that cause gastrointestinal
illness that could be severe with people who have a weak immune system. New
Haven, MI and San Antonio are reported to have this problem. The EPA should be
contacted for drinking water limits of perchlorate (interferes with functioning
of the thyroid gland), MTBE, a gasoline additive meant to reduce air pollution
that proved to be a frighteningly efficient ground-water pollutant, and THMS (trihalomethanes)
which is linked to bladder cancer, with some evidence of miscarriage risk.
CONCLUSION
For all the human
beings, water is a God-given gift to mankind. It is indispensable for survival
of man and mankind. Hence water should not be wasted. Why should communities
raise all water to drinkable standards and then use that expense resource for
flushing toilets or watering the lawns? Developed countries spend billions of
dollars to collect and treat this waste water before dumping it into a river or
the ocean. In poorer countries, this water is often simply returned untreated
to a river or lake where it may pose a threat to human health or the
environment. Rather than trying endlessly to find enough water to meet our
future needs, it is time to find a way to meet our present and future needs with
the water that is already available, while preserving the ecological cycles that
are so integral to human well-being.
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