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Poor Women Farmers' Crops of Truth

press-release

Thu, 09 Feb 2006 09:49:39 +0000

 

 

The Institute of Science in Society Science Society

Sustainability http://www.i-sis.org.uk

 

General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing List

press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

========================================================

 

Poor Women Farmers' Crops of Truth

 

*************************************

 

 

Rhea Gala reports from a `backward' area of Andhra Pradesh

where dispossessed women farmers have regained control of

their destiny by promoting a diversity of traditional crop

varieties

 

 

 

Pics: Crops of truth. Caption: Salome, Lakshmama and Manjula

show me the crops of truth'that had not seen water in four

weeks, by Rhea Gala

 

While in Hyderabad, India, I heard about the work of the

Deccan Development Society (DDS) that is a beacon for

sustainable agriculture. I took a long and bumpy bus ride to

Zaheerabad in Medak District to find out more, and was well

rewarded.

 

The DDS is a 20 year-old grassroots organisation for social

development that works with women's sanghams (voluntary

village-level associations of poor women, mostly dalits ;

the lowest group in India's social hierarchy; sangham means

union). Five thousand women from 75 villages in Medak

District (60 miles from the Andhra Pradesh (AP) capital

Hyderabad) have been helped by the DDS to prioritise their

needs and through their own efforts, gain food security,

enhance their natural resources, and provide education and

healthcare for their communities.

 

As a result, the women have acquired a new self-esteem and a

sense of solidarity, allowing them to regain their natural

leadership status within their village communities. After 20

years and many successful initiatives guided by DDS's

charismatic Director, PV Satheesh, these thriving

communities are now increasingly in control of their natural

resources including seed, food production, local markets and

media.

 

On arriving at the main compound in Pastapur village, I was

immediately struck by the energy, friendliness and warmth of

the community, as individuals went about their business in a

relaxed but purposeful way. There was a tangible ambience of

vitality and ease. Mr Satheesh was in Europe, and Mr Suresh

hosted my visit with inspiring enthusiasm.

 

" Discovering the core issues and realising the needs of the

most marginalised women creates a social strength that can

move mountains. " He said. " The women's achievements arise

from ongoing discussions that initiate community-building

activities. These generate the new skills and confidence

that enable more needs to be met as they arise. For example,

thousands of acres of degraded agricultural land, common

land and forest have been regenerated. There are village

crèches that feed young children nutritious local food and

teach them traditional games and songs while parents work on

projects. And medicinal plants are grown close to villages

to provide previously unavailable healthcare. "

 

That was just the beginning.

 

 

Food sovereignty is possible for the poorest people

 

*****************************************************

 

The Medak District is a semi-arid area that hosts some of

the poorest populations and the most degraded agricultural

land in the whole of India, so it is remarkable that these

women's sanghams have made so much progress. The diversity

of the cropping system developed by the sanghams on these

highly infertile soils has a huge significance for

ecologically sustainable agriculture all around the world;

especially as traditional skills have become marginalised

and forgotten through national and global market forces.

 

" When the Green Revolution hit India in the 1970s, it

happened in the fertile areas of Punjab, Haryana and AP

where high yielding wheat and rice hybrids that required

high investments for seed, fertiliser, pesticide, machinery,

and irrigation, became the rage for large farmers. " Mr

Srinivas, an agricultural researcher with the DDS, told me.

" But this change diminished the status of, and distorted the

market for local traditional varieties of a multitude of

crops, and caused many marginal farmers untold hardship. In

spite of this shift to `modern agriculture' these high

yielding varieties have failed to yield significantly more

per unit area than the traditional varieties " .

 

" In the infertile and `backward' areas like Medak, the

effect of the Green Revolution was much less. Nevertheless,

farming practices have been changing even here and without

the tenacity of the dalit women, this diverse and healthful

agriculture would also have been swept away. "

 

The rise of the Crops of Truth

 

*******************************

 

 

The sangham women have kept traditional biodiverse

agriculture alive on their dryland farms because they know

that particular crops have the qualities to sustain them for

a particular season.

 

A study was carried out by the scientists at the DDS's

Krishi Vigyan Kendra (Farm Science Centre) near Pastapur,

working with groups of men, middle class women and poor

illiterate dalit women to ascertain their views on the

strengths and weaknesses of a given crop, and to rank them

in order of preference.

 

The scientists found a great difference in perception of the

crops between the sexes, with men giving much credit to crop

status according to external opinion. The men gave priority

to cash crops even when they were not suited to local arid

soils, and did not value low water requirement or disease-

resistance as desirable traits.

 

There was some agreement between the rich and poor women,

although the richer women veered towards the concept of

status, introducing cash crops such as cotton and ginger

into the discussion, at least partly because their holdings

are more fertile , with access to irrigation. However the

dalit women had initiated a strong campaign against cotton

as early as 1994 because they knew it would deny them

continuous wages, food and fodder and invite new pests into

the farming system.

 

Nevertheless the women transcended their caste and class

barriers by voting for yellow sorghum, pacha jonna , a

nutritious and soil enhancing crop as their first choice;

which the men had put in third place. For the dalit women,

the perception of each crop came from their long hard

struggle with poor land and the survival strategies that

evolved from this struggle.

 

Their parameters for the 20 crop varieties scored included

needs for food, fodder, fibre, ritual foods, dietary foods,

employment generation, pest and disease resistance and

adaptability to marginal lands . The dalit women stated

emphatically during discussions that they much preferred

their own varieties to cash crops. This is at complete

variance with policy makers who argue that poor people

should grow commodity crops. Food security, which is the

women's first priority, is achieved through conserving the

diversity of their traditional varieties, not throwing them

away.

 

 

Green revolution diminishes social capital

 

********************************************

 

Mr Srinivas further explained how India has historically

depended on social capital for the mutual benefit of large

and small farmers.

 

" Landless farmers owning draught animals and skills would

liaise with landowners to work their land for 25 percent of

the yield, providing timely ploughing, planting, weeding

etc; and farmers' extended families would group together to

share skills and resources across holdings. " He said. " This

system is quickly disappearing in Medak as a more mobile

population brings other priorities to bear. "

 

He also told me that cash monocultures " cause many ripples

downstream " : their requirement for synthetic fertiliser and

pesticide ruins the soil for other crops. Animal husbandry,

which is vital to organic mixed cropping systems is

disappearing as manure now has no value, and grazing, forage

crops and wild food become unavailable. When farmers from

other regions buy tracts of once organic land and drill

boreholes to irrigate cash crops such as cotton, ginger,

turmeric and sugar cane, they dissolve the social glue that

had held rich and poor together in mutual benefit.

Government subsidies, agricultural extension programmes, and

bank loans for larger farmers are promoting this trend;

while poor farmers and their diverse and sustainable crops

are left unsupported and in retreat.

 

India's National Public Distribution System stores and

distributes hybrid wheat and rice to the poor at enormous

cost to the taxpayer; and often at too high a price for the

needy. Whereas a little economic support to local

traditional farmers would offer incomparably better value on

many levels, not least for maintaining higher biodiversity,

social cohesion, and superior nutrition.

 

God's own crops!

 

******************

 

 

 

Manjula and Lakshmama, two dalit women, and Salome from the

Farm Science Centre showed me a large field of rabi crops (

rabi is the rainless winter season that runs from November

to March). The field, acquired from the government by the

DDS for landless farmers, showed intercropping of linseed,

safflower, sorghum, pea, pigeon pea, lentil, mustard, fodder

crops, greens, sunflower and `weeds'. All were planted

simultaneously in October and have received moisture only

from dew for the last four weeks.

 

" Cereals, pulses, oilseed and trap crops all interact with

natural weed and insect ecology to optimise yield. Weeds are

not really recognised as such but are seen as a standby for

people and animals in times of shortage, or ploughed back

into the soil. " Salome, who spoke excellent English told me.

" Some or all of these crops will thrive and they are known

as Crops of Truth, or God's Own Crops as they require no

inputs, not even water, but emerge and grow by themselves. "

 

The crops looked to me to be in really excellent health;

what is equally remarkable is the nutritional value of these

crops, in particular, millets such as sorghum are far

superior to rice or other cereals.

 

Traditional millets much healthier than rice

 

*********************************************

 

 

While some locals aspire to eat more factory farmed chicken

with their rice, many still enjoy the taste of traditional

staples such as millets, and these are promoted in many

truly delicious dishes at the DDS's Café Ethnic in the local

town, Zaheerabad. Some examples:

 

Korra is a warming food with a wide range of nutritional

advantages. It has the highest percentage of protein,

minerals and iron of all food, having 100 percent more

protein, 500 percent more minerals and 400 percent more iron

than rice. It is very high in vitamins B1 and B2 as well as

in a range of micronutrients. It is also rich in fibre and

can be cooked in many interesting ways to add variety to

meals.

 

Samma is a cool food for summer that is low in fat, high in

phosphorous, calcium, minerals, protein and fibre (having

3500 percent more fibre than rice) that is most effective in

diabetes and high blood pressure in reducing blood glucose

and cholesterol levels. It also features strongly in tasty

traditional dishes.

 

Taida is considered the coolest and richest millet for taste

and nutrition. It is rich in minerals especially calcium and

fibre as well as vitamins B1 and B2. Where rice contains 10

mg of calcium per 100 g, taida has an enormous 344 mg per

100 g. It is easily digestible and is one of the most water

efficient crops.

 

Sajja is another cool storehouse of nutrition, topping the

list of energy giving grains at 361 k.cal of energy per 100

g. It has 132 mg of carotene per 100 g where rice has none.

It also has five times more vitamin B1 and four times more

calcium and 60 percent more iron than rice, and is known for

its delicious rotis , a type of bread.

 

Last but not least is jonna, a versatile and delicious

millet rich in energy, protein and iron, containing10.4 g of

calcium and 4.1 mg of iron per 100 g.

 

 

 

I had been favouring some of these tasty dishes since

arriving in India without realising that they were millets.

And while the value and potential of these millets is

obvious, the Indian government is chasing the mirage of GM

crops.

 

Annual Biodiversity Festivals

 

*******************************

 

To celebrate and promote biodiversity, the sangham women

have set up an annual biodiversity festival, using highly

decorated bullock-drawn carts to parade and show off their

organic seeds from village to village. They now enjoy a

dialogue with thousands of local farmers and dignitaries

where the pros and cons of different crops and cropping

systems are publicly debated. Every year more people turn

out for the festival as the women's ideas and inspiration

are spread further afield.

 

The women encourage farmers not to break their traditions

but to retain as many as 70 seed varieties within their

control while planting as many as 23 crops on a single acre.

Village level community gene funds have been created that

have retrieved over 80 landraces from oblivion, lending seed

out at the beginning of a season to be returned at harvest.

And village level community grain funds serve the critical

hunger needs of the poor and the destitute without recourse

to a centralised public distribution system; or genetically

modified crops.

 

Autonomous Media

 

****************

 

The DDS Community Media Trust consists of 17 dalit women

working with video and three working with radio to take the

voice of their communities to a wider world, especially

those that have suffered social exclusion. They have

produced dozens of films that highlight development issues,

the future of food and farming, the bitter harvest of GM

cotton, and agro-biodiversity.

 

Although illiterate, some of these women have achieved

international success through the power and skill of their

films. The DDS media trust collaborated with farmers,

scientists and communities to produce films such as `Bt

cotton in Warangal: a three year fraud', `Why are Warangal

farmers angry with Bt cotton?' (translated into English,

French, Spanish, Thai and German) that formed part of a

grassroots revolt resulting in the banning of Monsanto Bt

seed in AP in May 2005. Some have travelled to Peru to teach

poor farmers there how to use video and how to protect their

indigenous potato varieties from marginalisation by `high

status' crops.

 

I was moved and inspired to meet some of these filmmakers

and to hear first hand of their struggle and their pride in

the strides they have made, both personally and on behalf of

their communities. One married woman told me through Salome:

" My husband is proud that I have become well known and well

travelled, and he therefore gives me due respect. " Chinna

Narsamma, unmarried - an unenviable status in India - told

me: " Men are slow to see the relevance of traditional

agriculture in the modern world but once converted to its

benefits, they offer very strong and committed support. "

 

And much more

 

***************

 

Mr Muti showed me around the beautiful Green School, an

innovative resource for child development that serves the

educational needs of local children. It provides them with

sound and thoughtful academic instruction in the morning

followed by practical classes in the afternoon in such

subjects as pottery, gardening, bookbinding, woodwork,

veterinary aid, and medicinal plants that are relevant

within the community, and that also inform the general

schoolwork. The children I met there looked happy, healthy

and full of life.

 

Thus while the Green School, the Farm Science Centre, the

Millet Factory, Ethnic Café and other resources serve the

daily needs of the DDS community; a swathe of campaigns,

research projects, networks, programmes and other

imaginative and far-reaching works-in-progress are the

hallmark of this enterprising and inspiring organisation.

And the source of this creative fountain was the gold struck

by the DDS when it listened to the concerns of the poor

dalit women of Medak.

 

This model for the regeneration of traditional agriculture

could recreate sustainable food production anywhere. I t has

evolved from three guiding principles: Gender justice,

environmental-soundness and people's knowledge.

 

To find out more visit

http://www.ddsindia.com

 

 

========================================================

This article can be found on the I-SIS website at

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/

 

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Science in Society, and would like to continue receiving

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ISIS is an independent, not-for-profit organisation

dedicated to providing critical public information on

cutting edge science, and to promoting social accountability

and ecological sustainability in science.

 

 

========================================================

CONTACT DETAILS

 

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NW1 OXR

 

telephone: [44 1994 231623] [44 20 8452 2729] [44 20

7272 5636]

 

General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing List

press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

 

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