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By Stephen Bartlett of Agricultural Missions.
Stephen was accompanied in a tour of rural Haitian organizations February
28 through March 4, 2011 by Ruth Farrell, the Director of the Hunger
Program of the
Presbyterian Church U.S.A.
HELP THE HAITIANS REBUILD THEIR SOCIETY
TODAY!!
Photo by: Stephen Bartlett

Women continue to play an
important role in agriculture on the island called by the
Native Taino
people "Ayiti" This woman is harvesting bananas and yams in
this lush garden of plenty.
Standing up to
testify in rural Haitian hamlets with names like Bayonnais, la Victoire,
Acul du Nord, Ennery, Renquitte, Milot, Colladere, Papay, peasant after
peasant stood to speak, driving home the point far better than any polished
spreadsheet could have. (We already had the spread sheets in hand, that
showed 86 tons of locally purchased seed distributed along with 15,000
machetes and hoes among thousands of farmer families in 10 provinces of
Haiti!) The seeds and tools program was exactly what was needed in their
lives in the months following the catastrophic earthquake. Peasants of every
age, both women and men, proudly expressed their gratitude for empowering
them to shoulder their responsibilities and provide relief to the rural
hungry and to the large number of displaced persons who they now feed and
house. (Note: a large proportion of those displaced from Port-au-Prince have
chosen to remain in the countryside, testimony perhaps to the success of the
support for these vital programs.) In fact, for most, the peas, beans, corn,
rice, peanuts, and sorghum seeds and the extra tools were all that stood
between their loved ones, and a grinding hunger and mortifying defeat.
The seeds allowed them to act, in the face of great need and suffering. It
allowed them to shoulder their responsibilities to produce and nourish, and
not to succumb to the overwhelming circumstances with despair, despite an
extremely challenging context. In addition, the seed and tool program was a
stimulus to movement building and increased unity, as FONDAMA member
organizations reached out at local and regional levels to include community
organizations of all kinds, women´s groups, credit cooperatives,
un-affiliated farmers groups, even considered ´rivals´ among the
beneficiaries of the seed and tool purchases. The main criteria for
disbursement of seeds and tools was that recipients be farmers with land
access who were feeding victims of the earthquake of January 12, 2010.
Funding for the purchase of local Haitian seeds and tools and for training
tinsmiths to produce metallic silos for community seed banks as part of a
national strategic plan was provided by Agricultural Missions, the
Presbyterian Hunger Program (PHP), and the Presbyterian Disaster Assistance
program. The PHP and Ag Missions Haiti partner FONDAMA administered the
purchase and distribution of the seeds and tools across 10 departments of
Haiti, and undertook the training of 60 tinsmiths for production of silos
for community seed banks (100 silos have been produced thus far.).
Arriving in a cloud of dry-season dust in backcountry Artibonite, Leogane,
the North or Central Plateau, without fail groups of up to 65 rural
individuals were gathered to welcome our delegation of two, and to express
their gratitude for not forgetting them in their supreme moment of need.
They also took the opportunity to ask for continued accompaniment as they
move to creating or consolidating community seed banks, and to expand
further their staple food production. The depletion of their seed stocks and
any saved cash that resulted from the arrival of multitudes of displaced
victims of devastated Port-au-Prince, put the Haitian farmers in a double
bind. Already living on the margins economically, the new reality for the
Haitian peasantry of having to feed and shelter more than half a million
destitute and shell-shocked persons threatened to overwhelm them.
A peasant by the name of Christophe from the well-watered north put it this
way. "When the quake destroyed Port-au-Prince in 90 seconds of horror last
January, some 18,000 victims flooded the communities surrounding Acul du
Nord/St. Michel. ¨Many of us had to do search and rescue trips to the
capital, searching, sometimes, in vain, for our loved ones and their
neighbors. Everyone in Haiti was touched. As so many displaced relatives and
even unknown persons flooded our communities, we had to dig deep, literally
to the bottom of the barrel, to try to feed and shelter them all. Our
hospitals were overflowing, our churches converted into shelters, our humble
houses filled to overflowing. The January and February planting season
passed us by. April-May when it was time to plant again, we were barely back
on our feed and we hadn´t a single seed on hand to sow, or money to buy
seed. That is when 20 pounds of black bean seed, 12 pounds of corn, 20
pounds of peanut seed and a new hoe and machete came to us, thanks to your
organizations. We couldn´t have gotten that seed any other way. We were
broke. We want to thank you for helping make that happen, for my family and
for so many other families. It wasn´t as much as we could have planted, but
it made a crop! We hope you will continue to keep Haitian farmers in your
hearts and minds. Many others still need seeds and tools. And we need grain
silos so our organizations will never be without planting seed again.¨
Unwittingly, in what was aimed to be a ¨well-timed¨ gesture in terms of
international public relations, an infamous transnational corporatiion
provided a memorable, menacing and TRULY TIMELY object lesson to Haitian
farmers (and to the world). The gesture of Monsanto corporation threatened
the seed autonomy still remaining among rural communities in Haiti,
threatening what remained of Haitian´s well-adapted homegrown crop seeds. On
May 13 Monsanto corporation announced that it was entering the Haitian
market for the first time, in the form of a ¨gift to the Haitian people, of
460 tons of imported hybrid seed, at the explicit invitation of USAID, and
its local WINNER organization run by a former Duvalierist, that would be
facilitating distribution. Organized Haitian farmers were indignant and
outraged. Leaders of FONDAMA member organizations and Via Campesina Haiti
declared this a mortal and ¨poisoned gift. In fact, most of the seeds were
coated with a pesticide banned in the U.S., despite the practice of
hand-sowing of seed among Haitian subsistence farmers. And while Monsanto
claimed the seeds were not transgenic (GMOs), they were hybrids, which
cannot be replanted after the first harvest, thus setting up a dependency on
the company once local seed stocks have expired.
The farmer organization known as the MPP (Mouvement Paysan de Papay) with
rural allies and members of Via Campesina Haiti called for a national march
on June 4 to protest this aggressive maneuver by Monsanto, known to every
member worldwide of Via Campesina as a predatory enemy of family farmers and
peasants. Within weeks, a national march was organized and involved over
15,000 peasants who marched from Papay to Hinche in Central Plateau
department (province). 200 representatives of peasant organizations from all
across Haiti traveled to remote Papay, as did many international solidarity
folk. Our own Agricultural Missions sent retired US farmer Sam Smith to bear
witness. We also provided $3,000 in funds for the materials purchased to
enliven the protest, straw hats, banners, placards, etc...The bulk of the
marchers arrived on foot and on motorcycles and mules, from a radius of
several hours walking distance from Papay.
A national Haitian television channel (channel 11) as well as a phalanx of
journalists, including an Al-Jazeera reporter stationed in Port-au-Prince,
turned up in rural Papay. News of the vibrant mass march and the symbolic
burning of a sack full of the eerily pinkish-coated seeds circulated the
planet, and penetrated into the hearts and minds of Haitian farmers, for
whom after the catastrophe, a lack of native seed could have resulted in
their literally becoming ¨undone.¨ Seeds, people realized with new fervor,
were strategic. Local control of seeds was essential. The ancestral DNA in
staple crop seeds represented nothing less than freedom from subjugation and
eventual bankruptcy and failure as farmers.
Haitian farmers enthusiasm and commitment to the seed program launched by
the coalition called FONDAMA (Hand in Hand Foundation) surprised even their
optimistic leaders. Many had questioned whether farmer recipients of seed
would return seeds from their subsequent harvests, to replenish the stocks
so that others in need could also get high quality local seed. Their doubts
were proven wrong by the positive response, and tons and tons of harvested
seeds were returned from the first crops to be distributed again, or stored
until the next rainy season, and some of the crops are still drying in the
fields up north. Now the work of the newly-trained tinsmiths becomes
critical, to produce the metallic silos where seed can be safely and
securely stored, protected from insects and rats, sealed from above by
layers of neem leaves and wild chilies, or mixed with wood ash. Farmers are
people of hope at each new planting season, and Haitian farmers hopes to
produce their way out of their poverty is rising like a tide.
Those of us who helped get the word out to donors in the U.S. and Canada--
and those donors included many individuals as well as church program
agencies and solidarity NGOs-- should be proud of providing the kind of
support that empowers and leads to long-term well-being and sustainability
in the long uphill climb of the Haitian peasantry to restore and revitalize
Haitian agriculture. We who got to tour the rural communities shouldering
their burdens with courage, have no doubt whatsoever that Haiti can feed
itself, if given half a chance and an equitable share of resources for
reconstruction. We aim to continue to build the kind of international
solidarity that must fill the gap left by the failure, corruption and
dependency of the government of Haiti and of the international governments
under the UN and MINUSTAH who so far have done little or nothing to allow
for that to change. Haiti is faced by a choice between solidarity or
calamity! What we ask of everyone who reads this: be part of blessed
solidarity!!
Want to join this effort? Contact any of the member organizations, or point
person Stephen Bartlett,
sbartlett@ag-missions.org 502 896 9171.
To send funding,
click here to make on-line donations, or send tax-exempt
checks made out to Agricultural Missions, at 475 Riverside Drive, Rm 725,
New York, NY 10115 with Haiti Recovery in the Memo line.
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Many Haitian farmers
cling to barren hillsides to live. This hill overlooks Gonaive, where
landslides and flooding have been disastrous.

Farmer leader in Ennery, Artibonite,
surveys tree seedlings in community nursery.

Women in Milot, North Haiti, display
seeds reproduced from seed and tool program, soon to be distributed for
others
housing and feeding earthquake victims.
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