In Prey Veng, Cambodia, people have grown enough
rice to feed themselves for as long as anyone can remember. Along with rice,
they traditionally ate wild greens, fish, eels, snakes and other animals from
the rice paddy, as well as fruits, nuts, and roots from the forest, and meat
from animals they hunt. This diet gave them good health all year round, except
in times of war or flooding.
More than 40 years ago, the government began to
promote new farming methods to increase production of a few main crops, like
rice, for export. These new methods were part of a worldwide change in
agriculture, the deceptively named Green Revolution. The Green Revolution
encouraged the use of chemical pesticides and fertilizers to produce more rice
than traditional methods. It also used large irrigation systems and machinery
to plant and harvest.
When they started using these new farming methods,
the people of Prey Veng were able to produce large amounts of rice to sell.
They used the money to improve their houses, build roads, and buy personal
goods like clothes and radios. The villagers stopped using animal manure,
stopped rotating rice with dry season crops, and stopped using other
traditional farming methods as well.
The new methods worked very well for growing large
areas of a single crop, and increased the amount of rice they had. But over
time, they discovered that their land and the way they ate had changed.
Herbicides killed the wild greens the villagers had eaten before. Fish and
other wild foods grew scarce. Year by year they spent more money on chemicals
and had nothing but rice to eat. Before long, the soil in their fields no
longer supported healthy crops, and rice yields began to go down.
Coming together to discuss the growing hunger, the
villagers recalled the old ways of farming that used mixed crops, field
rotations, and natural fertilizers to grow crops all year round. They saw many
advantages to the traditional methods, and decided to change back. They also
began trying new methods like planting rice plants closer together and growing
different crops in the same field
No comments:
Post a Comment