Terra Madre notes: Shiva to address the G8?

Via video, Italian official announces Slow Food will have a G8 audience 2

Terra Madre 2008: Grist reports from Italy on the slow food scene

Turin, Italy -- Perhaps the most surreal -- and newsworthy -- moment of Terra Madre came during the closing ceremony last Sunday, with some 7,000 to 8,000 people packed into an Olympic stadium. As with other large-scale gatherings during Terra Madre, the speeches were translated into eight languages on the fly, into little headsets.

That's when we learned that the Italian government had maneuvered to get an audience for Terra Madre officials at an upcoming meeting of the G8 nations. We found out in a dramatic and even comical way.

A youngish guy wearing a dark, sleek suit played emcee for the evening. It was kind of like watching an Italian variety show -- he zipped back and forth across the stage, cracking little jokes as he introduced speakers.

Everything was going swimmingly -- until he introduced Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini, who would address us not in person but via taped video on the large screens suspended from the ceiling. The address would last 1,000 seconds, the emcee informed us with jarring specificity; we should listen especially to the last 100 seconds.

The Frattini video opened to polite silence. He said some nice and banal things about Slow Food, regretting his inability to attend Terra Madre. Then he began to drone on about the global food crisis, and you could feel the audience getting tense. At some point, he seemed to praise the G8's response to the crisis -- the hundreds of millions of dollars in aid money it had pledged.

Now the crowd turned restive. To roughly sum up the prevailing assessment of the G8's performance with regard to the global food crisis: the rich nations had come up with too little aid to make much of a difference, and taken no action to reckon with the crisis' core causes, such as Western biofuel programs, unfair trade, the systematic squashing of small-scale farmers, etc.

As the minister -- i.e., his projected image -- went on about the G8, isolated whistles began to cut the air. Soon, loud jeers rang out from around the auditorium, punctuated by shrill whistles, scornful hand clapping, and the loud stamping of feet. Some folks theatrically turned their backs; one man sitting near me, an aging Italian hippie, thundered again and again, "No!"

Before you knew it, the hapless minister's 1,000 seconds were up -- and the final 300 or so had been drowned out by the collective outburst. Despite the anger, the mood was jolly; people were cackling at the spectacle of the politician's ill-received speech.

Retaking the stage, the poor emcee seemed in a panic. "Don't jeer me," he beseeched. "I'm just the announcer!" He quickly summoned Carlo Petrini, who took the role of a scolding but indulgent uncle.

He shot a mock glare at the crowd, more amused than angry -- but clearly disappointed. The politician had spoken for too long, Petrni admitted, because that's what politicians do. But we should have listened!

Then came a lecture about the importance of listening to people you don't agree with. And then: If you had listened to the end of the speech, you would know what the minister had announced: That Terra Madre representatives would be invited to address the G8 on behalf of the Italian government.

He hinted that Vandana Shiva and Alice Waters would be giving speeches before the G8. Shouldn't we accept this invitation, he intoned? The crowd roared again, this time in approval.

Perhaps learning a lesson from the politician, Petrini kept his remarks uncharacteristically brief, and turned the stage over to a series of excellent musicians from all over the world. For the next hour or two, Terra Madre turned into a frenetic dance party.

Grist food editor Tom Philpott farms and cooks at Maverick Farms, a sustainable-agriculture nonprofit and small farm in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina. Follow my Twitter feed; contact me at tphilpott[at]grist[dot]org.

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  1. Steph Larsen Posted 12:42 pm
    03 Nov 2008

    Co-opting the messageI had a slightly different take on the disapproval of the crowd during the politician's talk.
    I understood the unrest to be not just about the G8's reaction to the food crisis, but to food and farming as a whole as it currently exists. The economic policies of the WTO and IMF have driven farmers off the land and into starvation. Instead of growing food to sustain themselves, they are largely exploited by unfair trade agreements.
    I thought this was why people were angry, and it was because of the injustices perpetuated by the G8 that caused many to rise in protest.
    I could be wrong though...it was pretty noisy in there.
    My greater concern, though, was Carlo Petrini's response. I thought he stepped dangerously close to losing some trust by suggesting that Slow Food present to the G8 and scolding people who protested the speech. People have a right to disagree with the G8, and he said he understood that. What he failed to recognize however is that by accepting an invitation to speak at the G8, Slow Food opens its new-found political and food justice messages being co-opted.
    I have a lot of faith in Vandana Shiva, whom Patrini said may have a chance to speak to the G8. In a workshop at Terra Madre, she said (and I'm paraphrasing) to only make alliances where you do not have to compromise your principles. I couldn't agree more.
    I wonder if the G8 is an alliance Slow Food can join without having to compromise. Having gained a level of standing as an organization, I would like to see Slow Food continue to push for an equitable food system as an independent voice instead of an insider. I think that's when true change will come.
  2. ergosum Posted 4:20 am
    21 Nov 2008

    We will doThe crowd jeered at Frattini not just because he was delivering for far too long occasionally obnoxious political platitudes with an intonation that would have make an elephant bored, but because he is a Minister of Berlusconi's government, simply anathema for most Italians present at the closing Ceremony of Terra Madre.
    As for the value of Terra Madre [not Slow Food] talking before the powerfuls of the Planet, I dunno. Maybe they'll throw down some small piece of legislation from the table - after they have eaten the cake. It will be good, anyway. But I believe the same as the Native from New Zealand (if I remember correctly)who spoke afterwards: we should not trust the politicians, nor we need them. We'll do everything ourselves.
    Enzo Pollono

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