|
|
||
Have a Peasant TomorrowChavannes Jean-Baptiste ensures a future for Haitian farmers22 Apr 2005
Chavannes Jean-Baptiste.
Photo: Goldman Environmental Prize.
Yet Chavannes Jean-Baptiste, the founder of the Peasant Movement of Papay, has hope for the environment and people of Haiti. An agronomist, he has spent more than three decades training tens of thousands of farmers to use water-saving irrigation systems, natural fertilizers and pesticides, and simple erosion-prevention techniques. He's also fought for legal and economic justice for rural Haitians. Jean-Baptiste's efforts have exacted a great personal cost: he has faced several assassination attempts, and was forced into exile from 1993 to 1994. But his work has also resulted in the planting of more than 20 million fruit and forest trees and, he says, fostered a strong sense of solidarity among the subsistence farmers in his area. "They've come to understand that together, they can change the way they live," he says. Jean-Baptiste was awarded a 2005 Goldman Environmental Prize at a ceremony in San Francisco on April 18. He spoke with Grist through a translator. I began to read, and do a lot of research, and from this I began to discover my own way of educating. I began to realize that the peasantry had problems with divisions among themselves, and that they were extremely fatalistic, and that these problems and issues were holding them back. Little by little, I developed a method of education and organization. I started in 1973 with two small groups, and now we have a movement of 60,000 people.
Jean-Baptiste at the training center he runs in Papay, Haiti.
Photo: Ana Fuentes.
So we began by addressing the immediate needs of the peasant, then moved into other areas. We fought for peasants to have justice in the courts, struggled with them against unfair taxation, and fought with them against the usury system -- which sometimes charges people 300 percent interest per year. We now have a credit union, so peasants can borrow money without paying such high interest rates. The stocking of seeds for the future allows peasants to make a greater profit from production, and training in organic and sustainable farming has increased the capacity of farmers.
It's these kinds of struggles, against all kinds of abuses, that have caused the peasants to come together in solidarity.
Thanks to Jean-Baptiste's movement, sustainable farming is on the rise.
Photo: Jim Iacona.
|
Also in Grist
The Week's Most Popular
![]() From the Archives
Mine Sweeper, by Michelle Nijhuis. Former journalist Stephanie Roth is battling against a gold mine in Romania.
The Day After Tamayo, by Michelle Nijhuis. Father José Andrés Tamayo Cortez guides the fight for Honduran forests.
Leaf Those Plants Alone, by Michelle Nijhuis. An African wildlife reserve is saved, thanks to Corneille Ewango.
|
|
You are not logged in. Thus, you cannot post a comment. If you have a Gristmill account, log in below. If you don't have a Gristmill account, well, by all means go make one! Meet you back here in five.