Newsline: Global Food Crisis Fund hosts gathering for Foods Resource Bank

From CoBNews <CoBNews@brethren.org>
Date Tue, 1 Mar 2011 17:26:12 -0600

Newsline: Church of the Brethren News Service, News Director Cheryl

Brumbaugh-Cayford, 800-323-8039 ext. 260, cobnews@brethren.org

Global Food Crisis Fund hosts gathering for Foods Resource Bank

(March 1, 2011) Elgin, IL -- Growing project leaders gathered at a meeting

of the Foods Resource Bank hosted by the Church of the Brethren's Global

Food Crisis Fund (GFCF) on Feb. 15. The meeting brought together some

35 farmers and representatives of churches involved in growing projects in

>northern Illinois and southern Wisconsin.

Foods Resource Bank growing projects in US communities supply funds for

food security and agricultural development and education programs carried

out around the world. Brethren congregations participate in the Foods

Resource Bank through the sponsorship of the GFCF.

The Feb. 15 gathering at the Church of the Brethren General Offices was one

of seven simultaneous winter gatherings conducted by Foods Resource Bank

board members across the country. Other regional meetings were held in

Akron, Pa.; Archbold, Ohio; St. Louis, Mo.; Decatur, Ill.; Kansas City, Kan.;

>and San Antonio, Texas.

Foods Resource Bank members Gary Cook of Bread for the World and Brian

Backe of Catholic Relief Services joined GFCF manager Howard Royer in

planning and hosting the Elgin observance. The keynote presentation was by

Roger Thurow, co-author of "Enough: Why the World's Poorest Starve in an

Age of Plenty" and a former journalist at the "Wall Street Journal."

Thurow's interest in food and agriculture began when he was on a trip to

Kenya with a group of farmers from Ohio, and first saw African farmers

through the eyes of American farmers, he told the gathering. The experience

led to his current writing project, a book on the smallholder African farmer.

Thurow is spending time with a group of subsistence farmers in Kenya,

finding out what their day-to-day life is like as they try to raise crops to 
feed

>and support their families.

"What is it like not to be able to grow enough food to feed your family?" he

asked. Most of the farmers he is following for the book are women, because

women make up the majority of smallholder farmers in Africa. Thurow's

next trip to Kenya is this planting season, when he will wait with the farmers

>for the rains to come.

The challenges these farmers face are many: small plots of land, averaging

less than an acre to one or two acres each; little use of hybrid seed; little

education about how to plant and care for a crop; lack of good storage

facilities; lack of access to markets; difficulties with transportation and

infrastructure; and vulnerability to weather and drought.

"Outrage and inspire" was the "mantra" for his first book "Enough,"

written with co-author Scott Kilman: "Outrage that we have brought

hunger with us into the 21st century. Hunger is one of the great problems

of the world that can be conquered.... It can be the singular achievement

of our age," he insisted. "So, enough is enough!"

"Captivate and motivate" is the mantra for his book on the African farmer.

This is because the problems of Africa may potentially affect the food

situation in the whole world, Thurow said. Experts have said that by the

year 2050 the world must double its food production in order to prevent

mass hunger. "Where will this quantum leap come from?" Thurow asked.

"Africa is the place where this kind of improvement can still happen."

International support for agricultural development in Africa is crucial, to

move the continent from subsistence to sustainability, he said. He added

a plea for the US government to maintain its budget for development

work in Africa through US AID and development aid. "We have the

technology, so what we need is this political will."

Quoting from Kenyan farmers who have chosen a name meaning "We

have decided" for their group, Thurow congratulated the Foods Resource

Bank for being among those who have decided to fight hunger. "What I

have decided is I have to go and man the front ramparts of the hunger

fight with all of you," he said in closing. "In the 21st century, nobody,

particularly the small farmers of Africa, should be dying of hunger."

Following his presentation, Thurow fielded questions about other issues,

ranging from what the price of food should be in our world economic

system, to crop diversification. Many people stayed on after the meeting

ended to talk further with Thurow and to buy copies of "Enough," which

is available through Brethren Press (call 800-441-3712).

For more about the Global Food Crisis Fund go to

www.brethren.org/site/PageServer?pagename=go_give_food_crisis.

For more about the Foods Resource Bank go to www.foodsresourcebank.org.

The Church of the Brethren is a Christian denomination committed to

continuing the work of Jesus peacefully and simply, and to living out its faith

in community. The denomination is based in the Anabaptist and Pietist faith

traditions and is one of the three Historic Peace Churches. It celebrated its

300th anniversary in 2008. It counts some 123,000 members across the

United States and Puerto Rico, and has missions and sister churches in Nigeria,

Brazil, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and India.

># # #

>For more information contact:

>Cheryl Brumbaugh-Cayford

>Director of News Services

>Church of the Brethren

>1451 Dundee Ave., Elgin, IL 60120

>800-323-8039 ext. 260

>cobnews@brethren.org