From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


CWS - Haitians Combating Food Crisis with Sustainable Agri Co-ops


From Worldwide Faith News <wfn@igc.org>
Date Thu, 24 Jul 2008 19:34:21 -0700

For Immediate Release

ARTIBONITE DEPARTMENT, HAITI, July 24, 2008 -- Haiti and other nations continue to struggle in the grip of a worsening world food crisis. But Haitians in the island nation's remote Artibonite and Northwest regions are gaining food security, through a sustainable agriculture program supported by global humanitarian agency Church World Service and funded in part by a new grant from the U.S.-based Osprey Foundation.

The program's expansion will provide more people, particularly women, with opportunities to grow enough food for their families and increase income for other basic needs through access to credit and training. "The program was launched in 2005 following Tropical Storm Jeanne as a transition from disaster recovery to sustainable community development," says Martin Coria, Regional Director for Church World Service in Latin America and the Caribbean.

"We've seen really impressive results in terms of people building robust food production, so they can feed themselves. But more important," says Coria, "beyond basic food survival, the program has flourished in an area of severe poverty which was compounded by the devastation of the 2005 storm. Twelve agricultural community cooperatives of men and women have formed, and they continue to increase their farming skills through training and with the provision of what NGOs like to call 'agricultural inputs.' Translates as: tools, livestock, poultry and seeds." As a result of the post-storm Rural Development Program, family income is up and adult and childhood malnutrition is down, while elsewhere Haitians are rioting over lack of food. Families participating in the northwest co-op farming program are producing larger, healthier and more diversified crops--including rice--by using fertilizer, crop rotation, and cultivation methods that tackle environmental problems and prevent soil erosion.

In the northwest cooperatives, nine small agricultural loan funds and five women's microenterprise loan funds are now viable, rotating sources of micro-funding which help members expand their ventures or start new ones. CWS Haitian partner the Christian Center for Integrated Development (Sant Kretyen Pou Developman Entegre, SKDE) coordinates the food and livelihood security program locally.

SKDE director Pastor Herode Guillaumettre says, "After Hurricane Jeanne, most will remember what terrible flooding and destruction there was in Gonaives, in Artibonite. But, now, if you go to Artibonite, where food and gardens were totally destroyed, now people have gotten their gardens back.

"The farming cooperatives in Artibonite and Northwest Haiti are like a light in the communities, showing people the way to food security that will last," he says.

Guillaumettre says a new road being built into the region is literally creating a market-driven economy in the remote area. "Trucks from other areas will now be able to go in and buy food from the farm cooperatives," he says. Guillaumettre said the established co-ops are extending their project by reaching out to other farming groups. "We send people from our projects to other areas of Haiti to train other farmers so they can establish their own cooperatives, food sources, and livelihoods."

CWS's Coria says the Foods Resource Bank (FRB), a U.S.-based hunger and poverty-fighting organization, has supported the CWS program since its inception in 2005 and will continue through 2009. USAID also provided some funding in the past.

Coria notes that "more funding was needed to propel the gains and strengths of these communities to a higher and even more durable level. The new $100,000 Osprey Foundation grant will make it possible for the existing Artibonite and Northwest co-ops to increase the capital in their agricultural credit and micro-enterprise loan funds," he says, "and for new co-ops to establish new loan funds."

He says CWS will provide further business management training for participants, seen as critical for the ongoing success of the loan funds and the life of the cooperatives themselves.

"This is not just learn-how-to-plant-compost-and-irrigate agriculture for home gardens," Coria stresses. "The people of Northwest Haiti who are participating in these cooperatives are learning hard core business success models." The new Osprey Foundation grant to CWS will fund training in results-based management, efficiency, and practical outcome measurement--all those things successful business enterprises have to master.
'Mud patties won't do'

"In the case of Haiti and Haitian farmers, results-based management will translate into, 'We can eat now and next year, have healthier children, create family income, and build an economically stronger community through cooperatives,'" says Coria.

"The current food crisis has heaped intolerable scarcity on the existing complex, chronic and critical food needs of the people of Haiti. Eating mud patties just won't do.

"We wish more Haitians could be strengthened and could feed themselves, through programs like those in Artibonite and Northwest."

Church World Service is an international relief and development agency, funded by public donations, grants, and by 35 member denominations in the U.S.

The Osprey Foundation also is a supporter of the CWS Weapons for Water program in Mozambique and of the agency's Emergency Response Revolving Fund, which most recently assisted Kenyans displaced and threatened by this year's post-election violence there.

The Chicago-based Foods Resource Bank works on behalf of 25 member Christian denominations and agencies to mobilize and increase resources that support smallholder, agricultural food security programs in some of the world's poorest areas.

Other faith-based organizations including the Mennonite Central Committee (MCC), Reformed Church World Service (RCA-RCWS), the United Church of Christ, and United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) also have supported the program, with Church World Service as lead agency.

Make a contribution to support Church World Service sustainable agriculture and food security programs at: https://secure.churchworldservice.org/catalog/display.php?product_id=89

Church World Service
475 Riverside Srive
New York, New York 10115
(212) 870-2676


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