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PHILIPPINES: Organic Rice |
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While always seeing my primary role as a Columban missioner in the Philippines to bring the "Good News" that Jesus loves us, died for us, and wants us to live for Him (John 6:24-35) how I carry this out takes many forms.
One form would be helping farmers to grow their crops sustainably.
When I was young, after Mass on Sunday I cycled home to our farm and then spent the rest of day with my neighbour friends roaming about the countryside. When hungry there was always an abundance of fruit and vegetables growing in the fields that we just helped ourselves to. When thirsty we just knelt by the nearest stream and drank straight from the clear water. Now with so much fertilizer, slurry, insecticide and pesticide being put on the fields by the farmers it would be too dangerous to drink the contaminated water.
In my parish in the Philippines I encourage the farmers to grow their crops organically and not to use artificial fertilizer, pesticide, and insecticide. I have a programme teaching them how to make organic fertilizer for their banana and rice and corn crops. We collect different type of rice seeds especially of the older varieties. We now have collected seventy-four different varieties of rice and sometimes we cook a number of different varieties and allow people to taste them so that they can choose the one they want to plant in their rice field. We also teach them how to recognize the different leaves and herbs and the ones to use for making cough and other medicines and how to make jam and preserve fruit and vegetables.
One of the problems of rice farmers is how to get rice dried after the harvest. In one village in the centre of the rice-growing area I bought an old cockpit that was no longer used for cock-fighting, the Philippines national sport, and built a solar drier for drying the rice. Whoever hires the drier for the day empties out his sacks of palay, unmilled rice straight from the thrasher, early in the morning and the heat of the sun dries it all day. There is a rental fee for using the drier and the money collected helps to maintain their village church and helps to support the catechists in their village school.
By Fr Damien McKenna SSC
Ordained in 1969, Fr Damien has served more than 40 years in the Philippines.
Photos courtesy of Fr Damien McKenna
[Far East Magazine]
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