Action, not words!
There have been too many false-starts and failures in Africa
and, as a result, many of our people suffer from a poor self image. This is no
basis for development. But there is another Africa, not yet known to the
mass-media and the world at large, which recognizes that Africa can survive if
Africans draw on their own traditions, energy and creativity to become
self-sufficient.
Looking at Africa today, the continent's major problems are lack
of food, poor transport and unemployment. In major cities like Lagos, Abidjan,
Nairobi and Harare, food prices are going up largely because of the cost of
transporting food from rural areas. At the same time there are more mouths to
feed, more hands without work and more people without income. The Songhai
Environmental Rehabilitation Centre has been developed as model farm and
training ground to help young Africans to meet these challenges. Our main
objectives are to develop low input and therefore low cost, food production
systems at the places where the food is most needed - in the cities and in those
rural areas where food production is failing. Simultaneously this will provide
employment for the many who need a source of food, if not income as well.
The Songhai Project is both a centre of what we might call
"barefoot" research and is a centre of production. The farms and gardens have to
be self-supporting economically in order to survive and we believe that it is
essential that we train young people within this atmosphere of economic
viability for their own future benefit. Our production system integrates crop,
livestock and fish production: waste water from the fish ponds irrigates our
cassava, corn, vegetables and fruit, while small fish provide protein
supplements for our animals; animal manure, crop wastes and water plants
generate biogas that serves as the project's primary energy source; and the
fish, fruit vegetables and other crops, together with our poultry, rabbits,
sheep and goats, help feed the staff and the trainees. We have also responded to
the needs of those without any land who wish to produce some of their food by
incorporating techniques of growing plants in containers such as old tyres and
boxes filled with soil and even on hollow blocks set in walls. In many towns and
cities too there is vacant waste land, which urban authorities could make
available to local residents, even on a temporary basis, to grow food.
To-date, about one hundred young people from several countries
have graduated from a rigorous two-year training programme in which they have
learned about complementary farming techniques, making their own tools and
managing their farm business financially. Many more people have attended shorter
training courses and most have returned to their homes in town and countryside
to put their learning into practice and, hopefully, to pass on their learning
and enthusiasm to others. They form a network of Songhai graduates with whom we
keep in touch, give advice and respond to their feedback.
The overall aim of our work is to lower the cost of production,
enhance sustainability and discover or develop new and more appropriate low-cost
inputs. Some of the activities include composting, biosolar drying,
pharmacopoaeia, earthworm production, local chicken production and insect larvae
for fish production. Technologies that we have developed at Songhai, such as
organic bacteria, have begun to be tested at nearby farms.
Our overall productivity, which now incorporates three separate
centres, has increased by 10% in the past three years. In addition to this,
Benin's Agriculture Departments have created 15 centres modelled after Songhai,
and nascent projects have been launched in Nigeria, Ghana and Togo.
Part of our success at Songhai has been achieved because we have
been willing to learn from our mistakes; we are not afraid of admitting our
mistakes and pulling back. Songhai is not so much a "how to do it" institution
as a "how to be" organization. We don't write a lot of books or articles,
because so many of the masses we hope to reach are illiterate and anyway they
often live out of reach of publications. Instead, we try to ensure that the
things we do speak for themselves: everyone can "read", whether they see a
demonstration at Songhai's three main sites or on a neighbours land, they see
concrete results and they can say "Yes, this is possible. Let's do it!"
The benefit of the Songhai Centre's philosophy and practice is
that it goes beyond even providing food self-sufficiency and employment: it
encourages community action. This kind of production can be a lot of fun; people
learn from it, they can collaborate and work with their neighbours to share
ideas, exchange seeds, plants and produce and safeguard each others garden
plants. Finally, it helps to feed people and make money because even if
production is not sold, the money saved on not buying food is money earned.
Our philosophy at Songhai is to create solidarity and
self-respect in our communities, as well as self-sufficiency. We can share so
many things in life but something that cannot be shared is
poverty.