I can’t believe it is already mid-July! Since my last post we took things into our own hands and helped re-develop the program. We were clear with what wasn’t working, why and what we wanted it. And I think we finally got it. This past week the program began to step in regards to fulfilling our expectations and needs and I have high hopes for the remainder of the program.
We totally revamped the schedule, which is still a work in progress but within the next two weeks a completed schedule and syllabus for the reminder of the program will be completed. Marianne and I decided to take one step back on the compost project and first improve the recycling at Ein Zivan. Before starting a new, and more radical, project we wanted to make sure what they already had was working at full potential. Personally, coming from a green family and after living in Burlington VT, I need to remind myself I am working with a different culture. For example, in my head the Kibbutz is tiny so no matter where you live the recycling center is close, especially with a car, but most residents don’t share this feeling. The group also decided to scratch Gan Kipod, and instead of waiting for the community to clear out the empty space of the old bunker so we can build there, we are just going to start building our ideas near the new children’s playground. This way it is more accessible to the community and we can start right away.
And lastly, I have found a personal project! I finally found ‘that thing’ that I combines my interests together. It started out as a research idea for a Fulbright grant, but has turned quickly into a passion that I plan to go with whether I am accepted as a Fulbright scholar or not. I am interested in exploring current small scale organic agriculture practices, specifically bio-intensive methods, in India and their potential for providing rural poor communities with the tools to become more self-sufficient. My vision is to help provide the means for communities to improve their overall long term well being through growing their own organic vegetables. This has the potential to improve their economic, social, health and environmental situation while empowering and creating independence for communities and individuals. My idea is to spend my time in Israel, and when I return to the states studying bio-intensive farming. Bio-intensive farming focuses on gaining the maximum yields with the minimal amount of land and effort. Bio-intensive takes a holistic approach to farming and focuses not just on growing nutritious food, but growing soil and community. The idea is to create a closed loop system that is sustainable in the long run.
Once I get to India I would like to explore what is happening with current small scale organic farming and take what I have learned and apply it with the B’nei Ephriam community I spent two weeks with in Andra Pradesh. I am interested in giving the community the knowledge and tools to create a sustainable long term practice that they can then teach others. My goal is to create a model that can then be applied in different communities all over the world.
I am thrilled that I have found something that combines my academic interests of environment, economics and poverty with my personal interests of healthy food, community development and working in developing countries. I am especially excited about returning to India, and the having the opportunity to help the B’nei Ephraim community that I grew to love so much. This project has really given me something to get excited about and I am looking forward to digging deeper into my project development.
