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The Good Food Revolution
The lush landscape of Hawai‘i once offered abundant food. What can these islands teach us about food and sufficiency?
The island of Kaua‘i is one of the most beautiful and fragile places on earth. From above, it looks like a vibrant green flower, lush and pulsing with life, floating in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. The Hawaiian tourist industry calls it "The Garden Isle," comparing it to the Garden of Eden. The image of Hawai‘i has always been sold as a "paradise." But there is another side to life on this island, one that visitors rarely see.
The west side of this tiny island is home to the U.S. military's Pacific Missile Range and testing grounds, part of the longstanding military occupation of the Hawaiian islands, and to the headquarters of giant agrochemical corporations Syngenta and Dupont. These corporations test and produce genetically modified crops on former sugar plantation lands here and throughout Hawai‘i, along with toxic herbicides, insecticides, and fertilizers. It is the very worst of America's "agrochemical military industrial complex," imposed on the ancient homelands of a rich traditional farming and fishing culture, in the midst of some of the world's most precious biodiversity.
When I visited the west side of Kaua‘i in 2006, the local newspapers were full of reports of children from Waimea Canyon School who had been sickened by chemicals used on nearby test plots. As many as 60 people were affected, including teachers and staff. It happened again in 2007, with school children suffering nausea, headaches, and dizziness. In 2008, for the third time in three years, chemicals being tested for industrial agriculture sickened children and adults and sent them to clinics and the emergency room with tears in their eyes, holding their heads in their hands, or vomiting. The corporations responsible for the tests deny any role in the incidences. But the open air testing of chemicals and genetically modified crops is a now a persistent worry for people living in this small rural community. Local activists have suggested that the welcome sign at the Kaua‘i airport be changed to warn tourists of what is going on there: "Welcome to the Mutant Garden Island." Instead of being a source of health and well-being for the land and people, the American system of industrial agriculture has become a source of problematic food and even fear.
The connection to the military is the key to understanding how this tragedy came about. Most of the toxic chemicals used in agriculture came from the implements of war, such as nerve poisons and defoliants developed during World War II. And our military has been repeatedly used to impose our system of industrial agriculture on other lands, depriving traditional farmers of their livelihoods and redirecting their natural resources to the use of U.S. business interests. American plantation owners used the military to force the monarchy of Hawai‘i out of power. The takeover of Hawai‘i-the imposition of plantation agriculture on Hawai‘i's traditional system and the conversion of the Hawaiian people to a Western lifestyle-is a case history and a warning for all of us concerned about the future of food. We are facing an urgent problem: Given global warming, growing populations, and declining natural resources, how will we feed ourselves?
Before colonization, Hawaiians had a sophisticated system of land, water, and ocean resource use that fed populations equal to or even greater than those on several of the islands today (excluding the urban populations of O‘ahu). Now, residents of Hawai‘i import 85 percent of their food. The descendants of the first Hawaiians, like most native peoples who have been colonized, suffer from some of the worst poverty and diet-related health problems of anyone living in the United States.
The food being imported into Hawai‘i is produced, processed, packaged, and transported using enormous amounts of fossil fuels. By one measure, the current U.S. food system uses 10 times more energy than it produces in the form of food calories. Even if you like industrial agriculture, its built-in obsolescence is a problem. When oil production peaks, and prices rise again, as they inevitably must, food in Hawai‘i will become unaffordable. What will happen when the gas pumps and grocery store shelves are empty? This is a question all of us will face, sooner or later, since we are all on what David Brower called "Earth Island," a small planet floating in a sea of space.
A Storied Land Mythologists like Joseph Campbell tell us that many creation myths are stories about how a food plant or animal came to people, usually as a gift from their creator. But invariably, these gifts came with instructions about maintaining respect for and reciprocity with the sources of one's food, to assure its continuing productivity. These stories are central to the formation of a culture's core values. And they affect us now, not just in how we feed ourselves, but in how we relate to the natural world and each other.
A Hopi creation story, as told by Frank Waters in The Book of the Hopi, is a good example, illustrating the values inherent in the choices we make. As Waters explains, the continuity of the Hopi people comes from these values and the way corn forms the sacred center of their lives, kept alive in ritual and practices to this day.
Since the beginning of their existence, the Hopi have emerged through several worlds. Whenever they were overwhelmed by wickedness or corruption, their world would be destroyed. Later, they would emerge into the next world. At each emergence, the Creator would give them corn for sustenance. When the people entered the Fourth World, the one we are living in now, the Creator decided to find out how much greed and ignorance there still was among these humans. Many ears of corn were laid out of all different shapes, sizes, and colors. The people had divided into many races, and each was told to choose, according to its wisdom, the corn they would take with them into the Fourth World. They rushed forward and took different corn ears-long ears, fat ears, and ears of different colors. The Hopi held back and waited. All that was left for them was the smallest ear. But, they said, it was like "the original humble ear given them on the First World." They recognized that this corn would be the best one to help them survive the harsh desert climate where they now lived.
Traditional people worldwide have developed long-standing symbiotic relationships among themselves, their homelands, and their foods. And their farming practices are intimately adapted to the places they inhabit. All over the Americas, people developed corn varieties that were finely tuned to local conditions. According to Boone Hallberg, a botanist and one of the world's experts on corn, some of these varieties were drought-resistant; some withstood wind, crowding, local pests, and different soils; and some even fixed their own nitrogen. These plants are evidence of an incredible genius at work in the reciprocal relationships among people, plants, and place. New Mexican activist Miguel Santistevan describes how, in the Pueblos, each type of corn "drank" from its own river, producing seed that was specific to its own watershed.
One of the world's most influential creation stories comes from the Book of Genesis in the Bible. It is often told incorrectly, without the warnings and prohibitions that are in the story-as if the children of Adam and Eve were entitled to control creation. Whether you read this story literally or metaphorically, it has had a powerful impact on Western thought. Many scholars believe that our current environmental conditions came about because our society interpreted this story as a license to dominate nature. When told this way, the development of our military-industrial system of agriculture makes sense. We can see the long arc of history, the search-and-destroy missions throughout the ages, including manifest destiny and the conquest of native peoples, their lands, and their well-developed integrated food systems.
And the good, no, the really wonderful news, is that all over the world, people are engaged in relearning traditional ways, weaving them into new life-enhancing technologies, and making essential ecological and economic reconnections.
We can see the gradual and painful dismembering of North America. Europeans brought with them a fragmented system of agriculture, breaking the sod, fencing, and buying and selling parcels of land. Piece by piece, they went about destroying the natural systems that gave this land its enormous fertility. Their ancestors had deforested many European countries, and they continued seeking sustenance by taking more than was returned, depleting the resources they used, and then moving on. After using up the larger landscapes, they now have turned to smaller frontiers-genes and molecules.
Genetic engineering in agriculture was developed as a way to squeeze more from corn, wheat, and rice, turning these plants into little machines. We demanded that these plants put out more and more for us, and pumped them full of chemicals and hormones. Now, almost 80 percent of corn grown in the United States is genetically modified. The rest is contaminated with GMOs, and the parent seed lines of corn are privately owned by the agrochemical companies. If we cared to learn, corn would have been able to teach us about generosity, adaptability, and resiliency. But rather than learn from nature, we still believe that our limited human imagination is sufficient and that we can solve systemic problems in mechanistic ways.This approach is fundamentally flawed. Production-based solutions to hunger have failed miserably. And yet the urge to control nature seems unbounded. Farmers at the beginning of the 20th century could make a decent living. They saved and exchanged seeds, and bred their own crop varieties.
Then, in the 1920s and 1930s, a growing private seed industry used the new medium of radio advertising to heavily promote commercial hybrid seeds as the way to increase production. Hybrids can be bred to increase vigor, but they do not produce seed that is "true," meaning that each year new hybrid seeds have to be purchased and planted. On-farm seed saving and plant breeding began to go out of fashion. Not content with just a good share of the seed market, seed companies began pushing for changes to the law, and by the end of the 20th century, farm-based seed saving and plant breeding ended. Now, sexually reproducing, living plants can be patented-a moral, biological, and legal outrage.
American commodity agriculture has become a bloated industrial machine dependent on chemical inputs and government subsidies to survive. Commodity farming is not about food for people. It's an extractive industry, often compared to mining. It mines the soil and pollutes the water and creates mountains and rivers of waste. Soil regenerates on a slow natural timescale, about one inch of topsoil in every 500 years. The United States is losing topsoil 13 times faster than it can be replaced, costing the nation an estimated $37.6 billion in productivity losses each year. According to a recent U.S. Geological Survey, the one billion pounds of pesticides that American farmers use every year have contaminated almost all of the nation's streams and rivers, as well as the fish living in them, with toxic cancer-causing chemicals. Fertilizers pour off farms into the Mississippi watershed, stimulating algae blooms in the Gulf of Mexico and creating a "dead zone" where nothing lives.
If science had remained publicly funded and in the hands of land grant universities committed to conducting research in the public interest, production-based innovations might have added another useful tool to farm technology. Instead, private commercial interests hijacked the research agenda and privatized its technologies. Corporations and a few foundations took over the social mechanisms for problem solving, leaving us with only for-profit solutions in the form of products. Government not only deregulated many toxic technologies; it abdicated its responsibility to protect our health and safety.
There are no brakes on this runaway technology train. The continual expansion of corporate power poses even greater looming dangers. Biotechnology, especially as used in agriculture, has been harmful enough, but nanotechnology and synthetic biology, now being developed for biofuels, promise to do far more harm than good.
Industrial agriculture contributes almost 17 percent of all greenhouse gases, along with accelerating deforestation, desertification, and profligate water use. A study released in January this year in the journal Science predicts that half of the world's population will face food shortages by the end of this century as rising temperatures, drought, and loss of soil moisture depress crop production. Who, indeed, will be feeding us then? Monsanto, with its patented "climate-ready" crops, or the organic farmer who sells at your local farmers market?
As a Native American friend of mine used to say, "Here's a little bit of native wisdom: If we don't change direction pretty soon, we'll end up right where we've been headed!"
Severing and RememberingAnother way to look at this rather dismal story is this: At every step of the way, we have disconnected and dismembered the intricate relationships that form the web of life. Recombinant DNA technology, for instance, cuts a genome, inserts foreign material, and severs the original evolutionary lineage of that organism.
The solution to all this severing and disconnection is re-membering, meaning "to put back together." This is the fundamental lesson traditional peoples keep trying to teach us. They often say that they are minding the rituals that hold the world together. They say that if we want to save the places, peoples, and plants we love, we have to remember their stories. They know that the answers we seek are already available, once we begin reweaving the social and biological webs that sustain us.
Independent science supports this interconnected approach to solving problems. The biotechnology industry asked several major international institutions like the U.N. and the World Bank to study how best to feed the world. After a four-year global study, 400 experts prepared a peer-reviewed report, adopted by 60 countries, known as The International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development. Ironically, the report said biotechnology cannot feed the world. There is now a consensus in government and the scientific community that small-scale farming, traditional knowledge, and a focus on local economic vitality and adaptable agro-ecological methods are the optimal way forward.
And the good, no, the really wonderful news, is that all over the world, people are engaged in relearning traditional ways, weaving them into new life-enhancing technologies, and making essential ecological and economic reconnections. Young farmers, urban activists, cooks and chefs, teachers and students, community organizers, and faith groups are bringing local organic food, seed saving, and sustainable work projects into the mix. The values of the natural world-diversity, integrity, adaptability, and resiliency-are reemerging and re-entering the cultural exchange, just when we need them the most.
On Kaua‘i, too, there are people engaged in remembering and reconnecting. Unlike the dry west side of the island, the North Shore is a lush place of almost heartbreaking beauty with a vibrant, racially mixed local culture. There, the Waipa Foundation hosts a weekly farmers market selling organic local food to support its work reviving traditional foodways. Like many Native Hawaiian organizations, they have a Hawaiian-language immersion school that integrates traditional food, farming, and fishing into their curriculum. They connect local farmers with schools, which are getting young people out of the classroom and into the mud of the taro patch. Activists on the island and throughout Hawai‘i are working toward food security. They achieved a ban on genetically modified coffee and are bringing back the original "gift economy" of exchanging traditional varieties of taro.
Just up the road from the Waipa farmers market, Limahuli Garden is restoring the traditional Hawaiian land-use system called an ahupua‘a. Kawika Winter, an engaging young ethnobotanist, Native Hawaiian, and the garden's director, says the name lima huli means "turned hand." It refers to a Hawaiian proverb which, roughly translated, says, "If your hand is turned up, you will be hungry; if your hand is turned down, toward the soil, your belly will be full." The up-turned hand, Winter says, is not a positive symbol for Hawaiians. It is a sign of supplication. The down-turned hand, however, represents the hard work of cultivating the land.
Winter explains that the work they are doing there is all about remembering that the land is our ancestor. "We know that the way to get through difficult times is to use what was left to us-our land and our traditional knowledge. That will carry us into the future," he says. "This is also our gift to the world."
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10 Comments so far
Show AllSpeaking of Joseph Campbell, it is interesting how the currently most violent religions came from the hunting/herding cultures of the Middle East.
Ok I know Hawaii had volcano sacrifices.
Another interesting factoid is that in ancient times the merchant class were seen as the lowest. Farmers were much higher.
If you were useless, you must be a merchant.
now, or at least until recent events, being a corporate raider was glamorized.
"Another interesting factoid is that in ancient times the merchant class were seen as the lowest. Farmers were much higher.
If you were useless, you must be a merchant."
And the priest class were nearly always the highest.
So what?
Sioux Rose
Wonderful article. I am glad to see points so well-articulated in explaining what the for-profit motive added to the control of genetic combinations really means. And how about the tonnage of pesticides as run-off, she said "a billion" pounds of that crap in our waterways. Is there really a mystery as to why cancers have hit so many? The human body was NEVER equipped to fight off all these dangerous chemical invaders. Whatever negatively impacts ANY part of the web of life cannot be healthy for any other. It's either toxic or it's not. Some have greater thresholds when it comes to succumbing to these noxious agents.
How sad that these monsters who play with war and genes get to use as their laboratory one of the most pristine amazing magical places in the world. I wish we could put the things Pandora set loose back into the box.
That's the problem with Hawaiʻi - it's far more militarized than people might think. (Oʻahu is even worse!)
So, what would these people think about the Hawaiian independence movement? No one's proposing bringing back the kapu system, I hope.
And I'm not sure if those are proper ʻokina's, but hey, they tried to spell Hawaiian placenames correctly. That's good. :) Remember - a lanai is a balcony, Lānaʻi is an island.
REPEAL CORP. CITIZENSHIP
Re Militarization of Hawaii - See the Superferry Chronicles and how the prototype shorline military ship was shoved down Maui and Kaua'i throats by Bush's buddy Gov. Linda Lingle (http://www.SuperferryChronicles.com)
Re Monsanto and GMOs - We are the testing ground for these companies and are currently battling their attempts to GMO-ize our taro. Part of the problem is that institutions such as the University of Hawai'i are getting most their research money from corporations. Thus all the research goes to benefit and also back up corporate lines - such as GMOs are so wonderful...not! There's no money for research to refute this.
Re Sacrifices - in the old days Hawaiian people did not practice sacrifices. Then about 1400 (I think) some psycho priest was kicked out of Tahiti, came to Hawaii and instigated the practice.
The saddest thing is that our bailout money is going to prop up big corporations who are raping our 'aina (land) building gated vacation subdivisions for the extremely wealthy (condos starting at $4million) on top of the bones of our ancestors and blocking off traditional ocean access. See http://www.SaveMakena.org.
And they are turning our politics to the very worst sort of Republican exploitive "free market" attitudes. These mainland transplants (unlike many who came before and assimilated into our culture) live in gated compounds - expat societies. They don't even know any local people and they think of us as inferior servants. It is heartbreaking to see what is happening to Maui
Great article CD!
In order to feed the world we must switch from grain based crops now almost wholly in the hands of the multinationals perpetrating these horrors on our Earth Island to tree based crops(not monoculture as with palm plantations).
Tree crops offer incredible yields per acre of highly nutritious protein, good fat, B vitamins and minerals in the case of nuts, ” pure water” and vitamins from fruits,
(see Tree Crops: A Permanent Agriculture published in 1928!) Other foods(grains, vegetables,roots of course can also be planted beneath the trees.
Tree crops can be stored and exchanged just like grains but with so many ecological, sustainable benefits.
Trees also require much less energy input and people can do other work in between caring for them. Trees have the additional advantage of attracting and stabilizing water rather than depleting it. And we all know trees clean the air, create additional habitat for animals, provide firewood, fibre for clothing and housing.
Finally trees can serve as our true carbon capture sink.
In 1980, Mauritania cut down its last tree. Grasslands had been replaced by sand dunes - all cattle headed towards the Senegal River - most trees were cut down.
Several years ago - Kinshasha, the capital of the Republic of the Congo (then known as Zaire) ran out of food. For years, the largest forest in the world fed more than 5 million people in Kinshasha. They ran out of fuel. There was no transport. People survivved on food aid from GM crops in the US. Local farmers could not compete and crops rotted in the fields.
Thailand now feed the world with GM rice, develeloped at IRRI in the Phillipines. Si much for the green revolution.
We have the luxery to choose our food. 90% of the world does not. We are part of a big system. We must think as a big system.