By Todd Hardesty | Executive Director
Passing through the market at Old Fangak you see many women selling vegetables and fruits. Tomatoes, onions, melons, okra, eggplant. Most spread their harvest on coverings alongside the dirt path leading in and out of the marketplace. Most cannot afford a permanent booth. But the sales are made outside, and the farmers are happy.
Half of the farmers we help are women. They have survived conflict and flooding. They live in a system that typically does not provide equal opportunity for education. Yet these stewards of the gardens are here raising money for their families and providing food for their community. It is an exciting day for us as we witness the continued results of our project to fight famine with farming in South Sudan.
The region where we concentrate our efforts, Fangak County, South Sudan, has been underwater for over three years. Flood water overtook most of the dry land and now our farmers face the task of raising crops in a region mostly underwater. In the last decade these women and men have already faced civil war, localized conflict, droughts, and crop damage caused by heavy rains. Now, here in the floodplain of the Nile River, the water rose to record levels resulting in loss of nearly all livestock and putting lives at risk by starvation and disease.
Yet this is a good day. The market is busy. The farmers you support are happy to be here, and many more women and men have said they want to join this program. It is working.
With the flooding our program is adapting and changing. We are growing rice! While it is now nearly impossible to grow sorghum (a crop relied on for decades) the flooded land is perfect for growing rice! Just this week a dozen women and men gathered near Old Fangak to learn how to plant rice. Our trainers have the goal of training 100 farmers in the next few weeks. In three months, they will have their first harvest.
Other farmers we’ve trained are already successfully growing rice and the first harvest was this March. Our team was excited beyond words as the rice mill we purchased began to remove the husk and bran from a harvest of 1,000 kg’s of rice. Life changing.
Your support is needed now more than ever. We have over 800 farmers wanting seeds, tools and training this spring so they can fight famine with farming. We want to equip as many farmers as possible with the knowledge and the tools to grow and harvest rice. There is so much promise. Please consider what you can do to help. Thank you. I wish you were here to taste the rice. The best ever!
Links:
Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.
If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can receive an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.
Support this important cause by creating a personalized fundraising page.
Start a Fundraiser




