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|                         Wishing all Goanetters                         |
|                             a Prosperous                               |
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|                         Happy New Year - 2006                          |
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Please forgive me for posting a topic which is not about Goa. But I
just thought it's very relevant here. FN

Once Upon a Time in a Desert
He's ensured sufficient water, organic manure and even a social
transformation of a village
OUTLOOK, DECEMBER 26, 2005

By Bhavdeep Kang

THE wells of Laporia never run dry. In an arid village, in an arid
corner of the country's most arid state, that's little short of a
miracle. Seven consecutive years of poor rainfall in the Dudu
subdivision of Jaipur district, Rajasthan, has decimated villages,
forcing large-scale migration. But Laporia soldiers on, its perennial
wells and ponds never failing to slake their thirst.

Meet the man who made it happen: Laxman Singh, a simple farmer with a
simple dream.

"I visualised a village at harmony with nature, self-reliant and
prosperous," says this farmer-turned-green activist. "I knew the kind of
farming we were doing was wrong. We were interfering with nature,
subverting natural processes. No good would come of this."

Large flats of wasteland bordered the village and water was hard to come
by, he recalls. This was in the mid-1980s, when 'sustainable
agriculture' was not yet part of the policymaker's vocabulary.

Singh mooted a unique watershed management scheme, dove-tailed with
animal husbandry and organic farming. It was low-cost and
community-driven. The villager elders were convinced. The watershed
management project was exectued by the village itself.

Says he, "We evolved what we now call the chauka system. A series of
bunds, channels and pits were dug over a 5-km stretch, in a checker
board-like pattern, following the natural slope of the land." Water is
thus channeled into the ponds and wells, which are desilted annually in
a shram-daan (gift-of-labour) programme involving every woman, man and
child. 

Gradually, the wastelands were transformed into rich pastures.

Central to the economy of the village are its cattle. The gochar or
pasture is considered sacred and is integral to the watershed management
programme. The cattle are left free every morning to graze along the
bunds and pits which form part of the chauka system. They follow a
well-defined daily routine, eating grass from the pits and sipping water
from the channels.

"Our cattle are desi breeds. Stall-feeding is rarely required. The
different varieties of grass they consume on their daily rounds seem to
have a medicinal as well as nutritional value. They never fall ill,"
says Laxman. 

No shrub or tree which grows on the pastureland is ever touched.
Likewise, no form of wildlife is disturbed. A portion of the village
land has been designated as a forest zone where trees, plants and birds
of all descriptions are allowed to flourish.

Cattle wealth allows the production of plentiful green manure which is
essential for organic farming. "An agricultural scientist once trained
us in vermi-composting and we've never looked back. It's five years
since any farmer used chemical fertilisers ere and yet yields have not
suffered," he adds.

The Laporia model can work only if a village pulls together. The
toughest part was evicting those who had grabbed the common land,
leaving nothing for pastures and watershed schemes. Once the gram sabha
land was free, everything followed.

The best part, they say, has been community bonding. Crime is virtually
non-existent as the village folk have become accustomed to working
together. The bureaucracy, perhaps unnerved by this camaraderie, sent
Laxman a showcause notice for having usurped their powers by mooting a
penalty (of planting five new saplings) on anyone who felled a tree!

The biggest problem in rural areas? Says Laxman: "I think it's the
decline in village commonland. If there are no pastures, there will be
no cattle and if there are no cattle, there will be no manure. You'll
buy chemicals from the market and poison the earth."

The Rajasthan government's proposal to give wasteland to private players
for development should be modified, he feels. If the land is given to
village communities, they will do a better job of reclaiming it.

Laxman is replicating the chauka system through an NGO, Gram Vikas
Navyuvk Mandal Laporia (GVNML). He can be contacted at 0941071843.


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