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Free trade, chemicals threaten village-based farming in Thailand

01:00 AM EDT on Saturday, June 2, 2007

RUTH MacNEILLE

BANGKOK

RURAL THAI farmers were told that free-trade agreements and 
profit-based agriculture would help them. But now many find 
themselves without enough food to feed their families. The Nakhudsim 
Primary School has decided to take matters into its own hands.

An old bike sits between the garden at Nakhudsim Primary School and a 
murky pond. From under a shaded pavilion, the bike looks out of place 
at first glance. I am barely able to focus on anything other than the 
beads of sweat peeling down my temples. In the sun, children are 
talking. Some hold empty watering buckets, some bounce the handles of 
hoes back and forth from hand to hand, and others kneel over rows of 
young vegetable plants breaking through the hay-covered soil. The 
healthy young plants in the garden shine bright green against the sea 
of brown in the tilled rice field beyond the pond. When the garden 
needs to be watered, students can pedal the bike to pump water from 
the pond to a hose that waters the vegetables. All of the vegetables 
in the garden are organically grown using compost fertilizer; when 
harvested, they are added ingredients in the student lunches, 
lowering the school's costs.

These Nakhudsim students, as with many Isaan students (from the 
northeast region of Thailand), come from rice-farming families whose 
existence depends largely on the village community. Villages in 
Thailand are often a cluster of shared public institutions because 
people feel a genuine sense of responsibility for one another's 
livelihood. Interdependent villagers can create independent 
self-sustaining communities by using their resources and working 
together.

The break of dawn is not a quiet, still time in the Isaan 
countryside. Roosters crow at 4 a.m., and on market days, they are 
not the only ones awake. Mothers wearing straw hats or caps and 
aprons pile onto the two benches in the open back of a truck, 
squished up against their buckets of goods to sell. Some buckets are 
filled with jumping frogs, some with chicken claws, and others with 
bugs collected after being fatally attracted to a bright fluorescent 
zap-light in the dark.

As we drive into town, the mehs are laughing at jokes I cannot 
understand, but every once in a while, I catch them laughing at my 
mishaps during my home-stay and I laugh, too, happy to be in on 
conversation. The truck is a comical clown car of sardine-packed 
people, and when it arrives in town, a chaotic bustle ensues as 
villagers help each other unpack.

During the hot season, the Isaan countryside is mostly brown rice 
fields, which stretch across the flat land between villages, nearly 
empty except for scattered foliage and a few roaming cows and water 
buffalo. There are no fences, only an occasional row of trees to 
indicate separation of property. Because homes are grouped into 
village centers surrounded by continuous fields, an outsider might 
not realize that the land has many owners; each household in a given 
farming village owns between five and 10 rai (a Thai land unit, equal 
to about 1,600 square meters). Thai farmers traditionally harvest 
their rice in November and begin the growing process again in May, 
when the rains begin. The rain also fills the ponds, which provide 
villagers with a way to water their vegetable gardens and fill their 
bathroom washing bins when rain is infrequent.

Theoretically, villagers could be nearly self-sufficient by making 
use of such methods. However, rapid changes in Thailand's development 
strategies over the past 25 to 30 years have industrialized food 
production, neglecting the local wisdom behind traditional and 
sustainable agricultural practices.

Farmers have been encouraged to use chemical farming methods 
introduced by the Green Revolution to increase yield per rai. These 
new methods have not proven sustainable in northern Thailand - 
economically, socially or environmentally. Not only are the chemicals 
expensive, sinking farmers into debt, but they are unhealthy for the 
people and the environment. Because the increased harvests deplete 
the soil, farmers have fallen into a vicious circle of dependence on 
outside resources.

In addition, free-trade agreements (FTAs) threaten Isaan livelihoods 
by negatively opening up the domestic agricultural market, on which 
farming households depend, to foreign markets: For example, Japanese 
rice has nearly wiped out the domestic Thai rice market. In turn, 
Thai rice has nearly wiped out the Korean domestic market. While FTAs 
were established on the theory that nations that trade do not go to 
war, the organic farmers in Thabtai, Surin told us that Korean 
farmers now hate Thai farmers for destroying their market. Because 
not all economies are equal, FTAs create lopsided circumstances, in 
which small-scale farmers find themselves competing with the machines 
and hired labor of large-scale agriculture.

While such development projects were ostensibly created to help 
Thailand's rural farming communities, now farmers do not have enough 
food to feed their families. Farmers find themselves returning to 
sustainable agricultural practices, in which they eat what they grow, 
using compost and manure as fertilizer and planting different plants 
and flowers to deter harmful pests. But the process requires a shift 
in the values that many farmers have internalized as a result of 
government propaganda and pressure from the international community. 
These values revolve around profit-based agriculture, which does not 
take such issues as the safety of producers and consumers, economic 
dependence or environmental sustainability into account.

In a collectively minded country like Thailand, communities are at 
the root of effective development. At the Nakhudsim School, though 
students are eager to do their garden work, the school failed a 
recent academic evaluation. Ironically, while local wisdom has been 
incorporated into the school's garden, it is not present in the 
classroom.

The students are given scenarios such as: "If a car leaves a city 
traveling at 60 miles per hour .... . " They could instead be 
provided with scenarios that are applicable to their lives, such as: 
"When you sell a fish you caught from your pond at the market for 
three baht, having fed it from food in your garden and bred it from 
other fish .... . "

Local wisdom is not valued in the current education system, though it 
is vital to students' lives. Many children in the village are sent to 
private schools for a better education. The public education system 
is failing.

The importance of strong communities is reinforced by Thailand's 
legal bureaucracy because public funding for social-welfare projects 
requires community appeal and proposal. One hope for Nakhudsim School 
is that by directly incorporating the village's farming culture into 
primary education, the community will become more invested and 
involved in the school. A re-evaluation of development in Thailand 
requires creative problem-solving that takes local wisdom and 
resources into account. The old bike that sits near the Nakhudsim 
School's pond to help irrigate the garden is a perfect case in point. 
The bike didn't cost much: It was just a good idea.

Ruth MacNeille is a University of Michigan junior concentrating in 
anthropology and history. She is studying in Thailand. This article 
originally appeared on GlimpseAbroad.org, an international news, 
travel and feature magazine.

Found at: 
http://www.projo.com/opinion/contributors/content/CT_glimpse2_06-02-07 
_B05MFCN.1cc4a54.html

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