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  • Seeds for peace - Restoring ancient seed

    Awhile back there was discussion about non-hybrid perennial grain seed. I cannot find it by searching. If someone can find that discussion, please post the link. The discussion centered around the implications of availability of grain seed during a pandemic. We're far too dependent upon hybrids & there is little sustainable grain production.
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    http://www.newfarm.org/international...d/rogosa.shtml

    Seeds for peace - Restoring ancient seed for Arab and Jewish organic cooperation

    December 14, 2006: A generation ago, the Arab village in Sachnin, in the pastoral Galilee hills of northern Israel, produced its own indigenous, drought-hardy varieties of wheat, and 80 percent of the men were farmers. Each morning, the fragrance of fresh bread emanated from almost every home. Today, a mere 3 percent of the population are farmers, and more than three-quarters of Sachnin families buy mass-produced white pita bread shipped in from industrial bakeries.

    Who grows the wheat today? Most of the wheat for Sachnin?s pitas?about 85 percent of it?is now shipped in from subsidized US farmers. This loss of local food production echoes throughout the Israeli food system. Rural communities that were self-sufficient a generation ago have lost their livelihoods due to low-cost imported foods and lack of competitive indigenous varieties.

    Loss of indigenous landraces results in loss of local livelihoods
    In Jerusalem?s Machane Yehuda open-air market, ancient stone buildings with arched portals give way to a colorful tapestry of ethnic peoples and fragrant foods. Abraham and his wife, Yehudit, opened the first Ethiopian shop in Machane, Yehuda, after they arrived in Israel from Gonder, Ethiopia, escaping local crossfire to return to their ancient homeland of Israel. (Ethiopian Jews may be direct descendents of Moses? children who migrated south after the Exodus, combined with ancestors from the tribe of Dan, who fled when the Kingdom of Judah divided in the 10th century BCE, enriched with descendents from trade relations during King Solomon?s time, perhaps even the Queen of Sheba.)


    Traditional Ethiopian farmers in rural mountain villages can't compete with high-tech farming in the region and, instead, ship their ancient grains to family-run markets in Isreal.
    Today, Ethiopian-Israelis number 100,000. Almost all were traditional farmers in rural mountain villages, but most have joined the ranks of Israel?s low-income, under-employed populations from Third World countries.

    Few have found ways to adapt their farming methods to compete with high-tech farming. So they resort to shipping their ancient Ethiopian wheat, teff and other traditional foods direct from Ethiopia to family-run markets such as Abraham and Yehudit?s.

    It was in Abraham and Yehudit?s market stall that I found emmer (Triticum dicoccum), called ?Em Ha?Hitach? or Mother Wheat in Hebrew, the almost-extinct delicious wheat variety that was domesticated in the land of early Israel 12,000-10,000 years ago. Wild emmer (Triticum dicoccoides) still can be found growing in remote fields throughout Israel.

    ?Do you know what this is?? I asked Abraham incredulously. ?Of course, it is aja, (Amharic for emmer),? replied Abraham, with an almost gleeful-hinting smile. ?Abraham, this wheat was used for our first matzahs in Egypt.? ?Yes,? concurred Abraham, ?It has been kept by our people in Ethiopia.? ?Why don?t you grow it here to bake matzahs?? ?Ah,? he lamented sadly. ?Who of our people have farms here in holy Israel? Who would buy our simple foods??

    Arab and Jewish families who were self-sufficient traditional farmers a generation ago have become marginalized in a world of rapid agri-technological advance. Last generation?s family farmers are today?s cheap labor.

    The ancient teachings of Israel are rooted in its agricultural heritage of decentralized small-scale farming. The biblical vision, the Talmud and Israel?s ancient laws, documented in the Mishnah, written down in the 2nd and 5th century in the book ?The Way of the Seed? or ?Seder Zari?im? in Hebrew, explains the principles of food justice, gleaning, tithing and the power of blessing, that are at the heart of the Hebraic tradition. In contrast to Canaanite practices of human and animal sacrifice that evolved from nomadic shepherds, the ancient Israeli farmer believed that the land and the people are one total living ecosystem. In additional to the practices of composting, crop rotation and fallowing, the Israeli understood that healthy soil would only bear nourishing fruit when the people, all of the people, were fed.

    After millennia of displacement from the land of Israel, most Israeli farmers jumped into green revolution agriculture with the seeds of modern breeding.
    ?Israel?s mainstream agriculture is totally Western in its reliance on modern high-yielding hybrids. This, urbanization and habitat erosion threaten the indigenous landraces, many of which date back several centuries, if not to Biblical times.?
    ~ Israel Gene Bank Report, 1966
    ?In the West Bank, there is a considerable decline in local varieties due to introduction of hybrid 'high-input' varieties. At least 90 percent of Palestine?s farmers have no irrigation. Both the drought-hardy traditional cultivars and farmers? traditional knowledge of seed selection are disappearing. There is a critical need to revive traditional varieties in the Palestinian Areas. However the PA has no central seed bank. Existing facilities are weak or non-existent.?
    ~ M.S. Ali Shtayeh, PhD
    Unirrigated fields in Israel.
    The lands of Israel and Palestine, in the southern arch of the Fertile Crescent, are the ancient center of origin for almonds, artichoke, barley, beets and chards, black mustard, celery, chickpea, date palm, emmer, pear, fig, flax, lentil, lettuce, melon, olive, pea, radish and safflower. Wild edibles, herbs and indigenous knowledge of their uses are embedded in both Jewish and Arab traditions. All of this is being lost today due to urbanization.

    Traditional Arab and Jewish farmers in Israel depend almost completely upon themselves and other farmers for locally-adapted seed. There are no commercially available indigenous vegetable seeds in Israel with the drought-hardiness on which traditional low-input Middle East farmers depend (20 percent of Israel?s population are citizens of Arab ethnicity who often lack access to irrigation systems). Small-scale organic farmers who grow for local markets do not have any supply of native heirloom vegetable seed, except what they domesticate, select, save and exchange amongst themselves and their neighbors.

    The Israel Seed Conservancy

    A dynamic circle of farmers, selective seed savers and markets, The Israel Seed Conservancy arose to fill the void. This grassroots consortium of Jewish and Arab small-scale farmers and seed savers are pooling shared genetic resources together to conserve and improve threatened native varieties in the fields of traditional and organic farmers, and to teach cooperative gardening with Arab and Jewish young people (see www.growseed.org/seedstewards.html). The model is adapted from Restoring Our Seed (www.growseed.org), a project, originally funded by SARE, that I founded with C.R. Lawn of FEDCO seeds (www.fedcoseeds.com).


    The Israel Seed Conservancy teaches cooperative gardening with Arab and Jewish young people.
    The Israel Seed Conservancy (ISC) has established a biodiversity conservation farm near Jerusalem, works in partnership with Laithi G?naim?s Food Bank Farm in Sachnin (see New Farm series: Vine and Fig Tree), and is a member of the EU-funded Landrace Wheat Working Group. On-farm genetic conservation in the fields of traditional, organic farmers keeps vital the dynamic interaction of indigenous varieties with their pests, predators and pathogens, and the durable resistances needed for robust crops not dependent on agro-chemical protectants.

    ISC organizes annual seed exchanges and training for on-farm seed-saving. I quietly exchange open-pollinated seed with Palestinian seed colleagues, under difficult conditions, protecting their identities for safety in a region of conflict. The power of organic farming cooperation and the mutual benefits of sharing seed speak louder than ethnic differences. ?We are helping each other to help ourselves,? reports Laithi.

    ISC?s work is rooted in four inter-dependent strategies:
    1. Conserve the landrace varieties, the living stories they carry and indigenous knowledge of their cultivation and uses.
    2. Restore the seed into the hands of farmers for selective seed saving.
    3. Integrate seed crops to enhance biodiversity for sheltering habitats for pollinators and predators of insect pests.
    4. Market in ways that benefit small-scale, low-input farmers?the traditional stewards of landraces.
    Wheat is the most widely cultivated crop on earth. Heritage wheat?s rich flavor and nutritional value are the very qualities bred out of modern wheat varieties, selected for high yield and uniformity, at the cost of high water demand. Artisan bread bakers prefer heritage wheat?s superior flavor and baking qualities. ISC is restoring rare, ancient indigenous wheats as a strategy to increase food and livelihood security for the region?s neglected traditional farmers. These indigenous heritage wheat varieties have evolved extensive roots system for efficient nutrient scavenging in poor soils, and they thrive in the typical climate extremes of rainy winters and droughty summers.

    Emmer (T. diccocum), Einkorn (T. monococcum) and Hourani (T. durum) are delicious little-known wheats that nourished ancient civilizations but today are almost extinct. It is our hope the historic value of these crops, their exceptionally rich flavor, high nutritional value, and capacity to thrive in the soils of their ancestral homeland will create markets that support traditional farmers to continue their heritage of farming.
    ?If you bring a grain offering of the first fruits to the Lord, offer the crushes heads of the spring grain roasted in the fire.?
    ~ Leviticus 2:14
    "The day after the Passover, the very day they ate of the produce of the Land, the unleavened bread and the parched grain."
    ~ Joshua 5:11
    Instead of purchasing subsidized wheat from industrialized mega-farms in the developed world, the Israel Seed Conservancy hopes to turn the table by restoring the seed of Israel?s diverse small-scale farmers and the traditions of bread-baking and other food arts. The cooperative is restoring emmer to bake organic matzah, einkorn for tasty flatbread with local wild herbs, and Hourani for ?parched wheat? using age-old methods.

    Eli Rogosa is an organic farmer specializing in the restoration of heirloom wheats, vegetables and wild foods, and indigenous traditions of sustainable farming and foodarts. Co-coordinator of Restoring Our Seed and the Israel Seed Conservancy, Eli works every winter with Israel's multi-cultural farmers and school gardens, to restore almost-extinct ancient Eretz Israeli foodcrops. Contact growseed@yahoo.com.

    .

    "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

  • #2
    Re: Seeds for peace - Restoring ancient seed

    Denise - I posted this link in the forum--which is a huge source for non-hybrid seeds:

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Seeds for peace - Restoring ancient seed

      Originally posted by AlaskaDenise
      [I]Awhile back there was discussion about non-hybrid perennial grain seed. I cannot find it by searching. If someone can find that discussion, please post the link. The discussion centered around the implications of availability of grain seed during a pandemic. We're far too dependent upon hybrids & there is little sustainable grain production.
      AD, Is this the discussion?

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Seeds for peace - Restoring ancient seed

        AnneZ:

        Yes, that is part of the discussion.

        We were discussing the impact of disruptions to the supply of hybrid seed stocks for grain production. We were trying to discover if there were any commercial perennial grains.

        Many people don't know that the source of their grain products could easily collapse due to something as simple as seed strains. Countries that are self-sufficient in production of native perennial grains will fare better in a pandemic.

        Based on the above article, Ethiopia may not suffer a grain shortage.

        .
        "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Seeds for peace - Restoring ancient seed

          This website is for sale! psrseed.com is your first and best source for all of the information you’re looking for. From general topics to more of what you would expect to find here, psrseed.com has it all. We hope you find what you are searching for!


          for perennial grain seed
          Upon this gifted age, in its dark hour,
          Rains from the sky a meteoric shower
          Of facts....They lie unquestioned, uncombined.
          Wisdom enough to leech us of our ill
          Is daily spun, but there exists no loom
          To weave it into fabric..
          Edna St. Vincent Millay "Huntsman, What Quarry"
          All my posts to this forum are for fair use and educational purposes only.

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          • #6
            Re: Seeds for peace - Restoring ancient seed

            Thanks LMonty.

            I noticed the largest quantity sold is 1/4 pound of perennial sorghum.

            Perennial wheat is either sold out or available in small quantities in small packets, e.g., ...
            Small Packets only, short seed supply, limit two per customer.
            I wonder if any American/Canadian/Australian large scale commercial producers use perennial seeds?

            .
            "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Seeds for peace - Restoring ancient seed

              Maybe I'll post it here, may not be really on topic but maybe.



              I like the idea & philosophy behind that Edible forest idea.

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              • #8
                Re: Seeds for peace - Restoring ancient seed

                Very cool!!!

                Sounds like a garden of Eden.

                Remember what we called the person who created the first garden of Eden? So what does that make folks who plant these forest gardens?

                It far more natural - the way our food was designed to be grown. A living renewable sustainable preppers dream.

                .
                "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

                Comment

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