Food
Security is a global issue AND along with Malaria prevention, it is
one of the primary global issues that Peace Corps in currently
focusing on. The projects that I am working on and the post that I
was given are meant to be closely intertwined with the Benin Food
Security program. I decided to make this month Food Security Month on
my blog. This will give me a chance to talk about some of the
projects I am trying to start up.. and explain to you what I am doing
here (if I can figure that out myself...) ha..
What
is Food Security?
In
general terms, Food Security is the access and availability of
balanced and nutritious food sources.
In
the United States food security is often a concern in low income
urban areas where we have what we call “Food Deserts” or areas
where low income families have little to no access to acceptable
healthy food.. (sometimes no grocery stores at all) and are in that
sense forced to eat unhealthy foods (most often from fast food
chains) in order to survive. In West Africa food security is
different.
In
West Africa it becomes an issue of not just where the food is coming
from and if it is nutritious but really whether there is any food at
all. For the people who live in small villages, if there is no food
growing.. and no food in storage.. then there is no food. Plain and
Simple. Many farmers can't farm year round because there isn't water
available year round (which is an issue in and of itself)... and some
seasons just aren't great for farming.. which is becoming an issue as
we see the seasons shift due to climate change.
Peace
Corps Benin has partnered with USAID West Africa and with a group of
other West African countries (many of whom have or recently had very
strong Peace Corps presence) in order to better West Africa's food
security. This partnership has become known as the West African Food
Security Partnership.
Our
environment program here in Benin has an agricultural focus, making
it easy to focus our work on food security -- we work on access and
availability. However, volunteers in all sectors contribute to the
food security project . Health volunteers often deal directly with
nutrition by teaching mothers ways to enrich the food that children
are eating, and teaching about the importance of a diverse diet –
they work directly with food utilization. Any volunteer who works
with a school can make a school garden, or teach lessons that contain
nutritional information. Business volunteers are great for marketing
fortified foods and also Moringa leaves which are highly nutritious.
The
projects that volunteers area currently working on in Benin include;
food diversification, food preservation (drying and/or bottling),
fortified foods, irrigation, animal raising, school gardens, and
nutritional education.
For
the people in my commune, because of my proximity to the city, access to
nutritional foods is not as big of an issue as it is in other parts
of the country. However, much of the food is imported, when it could
easily be grown right here. Often the local Beninese (even if they
can afford it which they often can't) will not know how to cook or
prepare the vegetables that are not traditionally in their diets,
making their potential nutritional values irrelevant. A woman isn't
going to spend the money, for example, on the expensive eggplant..
that she doesn't really know what to do with in the first place.
However, if she learned to grow her own eggplant, or the eggplant
didn't have to travel quite as far to the market (thus lowering the
price) she might be more willing to experiment and add new additions
to a diet based almost entirely around corn, fish, and tomatoes.
The
current focus at the office where I work is how to market new
vegetables so that it is cost effective for the women I work with to
grow them AND (from my end) hopefully teach the women to eat their
new products as well (baby steps). I am also working hard to start a school club and school gardens that will allow me a chance to work directly with youth and help them provide a greater variety of food to their school cafeterias.
For
most of you reading this at home, the access and availability aspects
of food security are far from a problem. What does apply to you –
is the utilization of these resources. Make sure you are using your
knowledge, eating right, and preparing your foods with your health in
mind. In the end food security falls on you, as the consumer, to feed
yourself properly. Don't take for granted your ability to do so.
Z
Si nous sommes ce que nous mangeons, alors peut-être nous devons choisir soigneusement ...
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