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 Some of the many Malawian children who greeted President Rawlins and other WSU visitors.
It is a long way from Pullman to Lilongwe, Malawi, and our route
took us to Seattle, Amsterdam, Johannesburg, and Harare, before
ending in Malawi’s capital city on June 14, 2006. Our Washington
State University entourage included Rafael Stone from the Board of
Regents, Lance LeLoup, associate vice provost for international
programs, and Chris Pannkuk, director of international research and
development.
Malawi is a relatively small East African nation bordered by
Zambia, Tanzania, and Mozambique. The per-capita income is one of
the lowest in the world, and life expectancy has dropped several
years in the past decade due to the prevalence of AIDS. Looking at
the statistics was a gloomy experience, and I somehow expected that
feeling to be reflected by the people I met. But it wasn’t.
Everywhere we saw colorful dress, strong and vital people, and
smiling and waving children. You get the feeling that children are
everywhere. In this seriously overpopulated country, women bear an
average of six children and, given the low life expectancy, the
population is very young. One of our sources estimated one million
orphans in this nation of about 11 million people.
WSU and Total Land Care (TLC), an organization that grew out of
our research, make up a kind of research and extension service in
Malawi. Dr. Trent Bunderson is a WSU faculty member, and his able
colleague, Zwide Jere, is the director of TLC. They are currently
advising villagers in dozens of locations around the nation and
wanted us to see as much as we could in the little time
available.
 President Rawlins with Zwide Jere, director of Total Land Care, a project which WSU is involved with in Malawi.
Our first stop was at a village where we had multiple projects.
The one they wanted us to see was the development of mushroom
houses where they cultivate valuable oyster mushrooms. About 20
beautiful women, colorfully dressed in their native wear, met us.
They approached us as a group and, in beautiful harmony, sang songs
of greeting. They were joined by the men and children in one of the
most moving serenades I have ever heard. Several young men from TLC
and a representative from the ministry of agriculture also met us
here. In fact, at all of the locations we were joined by district
government representatives as well as what was translated as
“traditional authorities”--the village and tribal organizations
that still control 80 percent of the land in Malawi. In some places
we actually had the tribal chief, often presiding over more than a
hundred villages. In other words, our visit was a big
deal.
Most of the visits followed a pattern. First, we would be
greeted by singing and children who wanted to see us up close. Then
we would gather and listen to the people of the village or the
tribe tell us about what they were doing. What they were
doing! Not what someone was doing for them! As people explained
what they were doing and how it was changing their lives, we all
experience a powerful sense that something very important was
happening here. We visited one project, for example, where the use
of treadle pumps to bring water up the hill from the river has made
them less dependent on the rains, allowed for an additional crop,
and opened up the opportunity for many new products. (Click
here for a related story from
WSM.) Trent Bunderson estimated that their annual
production had doubled. A village leader told us they had
started with 75 families on this project and now had over 500.
Then this leader asked us for more help to move to the next
level of technology.
One of our most impressive visits was to a rice field in one of
Malawi’s poorest regions. No one had shoes, and the children were
in tattered clothing. But there was such excitement and hope! They
told us about how they had learned that after they harvest the
rice, there is enough moisture in the soil to raise a crop of
beans, something they had never done before. And, as a bonus, the
beans fix nitrogen in the soil so the next rice crop is even
greater.
Over the next few days we heard many stories about
transformation. In one of the most simple but dramatic, we were
taken inside one of the small houses and shown a little
brick-and-clay stove that can be easily made from local materials.
The woman told us with great passion how this had improved her
life. The key is that she can now cook for 10 days with the wood it
would have taken to cook for only one day on an open fire. The
biggest impact of this may be on the children, who can now go to
school, rather than spend their days collecting firewood.
Our last visit was to an area where several villages are working
to reforest the hillsides. We were met by hundreds of people
singing and making us welcome. We saw some of the forest and heard
all the speeches from the leaders about how this was important to
their future. As we looked at this assemblage of proud people who
are changing their lives through education about new technologies,
we were all deeply touched.
WSU, Malawi, and the world are looking to the Trent Bundersons
and Zwide Jeres for a new vision of sustainability in the face of
starvation, overpopulation, and disease. This trip changed the way
I see a lot of things, and some things that I once thought
intractable now appear approachable.
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 Trent Bunderson, WSU faculty member, works with Zwide Jere (photo, left).
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