Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • yesterday
Dharashiv district is notorious for droughts and traditional mindsets. One organization is helping women farmers to negotiate changing weather patterns and patriarchal structures.
Transcript
00:00This is nothing short of a miracle. It rarely rains in the inhospitable areas
00:07of the Dalashiv district of Maharashtra. Nevertheless, the farmers here managed
00:12to grow crops on their fields. They have learned how to do this over the
00:16centuries. For the past 10 years or so, however, there have been repeated and
00:22sudden heavy downpours. So heavy that entire harvests are lost. Sangamitra
00:30Ankushrao lives in Bamni, a village in the district. The work of the 42-year-old
00:35here in the fields is becoming increasingly unpredictable.
00:46This May we were not expecting rainfall to affect our sowing.
00:52We no longer know when to do what. Now we have finished sowing. Still there is no rainfall.
01:06Sugarcane and soybeans are the region's most important crops, but they are sensitive.
01:12The timing of sowing, rainfall and periods during growth have to be right.
01:22Due to the unpredictable weather, Sangamitra's father repeatedly suffered
01:26heavy losses on his fields. He made many mistakes back then, Sangamitra tells us.
01:32We did not know for example that we could use our own homegrown seeds. My father used to buy them. He
01:43also used pesticides and any other profits were spent on buying more seeds. Losses piled up and
01:50any revenue went on purchasing seeds, fertiliser, etc.
02:01Some time ago, Sangamitra took over the work on her father's farm and she has made quite a few
02:06changes. With a seed drill, she can sow the grain faster and more efficiently.
02:16Drip irrigation ensures that the plants get enough water, but never too much.
02:20She built the pond for rain water herself and she got rid of her father's monoculture plantations.
02:30I have adopted the sari technique. There are three types of crops and I am growing gawar,
02:35mirchi, shepu and mansari line. These are three useful crops.
02:41The soybeans were lost in the heavy rains two years ago,
02:45but the yields from other crops helped her get through the year. She does not use pesticides
02:51and makes her own fertiliser. Sangamitra learned everything she knows from
03:01Soayam Shikshan Prayog or SSP for short. This grassroots women's empowerment organisation has
03:09been working to promote women's rights for more than 20 years. In workshops lasting several weeks,
03:15women learn the basics of sustainable agriculture. This is traditional farming and includes predicting
03:22weather patterns based on animal behaviour.
03:28If birds make their nest high in the tree, then it means there will be less rain.
03:32When they nest lower down, it means there will be heavy rains.
03:37In addition, women here are taught basic economic skills, knowledge most of them lack. As in most parts
03:43of India, women here have no right to own land.
03:54We have discovered that 70 to 80 percent of women work on farms from preparation to harvesting.
04:02When the harvest is over, their husbands sell the products in the market.
04:06In the end, the women's profit is zero.
04:17SSP has been helping women for some time now to have their land transferred from their families
04:22to their own names. Here in the district, two percent of women have succeeded in acquiring their own land.
04:29Getting this far has been a slog.
04:31We realized that if women became involved in decision making and generated income,
04:40the whole family would benefit and women would be involved in this way.
04:45So I started telling male farmers in each home,
04:47say you have 10 acres of land, give one acre to her and let her farm it.
04:51So Varna Mote owns her own land. Her husband died in an accident, leaving behind the 30-year-old
05:00and her two children. With the organization's help, she managed, albeit in a roundabout way,
05:06to have two hectares of land owned by her parents-in-law transfer to her own name.
05:12It was clear to her from the outset that she would do things very differently from her husband.
05:17My husband used to grow soybeans and sugarcane.
05:28That required a lot of chemical pesticides and a lot of water.
05:34Suvarna too now cultivates her fields using traditional methods which enable her to better
05:41withstand the uncertainties of climate change. SSP struggles to convince families
05:47and especially men to give part of their land to women. Government programs help in that respect.
06:00It enables women to gain security, while on the other hand, male farmers realize that by giving
06:05their wives land rights, they will receive subsidies and crop insurance.
06:09More than 16,000 women in this region have got their own land thanks to SSP.
06:20And the use of traditional farming methods is helping them better understand
06:24the unpredictability of the unpredictability of climate change.

Recommended