Nature - Nature knows best
by Suma Varughese
The spontaneous applause that greeted the bright eyed wispy haired little Japanese man dressed in a white kimono-like formal wear as he entered the unpretentious office of the Bombay Union of Journalists (BUJ), in India, was eloquent testimony of the love and reverence that Masanobu Fukuoka, 83, commands all over the world
And not without reason: Fukuoka is author of The One-straw Revolution, an extraordinary document that distills the deepest of philosophical and spiritual truths into a practical approach to farming that he calls natural or do-nothing farming. Since its publication in 1978 in English, the book has shot up to cult status, mandatory reading among advocates of alternative living. Fukuoka is a recipient of the Deshikottam Award presented in 1988 by the Vishwa Bharati University in Santiniketan, India. His second visit to India was in March 1997.
His book has been translated into Indian languages and published by Madhya
Pradesh's Friends Rural Society, influencing hundreds of farmers. In Nagpur,
an Indian town, a group of 10 farmers have formed the Fukuoka Society.
Scores of others have selectively grafted his methods on the more popular
system of organic farming. Natural farming cannot work everywhere, argues Kisan Mehta,
72, president of Mumbai based Prakriti, an organization committed to a
sustainable society based on natural living and sustainable agriculture.
In places like Saurashtra and the Kutch, desert regions of India, which
enjoy no rain, nature cannot regenerate herself without external support.
Fukuoka's philosophy has influenced leading health activists such as Vijaya
Venkat, who unhesitatingly calls him "the greatest philosopher of
all time". "He simply says to do nothing intelligently."
She says, giving me the courage to practice the same principle in nutrition.
Kavita Mukhi, who runs Nature Option, a health food shop in Mumbai, India,
feels the same: "Nature knows best. That's his message. He is a simple
and beautiful man. When in Mumbai, Fukuoka's simplicity and benevolence
won over all those to whom the book is not just an agricultural manual
but a work of art and even a religious and philosophical text. Fukuoka
sees our present alienation from nature and our reliance on technology as both needless and self destructive. When we lose the remaining 3 per
cent of greenery on the planet, we will lose our feeling of joy."
Quoting a scientific prophecy that Earth
will last only 20 more years, he reiterates the urgency of restoring wholeness
to this planet and its inhabitants. Fukuoka chanced upon this revelation
when he was 25 years old. Confronted with the proximity of death through a severe attack of pneumonia, he was shaken out of the complacency
with which to rebuild his confidence in life. Early one morning, after
a sleepless night under a tree, came a flash of satori.
In this world, there is nothing at all . Something one might call true
nature stood revealed. What Fukuoka instinctively understood and which
in its starkness echoes Advaita Vedanta or Taoism was the illusion of existence. God was all, and God alone ran
the show. Humankind's attempt to control or even understand life was futile
and self destructive.
Determined to demonstrate the practical value of the realization at a time when humankind
was hurtling in the opposite direction, he resigned his job as a research
scientist in 1938 and returned to his father's farm. His plan was to restore
the land to the condition that would enable nature`s original harmony
to prevail, which, he was convinced, was all that was truly necessary.
Through 30 years of refinement, his do-nothing
farming was able to do away with the need for soil cultivation, such
as ploughing or tilling, chemical fertilizers, pesticides, weeding, pruning,
machinery or compost, yet produce yields of rice or barley equivalent
to that produced either by traditional or chemical agriculture.
He says: "If a single new bud is snipped off a fruit tree with a
pair of scissors, that may bring about a disorder which cannot be undone�Human
beings with their tampering do something wrong, leave the damage unrepaired,
and when the adverse results accumulate, work with all their might to
correct them."
Fukuoka's agricultural approach is simplicity itself. He grows two seasonal
crops, rice in summer, barley and rye in winter, using just the straw
of the preceding crop, a cover of clover and a sprinkling of poultry manure
for fertilizer. Instead of planting seeds and transplanting seedlings
as in traditional rice cultivation, he broadcasts mud pellets containing
seeds on unploughed soil, sufficiently loosened by nature's own undercover
agents, the human earthworm and others of that ilk.
The use of white clover reduces the amount of water required to a mere
one week initially. Weeds are allowed to sprout, controlled by nature's
checks and balances, including natural predators, which also take care
of pests. "Nature, left alone, is in perfect balance," asserts Fukuoka
with proven confidence. Each rice stalk yields 200 to 300 grains, which
compares very favorably with the yield of other forms of cultivation;
labor time is cut to one-fifth.
More important, the top soil fertility increases with time, in contrast
to the decreasing or gradient levels found in chemical and traditional
agriculture. Given these unbelievable advantages, one might ask why the
world still hesitates to throw overboard its top-heavy systems in favor
of such simplicity. The reason is that, paradoxically, do-nothing farming
is the most challenging of all methods, for it demands nothing less than
the farmer's total presence of mind. The farmer must grow his crops differently
each year in accordance with variations in weather, insect populations,
the condition of the soil and many other natural factors.
Nature is everywhere in perpetual motion; conditions are never exactly
the same in any two years. Preconceived notions, preset formulae cannot
apply. What is needed is the yogi's ability to stay in the present. Which
brings us to the hitch in do-nothing farming. Enlightenment is a prerequisite!
Simplicity, finally, is the highest and most difficult state of mind to
attain.
Meanwhile, the world heedlessly hurtles towards more and more complexity.
Fukuoka's present battle is against the popularization of the US-based
Super Rice, in which he sees a sinister plot to control the world through
the control of the grain markets. Touted as a high-yielding hybrid variety
which can be seeded by helicopter broadcasting. Fukuoka fears that is
domination may well be total, particularly forgiven the fact that hybrid
seeds cannot be recultivated.
All crusades are led by backbenchers, by visionaries and pacifists way
behind the frontlines and way ahead of the first bullet. An ardent admirer
of Mahatma Gandhi, whom he sees as his spiritual mentor, Fukuoka looks
to India for a greater acceptance of farming in more natural and less
combative manner than the rest of the world has known or shown. In the
land of peace, may peace come to land.
Reader's Comments
Subject: NATURE KNOWS BEST - 4 July 2010
Masanobu Fukuoka is our guide for natural/organic farming.The whole world advancing hurridly to a unprecented cotaminated condition against the nature.How we can save and restore our planet from the satal grasp of the chemical robbery for a sustainable human More...
by: MOHAMMED AMINUL HAQUE
Pages: 1