1.  The Global Development of Permaculture


by Bill Mollison     
© Bill Mollison 3rd February, 2004    




Older personal friends such as Masanobu Fukuoka in Japan (The One-Straw Revolution) and the late P.A. Yeomans in Australia (Water for Every Farm) developed excellent models of both sustainable "do-nothing" agriculture in Japan, and integrated water / soil treatment / farm irrigation in Australia. Both these men were themselves successful farmers, authors and innovative or inventive thinkers. Both lack an active, well-informed body of students, or a world-wide following.

Yet Permaculture, with a curriculum text, PERMACULTURE: A Designers' Manual, has a body of many thousands of teachers, and millions of practitioners world-wide. Texts are available in about 20 languages, more each year, teachers are itinerant (not static or in institutions), and their students are encouraged to teach wherever they feel they have the courage to teach.

Why does Permaculture attract activists / practitioners / teachers, and some other good systems lack them? The short answer depends on a few essentials:

1. A well-developed, practical curriculum, now of global agreement and well tested.

2. A body of itinerant teachers, resulting in local teachers of both sexes, at home in their own culture and language.

3. An emphasis on reaching local farmers (women in Africa, India) and not directing teaching solely to men, by men. In this way we differ too, from all "aid" agencies who send in male "experts" for teaching, but who do not inspire local teaching. We teach the poor for free, incur no local debt.

4. We teach only Permaculture; we do not teach repression of local skills, beliefs, religion or folkways. All sexes, races, beliefs and cultures are thus welcome in the world bodies, at global conferences; we are not culture-changing, just culture-enhancing.

All these simple and folk-friendly ways give us admission to all but the most arrogant or militaristic cultures ruffling no feathers and selling no uniforms, flags or badges. Thus, we are essentially uncountable, and invisible, not an easily identifiable group, and we never carry arms.

A more recent friend, Takao Furuno and his wife Komiko, travel globally to rice-growing areas, carrying The Power of Duck as their text for small farmers in Tanzania, the Philippines, Taiwan, Korea, China, Indonesia, Vietnam, South-east Asia and India. They travel in their own time, pay their way, teach for free. Furuno tells me that his only crusade is to help small family farmers. He is very well regarded by a loyal corps of farmers in Japan, and every area he has visited. He is also a Permaculture practitioner, and has a well-equipped battery of solutions!

Ali Sharif, one of our Registered Teachers, runs an eponymous university in Brazil *, and is accepting students and graduates at tertiary level. This trend may well continue, but never at the expense of local or itinerant teachers. After all, in a world in crisis, why take 4 years and thousands of dollars to produce a usually-inactive graduate (96% of all university-trained graduates) when two intensive weeks can turn out 90% to 100% active, land-based farmers of both sexes? The latter have the good of their families and villages at heart, as does Furuno.

Thus Permaculture is democratic, training manual workers and the illiterate, as well as the over-educated, training "outcaste" women in India as well as nabobs developing friends in low, but essential places. Seeing solutions, not problems. Available to all.

Graduates develop their own financial systems (women's banks in India) and teaching centres. The U.S.A. has its Permaculture Credit Union (in Santa Fe); Japan, Korea, U.S.A. and Australasia are developing farmer markets and subscription-only farms to supply families. And in all these initiatives, you may find Permaculture graduates, being useful and applied. They love their work.

How did we develop globally? By going to people, not asking them to come to us. By giving them well-tried solutions, not airy-fairy beliefs - we never ask for belief. By teaching the poor for free, and charging only the affluent (the Robin Hood approach to costing). By staying "below the horizon", not threatening any body. We do not define the "infidel". All are welcome in our classes.

Granted, some of us display a selfless regard for our lives, but as we have to spend them anyhow, why not be useful? Already many graduates have dropped dead in harness; the Ralph Long Brigade of extinct, selfless people!  As I urge my students "the way is clear; the path is open; don't wait for orders!" All you have that you own is your life, and your work. Both are worthy gifts to those less well informed. We have the debt of privilege, and it will never be paid. Go for it.

Best regards
Bill and Lisa Mollison
The Permaculture Institute
(The original and the constant)


* The Bill Mollison University of Sustainable Systems

References:

YEOMANS, P.A., 1981
Water for Every Farm

FUKUOKA, Masanobu, 1978
The One Straw Revolution

FURUNO, Takao (wife Komiko)
The Power of Duck
Tagari Publications

MOLLISON, Bill
PERMACULTURE: A Designers' Manual
(and course curriculum)
Tagari Publications














Margie



Margie Bushman

(805) 682-4726 ext.101

mbushman@sbbg.org







Santa Barbara Permaculture Network
(805) 962-2571
sbpcnet@silcom.com
www.sbpermaculture.org

"We are like trees, we must create new leaves, in new directions, in order to grow." - Anonymous