Archive for the 'CRWRC' Category

Amaranth Grain in Xiengkhouang, Laos

Update July 30, 2009: The grain mentioned in paragraph 3 in Vieng village turned out to be sorghum, not grain amaranth. However, I have heard enough anecdotal accounts of amaranth grain use in Laos that I am hopeful we can promote it successfully. I’ve changed references to amaranth below and moved the sorghum pictures to a new album.

Amaranth is a highly nutritious grain that is being promoted by CRWRC in East Africa as a nutritional supplement for children and adults. It has a high-quality protein content, and is high in calcium, iron, lysine, and folic acid. ECHO is also a major resource and promotion center for amaranth. Amaranth originates in Mexico, where it was used by the Maya in religious ceremonies. Cultivation was prohibited by the Spanish priests for this reason, and it mostly disappeared from diets until people began to take interest again in the 70s-now.

Amaranth in Xiengkhouang, Laos

Tom Post has been the major promoter of amaranth within CRWRC since the late 90s in partnership with Dick Dugger and Partners Worldwide. They produced a video about amaranth planting, harvesting, cooking, and health benefits. Tom Post gave me some seeds over a year ago to test in Xiengkhouang but since no one had shown any interest yet, I waited.

Hmong people in Laos have traditionally grown amaranth as a vegetable crop: they eat the leaves in soups and stir fries. I had never heard of anyone eating the amaranth grain until this week, when I came across a woman threshing purple grain amaranth sorghum in Vieng village, Kham district, Xiengkhouang province. According to Rick Burnette, this is the first confirmed SE Asia case of grain amaranth that he’s heard of. Here’s a photo album of amaranth in Laos, which I will continue to update with new pictures. It has pictures of purple amaranth that I saw last year in Khanghong, and the grain amaranth threshing in Vieng.

The Hmong woman who was threshing the amaranth sorghum said they ate it steamed and boiled, after having threshed, winnowed, and crushed the seeds. I took the opportunity to share with the small crowd that gathered about the benefits of eating amaranth, especially for children and mothers. I said that children should eat a little bit every day, about 20 grams or 3 spoonfuls. I congratulated the woman for her good practice and encouraged her to continue eating amaranth sorghum. I am excited and encouraged that some Hmong people already use grain amaranth, because that means it won’t be difficult to spread the word about its nutritional benefits and get families to plant it for eating. Continue reading ‘Amaranth Grain in Xiengkhouang, Laos’

Muang Mai, Phongsali

Photos from Phongsali

In April I spent two weeks in Phongsali (pronounced pong-sa-lee) with coworkers surveying and selecting new target villages for our project in Muang Mai. We opened a new CRWRC office there this month with 10 staff working in 12 villages. I visited five villages that were quite remote: until a few months ago, they were 1-2 days’ walk from the nearest big town. Click on the map to see a flickr map of all the photos I took there. Over the next few days I will feature some of the best photos on this blog.

Open Space Technology

I’ve been researching Open Space Technology, a way of facilitating meetings and conferences that is radically decentralized and empowering. It is not a technologyImproving CRWRC meetings in the sense of computers, cars, or warp drives, but rather meaning a tool or a method (see Wikipedia). There is no agenda or plan before the meeting begins – only a simple topic phrased as a question. The facilitator explains the Rule of Motion and Responsibility (Law of Two Feet) and the principles that come from it, and then sits down to let the participants choose small discussion topics, host them, record them (paper, video, podcast, whatever), and then publish the results for everyone else to read. Here’s a photo slideshow that describes how a typical Open Space event unfolds.

I once participated in a conference that used Open Space Technology, hosted by PTEV. It was one of the most invigorating, passion-filled events I’ve ever seen. Continue reading ‘Open Space Technology’

CRWRC Laos Video

A few months ago I helped make a promotional video for CRWRC Laos. Actually, I only wrote some of the script and accompanied the Lao National TV crew while filming. The primary audience for this video are fellow NGOs and the Lao government. As such, it may be a bit amusing for North American audiences. Also, it is 20 minutes long, so feel free to skip the boring parts. The first 3-5 min introduce CRWRC’s development work; the middle section explores each sector (health, agriculture, education, road building, and leadership); the final 5 minutes shows a village envisioning its future and how that fits with CRWRC’s goals.

Bangladesh Learning Visit

Internet access in Bangladesh was spotty, but here in Laos we’ve got broadband wireless internet, so I can finally write about my adventures the past few weeks.

Health lesson

The easiest way to do that is by way of photos. You can enjoy my photos from Bangladesh (in reverse order). The captions might give you an idea of what I was doing.

Here’s a quick summary: I was in Bangladesh for nearly two weeks; the first week spent visiting CRWRC’s big USAID-funded Child Survival Project. I went with three Lao colleagues, 4 people from CRWRC Cambodia, and a few Americans.

I went along because I want to learn about different approaches to community development. CRWRC Bangladesh provided an excellent learning opportunity, not only in health areas (the main focus of this exchange visit) but also in their general way of working with communities. Although the cultural context differs from Laos, many of the things I observed can be adapted to work here. Above all, the trip got me excited about what good community development can look like after ten or twelve years. I’m grateful to CRWRC for making this great learning exchange visit possible. I love my job!

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