When U.N. World Food Programme Director Cindy McCain visited Haiti this summer, she said, “one of the world’s worst hunger crises is unfolding unseen, unheard, and unaddressed….half of the country is hungry.”
We know, however, that there are pockets of hope. As the crisis in Haiti worsens, Partners in Progress (PIP) and our community-based partners are providing training and support that is presently helping 9 rural Haiti communities to avoid crisis by taking back their own food sovereignty.
We believe this work is a model for others.
Through our Konbit Vanyan Kapab Farmer-to-Farmer Agroeology for Food Sovereignty Initiative (FAFSI); communities like Deslandes, Haiti are increasing crop yields, advancing traditional agroecology knowledge and practice, regenerating soil and ecosystem health, and building climate resilience.
Farmers trained as Agroecology Educators teach other farmers the most promising agroecology techniques, tested on cooperative trial farms, or konbit farms.
Agroecology Educators:
- Teach communities how to establish and care for community tree nurseries
- Help farmers design and test agroecology on their own farms and expand sales of healthy traditional foods
- Work with schools to provide nutritious meals for local children
The increased production of healthy foods and farmer organizing capacity has positioned farmers to take a lead role in providing food relief in the current crisis, much as they did during the pandemic and after the 2021 earthquake.
Within the communities we assist, these crises are not “unseen, unheard, and unaddressed.” The model is working. Your donation of $250, $100, $50, or $25 will empower these communities to determine their own future.
Visit https://piphaiti.salsalabs.org/give/index.html to donate online today, or mail your check to: Partners in Progress, PO Box 11278 | Pittsburgh, PA 15238.
Thank you for helping our neighbors in Haiti now, when they need it the most.
Afoyo/Mèsi/Thank You!
Warm regards,
Mike Neumann Executive Director