Vegetable seeds provided by Seed Programs International will grow fresh organic vegetables for 20 Maya Ixil elders in great need of nutrition and income, so each can grow more than 500 fresh vegetable servings. Guatemalan Ixil Maya children suffer an 85% malnutrition rate. A long civil war left families shattered and no way for widows and other elders to escape poverty and malnutrition for themselves or their children.
Ixil communities are still recovering from ten years of persecution that left many families broken.Today, Ixil farmers are organized into a coffee-producers organization and are working toward income improvement, but this does not address the lack of nutritious food for widows and their children. Many vegetable gardens are unplanted due to a lack of seeds. It is hard manual labor to make a garden on steep mountain sides that need to be cleared of brush, dug out by hand and terraced.
Twenty Ixil elders, including widows and their children, will have new access to nutritious organic vegetables by receiving seeds, a hoe, and a younger helper. Critical family income is increased through cash or barter of surplus produce in the local markets. Seed banks and vegetable starts will be combined with education to provide for sustainability. Widows and their children will have new access to barter for medicine and pay school tuition for their children.
Elders, widows, their children, and youth helpers will learn traditional Mayan organic farming and new methods in composting and soil improvement. Seed banks will ensure long term sustainability, support a strong education program, economic development, and increased food security. Note: generous GlobalGiving donors already funded support for gardens for twenty elders -- very quickly. This inspired us to support twenty more with another small project. Thank you!
This project has provided additional documentation in a PDF file (projdoc.pdf).