Helping poor Asians – one backyard at a time (Part 2)

I was told by a Filipino friend that many Filipinos don’t plant vegetables in their backyard because their neighbors will simply help themselves to the vegetables. And most Filipinos would rather lose their vegetables than lose the friendship of their neighbors!

I believe that this is a real problem because many Asian countries share this same communal characteristic. However, I believe that for every problem there is a possible solution. And my solution to this problem is that we should help the whole community to grow vegetables so that all will have vegetables of their own!

Of course, the next question is how do we get a whole community to produce their own vegetables? In every community, there are hard-working people and lazy people – and usually the lazy ones outnumber the hard-working ones. However, I believe that the power of envy is a very powerful motivator – even to the lazy ones!

I believe that if our community worker himself starts with his own little backyard plot in the community then after 3 months, the sight of his juicy tomatoes, red chillies, over-size bitter gourds, extra long long-beans, crunchy pakchoy will evoke enough envy among the neighbors to ask not only for freebies but also for a few earthworms (to produce good fertilizer) and a few tomato seeds and long-bean cuttings!

A little envy, greed and competition among mothers may just be what’s needed to turn Asia’s idle backyards to productive food machines for Asia’s poor!


Goducate believes that the key to the success of this plan is to train community workers who can first turn their own backyards into “model-farms” and then let envy drive one neighbor after another to turn their backyards into model-farms.

The first batch of community workers in Laguna are already being trained in the Goducate model farm there. The large farm in Iloilo will hopefully take in their first batch in December.

Helping poor Asians – one backyard at a time! (Part 1)

In my travels through Asia, I am saddened by the poor nourishment of many Asian children. My training as a doctor helps me to pick up signs of malnourishment (eg. under-sized children, late maturity, general lethargy) in almost every Asian country – whether rural or urban.

The average traveler is more likely to be impressed by the nicer clothes that they wear, the newer electronic gadgets in their hands and the slickly packed snacks that they eat and assume that these children are doing well.

An average meal for many Asian children is a plate of rice, topped with a little instant noodles (from a pack that is shared among the whole family). This convenient, tasty meal may satisfy the child’s taste buds and fill his belly but will surely not adequately nourish him. Sad to say, such meals are becoming more common as we “progress”! After all, to many mothers the slickly packaged instant noodles suggests a “scientific” meal for the modern mum!

I do not believe that Asian mothers deliberately want to under-nourish their children. I believe that ignorance contributes significantly to this state of affairs. And I believe that this trend can be reversed – one backyard at a time!

For the past year, Goducate has been experimenting with different aspects of bio-intensive backyard farming and we are convinced that with the right type of organic fertilizers (easily produced by earthworms), the right type of seeds (easily obtained from agricultural organizations) and a little encouragement, Asian mums can produce enough “organic” vegetables to feed their children in their own backyards. With today’s agri-technology, there is no reason why the poor cannot enjoy the freshest, most nutritious meals from their own backyards.

Goducate presently is developing two farms in the Philippines – one in Iloilo (in the central part of the Philippines) and the other in Laguna (in the northern island of Luzon) – to train community workers for Asia.

Goducate hopes to help Asians help themselves – beginning with one backyard at a time!

Batam English camp at Tunas Bahru Junior High School

Just last month Dr Paul Choo conducted a seminar on Principle of teaching for the 100 teachers of the seven schools under an Indonesian educational NGO (in English called “New Sprouts”).

Subsequently, Goducate was invited to conduct English camp for their first year Junior high students on the 7th and 8th August at one of the seven schools, called Tunas Bahru.

Camp started at 3.00 pm after school on the 7th which was a Saturday. 54 students came and attended the camp together with 3 of their teachers. How excited the kids were while waiting for our volunteer helpers from Singapore to come and spend time to teach them speech drama and play indoor games that will help them speak English!

We picked up our 7 Singapore volunteers from Sekupang ferry terminal and brought them to the school where the camp was held. We commenced with ice breaker action songs and games to help them break from their shyness and prepare them to converse in English. They were then divided into three teams and each team was to compete with the other at the end of the drama practice. The kids were so full of energy and did their best to speak English.

They spent a night sleeping in the school classrooms and were up early Sunday morning before the sun is up to play volleyball. Thereafter, we continued with our session with them.

The 3 Indonesian teachers really appreciate our coming to help their kids especially foreigners who can speak and teach English. Though not much can be done in term of teaching them to be fluent in English in just two days, yet our coming was an encouragement to the students to see the importance of learning English to prepare for a better future.

We will be back next month for another English camp. Any volunteer care to join us ???