Goducate starts swine-dispersal program in North Sumatran village

About a year ago, the needy village folk in Lau ban-Ban, Kota Binjai, North Sumatra, sought assistance from Goducate on how they could successfully raise pigs both for consumption and income. After several consultations, it was decided that the relevant strategy was the raising of superior breeds through a natural farming system (NFS). Instead of a concrete floor, a dug-out of one meter depth is backfilled with rice husk for natural bedding. After four months, the substrate is used as organic fertilizer.

The NFS approach, as validated by the village folk themselves, also eliminates the irritating odor from swine production; is 90% less intensive than the prevailing practices; optimizes water usage; and can be easily handled by women and children.

Five families recently became recipients of the swine-dispersal program. Five more households will receive two female piglets each in the next few days since some of the sows which were initially group-raised had already farrowed. Each recipient is expected to breed the pigs successfully and return four female piglets to the local association later on so that the piglets could be dispersed to two other identified families.

By helping each other through this scheme, all the 80 households in the village will hopefully have their respective swine-raising projects within the next two years thereby meeting their protein needs and earning additional income from sales.

Five-day-old piglets
Five-day-old piglets
Learning how to inject piglet with iron supplement
Learning how to inject piglet with iron supplement

Young Goducate musicians attend their violin teacher’s performance at Arellano University

A few weeks ago 24 children from the Goducate music program in Laguna had a special outing to Manila. They went to listen to their violin teacher Liezl perform at a concert at Arellano University. As an additional treat, the children were brought to a large shopping mall in Manila. For some of the children, many of whom come from small villages in Laguna, it was their very first time in a large mall.

Liezl had just finished a three-month perfoming arts (singer/musician) course at Arellano University. It was a Phillipines TESDA (Technical Education and Skills Development Authority) accredited course.

In 2011 Liezl was one of 5 violinists from the Goducate Orchestra who were selected by a Channel News Asia program, Once Upon A Village, to go to Singapore for a couple of weeks of intensive training at the Wolfgang Music Studio. Liezl was invited back by the studio for a couple more visits to prepare for the Grade 5 Trinity College music examinations in the violin, which she passed with a merit in mid-2012.

Since her return to Laguna she has been teaching the beginners and the juniors in the Goducate orchestra how to play the violin. Her students were very encouraged and inspired watching her perform at the concert to mark the end of her course. She said that she wants to teach them the right techniques, intonation, flexibility and style in playing the instrument.

We hope that the children in the music program will have the opportunities that Liezl has had to further their musical training, or to get scholarships to university on the strength of their musical ability, as several other Goducate musicians have done.

Listenimg to Liezl's performance
Listenimg to Liezl’s performance
At the shopping mall
At the shopping mall

Goducate discusses plans with village chiefs in Lailara, Sumba, to cultivate Moringa

Sumba is an island in Eastern Indonesia that is about 10 times the area of Singapore, but which has about only one-tenth the population of the latter.  The Sumbanese are poorer than other Indonesians, and a high percentage have been infected by malaria.  Infant mortality is also high.  Water is scarce during the dry season and the women and children have to travel several kilometers to fetch water while the men are at work.  Most of the original vegetation has now gone because of slash-burn clearing for planting of corn, cassava, and other cash crops.  Past attempts to reforest the limestone hills have failed due to absence of social marketing.

A couple of weeks ago a Goducate team was in Lailara (population: 1,030), a typical village in Sumba. Farming is mainly subsistence monoculture with minimal use of chemical inputs and with characteristically low productivity.  Livestock, small ruminants, and poultry are predominantly native.  Bare horseback riding is the usual way of getting quickly from one place to another.

The Goducate team was in Lailara to discuss with the village chief and other leaders how we could best help the community. We agreed that the first priority is to teach the community how to grow and use Moringa to improve their nutrition and health. Moringa is a plant that provides many nutrients in its leaves, it seeds and its seedpods.

We hope to assign an agriculturally trained community development worker (CDW) to Lailara in the not-too-distant future. The village is excited about this prospect and has offered accommodation for this CDW. It also plans to identify one of the villagers who can be mentored on Moringa production, processing, and utilization.

Consultative meeting with the village leader
Consultative meeting with the village leader
Site of proposed Goducate base in Lailara
Site of proposed Goducate base in Lailara