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Community
Farms at the Turn of the Millennium:
Outside
the Box -- But Inside the Hoop
© Copyright - 2001 by Steven
McFadden
Over the last 14 years of the 20th Century, Community Supported
Agriculture (CSA) took root in North America with moderate speed
and gradually grew to include about 1,200 farms. CSA proliferated
against a surging tide of decline for small farms in general,
and with virtually no government support.
As
we move on into the new century and a new millennium, CSA is still
generally regarded as outside the box of conventional agriculture.
Yet from the vantage that is indigenous to our land, CSA is respectfully
within the Sacred Hoop, a traditional philosophical concept of
Turtle Island (North America) for 12,000 years or more.
While
few CSA farms have explicit appreciation of the history and relevance
of the Sacred Hoop, or its attendant precepts, they are in many
ways implicitly aligned with it.
Because
of this, CSA is establishing a model with potentially wide implications
for the 21st Century.
CSA
and the Sacred Hoop
A
CSA farm is a community-based organization of growers and consumers.
The consumer households live independently but agree to provide
direct, up-front support for the local growers by investing in
a share of the harvest. The growers in turn agree to do their
best to provide sufficient quantity and quality of food to meet
the household needs and expectations of the shareholders.
CSA
farms typically produce a sizeable share of a family's fresh vegetables
and fruits; many CSAs also offer shares of milk, butter, eggs,
meat, and flowers; some also have formal links with consumer coops,
giving shareholders access to a wide variety of goods.
Within
this web of economic relationships, the farms and families form
a network of mutual support, whether the community is an urban
neighborhood, a suburb, a church, a school, or some other social
constellation. CSA has wide latitude for variation, depending
on the resources and desires of the participants. No two community
farms are entirely alike.
As
CSA pioneers conceived of it -- and as it is being practiced at
many farms -- CSA is not just another new and clever approach
to marketing. Rather, community farming is about the necessary
renewal of agriculture through its healthy linkage with the human
community that depends on farming for survival. It's also about
the necessary stewardship of soil, plants, and animals: the essential
capital of human cultures.
In
many respects CSA embodies and expresses the original Native American
social and environmental ethos, the Sacred Hoop. The Sacred Hoop
is a metaphor for a core concept, or worldview, encompassing a
host of subtleties and paradoxes.
The
Sacred Hoop (or the "Circle of Life" as popularized
in the Disney film, The Lion King) represents our interconnectedness
with the Earth. It is the understanding that we are in an inevitable
web of relationship with minerals, plants, animals, and natural
forces.
Human
beings are part of the continuum of nature, and exist within the
same order governing the rest of life on Earth. What happens to
part of the hoop ultimately affects all of the hoop.
To
be in right relationship with the hoop, one follows the original
instructions, a common Native American expression. Original instructions is a reference to
a set of natural laws -- laws which are inferred and shared, but not codified
or written. For example, the concept of original instructions would include appreciation of the fact that if you poison your water, you will get sick.
As I understand it, a foundational premise of these natural laws -- original instructions -- is to express respect for all things as part
of the Sacred Hoop of Life.
"In the
beginning we were told that the human beings who walk about on
the Earth have been provided with all of the things necessary
for life. We were instructed to carry love for one another, and
to show a great respect for all the beings of this Earth. We were
shown that our well-being depends on the well-being of the vegetable
life, and that we are close relatives of the four-legged beings."
- Haudenausenee (Iroquois) Elders
"In
our way of life with every decision we make, we always keep in
mind the Seventh Generation of children to come. We never forget
them."
- Oren Lyons, Faithkeeper, Onandoga Nation
Over
the last several hundred years the modern nation-states of Canada,
Mexico and the United States have supplanted the indigenous ways of
Turtle Island with whole new systems of culture and agriculture
based on a different worldview with different precepts of philosophy,
economy, ecology, and education.
These
precepts -- individuality, logic, measure, competitiveness, reduction of whole systems
into discrete parts, and monetary value
-- are now at the heart of the global market economy.
They
constitute the dominant set of agricultural ideas and approaches,
and can be said to represent a significant part of "thinking inside
the box." Because the Sacred Hoop by definition includes
all things, these industrial means and ends are also in the hoop. In my view, though, they are deficient in awareness of, and
basic respect for, this reality.
Sacred
Hoop and Superstrings
The
indigenous concept of the Sacred Hoop closely corresponds with
what modern scientists are glimpsing about the nature of reality
through the theories of Relativity, Quantum Mechanics, Uncertainty,
and Superstrings.
These
theories, Superstrings in particular, advance the understanding
that matter and energy are interchangeable and, ultimately, both
woven into a single unified field. As the November 1986 edition
of Discover magazine put it:
"The
theory (Superstrings) has turned the universe into an entity in
which all matter and energy, all forces, all people, planets,
stars, cats, dogs, quasars, atoms, automobiles, and everything
else are the result of the actions and interactions of these infinitesimal
linked strings."
Everything
is connected, and everything is in dynamic flux. The universe
is "a single, unbroken wholeness in flowing movement,"
as described by physicist David Bohm.
The Algonquin
words Manitou and Gitchee Manitou describe a similar,
if not the same, understanding. They refer not a Supreme Being,
as in Western spiritual conceptions, but rather to a cosmic, mysterious
power existing everywhere in nature, and connecting all things.
Scientists
say this universal connection occurs at the level of Planck scale,
wherein the ratio of measurement is to the atom as the atom is
in scale to the solar system. What happens to any one part of
the vast field of matter and energy which is our reality (the
Sacred Hoop) affects all other parts.
Eunice
Baumann-Nelson, Ph.D., of the Penobscot Nation, is but one elder
who has noted the intersection of the unified-field theories of
Western science with the Sacred Hoop concept of aboriginal philosophy:
"This
is a stunning insight. From it I know that I have the responsibility
of caring for you and all things that exist as I care for myself.
I have to behave as if everything I do to you and Creation, I
do to myself. Because that's the way it is. That's reality. Consequently,
it behooves me to act with respect and love."
Many
scientists say the Superstrings theory has potential to be recognized
as the ultimately correct way of describing the fundamental nature
of our universe. Our personal connection with each other and with
all things is thus not a purely religious, nostalgic or romantic notion, but is
also as accurate a worldview as modern physics and mathematics can
ascertain at the end of the 20th Century.
This
worldview -- anciently indigenous to Turtle Island by way of insight
and contemplation, and now joined by the leading edge of Western
science -- is so far grasped by only a few people. Over time many
more people may come to appreciate it. If so, they may naturally
employ it as a foundation for decisions and actions. And if so,
CSA will likely prosper and proliferate in the 21st Century.
One's
worldview, the ideas that arise in the context of one's worldview,
and the actions that follow, have both impact and consequences.
Industrial agriculture is, by and large, oblivious to the web
of connections represented by the Sacred Hoop. Consequently it
inflicts great harm on the air, soil, water, and animals.
The
US Geological Survey, for example, has identified agriculture
as the major source of ground water pollution in the US. Globally,
according to the World Resources Institute, more than three billion
acres of land (an area the size of China and India combined) have
been seriously degraded since World War II. The cause of this
degradation is primarily chemical fertilization, high-tech cultivation
techniques, and livestock overgrazing -- all practices intrinsic
to industrial agriculture.
Society
must decide if it wants to go on -- and can afford to go on --
bearing these kinds of consequences in the 21st Century. Or whether
we want to take another direction, perhaps a direction guided
by indigenous understandings and validated by careful scientific
inquiry. Because of their implicit awareness of and respect for
the Sacred Hoop, CSA farms are in far closer concert with prevailing
realities than the colossus of industrial agriculture.
How
CSA Honors the Hoop
CSA
gives practical expression to the precepts that follow from understandings
of the Sacred Hoop in at least three important ways:
First, CSA fosters coherent and positive links among families, communities
and the specific farms that they directly depend on for
their food. The families know the people who are growing their
food, and they know how the farmers are growing it; the farmers know who is
eating their food. Thus, relationship is reestablished on a basis
of reciprocity in a new and healthy social unit. That's outside
the box of usual thinking and practice in the modern food chain,
but respectfully inside the Sacred Hoop.
Second, in direct keeping with the Sacred Hoop's precept of considering
the impact of decisions and actions on the next seven generations
of children, CSA takes an inherently conservative approach to
new technologies such as chemical fertilization and genetically engineered (GE) plants, animals,
and organisms.
Over
the last four years multinational corporations have undertaken
an unprecedented experiment on plant, animal, and human populations
via massive infiltration of the food chain with GE organisms.
According to Genetic ID of Fairfield, Iowa, 60 to 70% of all processed
foods in supermarkets now contain GE components. No one can know
the consequences of this kind of fundamental alteration of plants,
animals, and organisms over the next seven generations of human
beings.
While
apparently within the box of conventional enterprise, such risky,
mechanistic, mass-scale initiatives have not one generation of
experience. Still, this is how the majority of agricultural resources
are being lined up for the 21st Century.
CSA
goes a different way. Collegial dialogue among the growers and
the shareholder families who eat their food naturally governs
the way the farm implements technological and dietary shifts. CSA gives families and farmers the opportunity to exercise their free will concerning the food they eat.
Most
people obtain their food from the remote market channels of industrial
agriculture. Thus they have neither information nor choice about
participating in the great genetic experiment being conducted upon humanity in our times. Genetically engineered food is not labeled. Consumers
are thereby thwarted from choosing a conservative diet; by default
they are unconsciously eating a radical, experimental diet of genetically altered
foods.
CSA
is one of the few ways people can exercise their free will in
this crucial realm. People know who is growing their food, and
how it is being done. This reality is respectfully in keeping
with the Sacred Hoop precept of personal sovereignty -- a precept
also said to be at the root of democracy.
Even while the form of
CSA in America (Turtle Island) is implicitly anchored in values and precepts that have been
tested and proven over hundreds of generations on this continent, CSA is endlessly innovative -- striving to
move wisely and efficiently into the future.
This
is evident in a number of ways, including the employment of appropriate
means such as organic, French-intensive, and Biodynamic growing
techniques. It is further evident in the judicious use of modern
tools such as computers and spaders, and newsletters, and in innovative
organizational arrangements with churches, schools, food banks,
inner-city programs, and suburban neighborhoods. Rather than tending
toward the anachronistic, CSA is pioneering.
Third,
CSA is outside the box but inside the hoop in the realm of economic
ideals. An ideal CSA strives not to make a profit, but rather
to make a living for the farmer and farm family, the community
of plants and animals that share the acreage, the allied families
and households who participate in the farm as shareholders, and
the larger community and ecosystem.
In this respect, CSA farms
represent a new economic and social approach to agriculture. Although
CSA farms have much to learn and to put into practice in this
regard, they have already proven themselves viable.
Farms
arising under the impulse of CSA are guided, or at least prodded,
by associative economics, which is distinct from both capitalism
and communism. Capitalism puts profit at the heart of the enterprise;
communism (at least as it has played out in various nations) places
the state at the heart of the enterprise; associative economics
holds that we must put the needs of our fellow human beings at
the heart of our enterprise.
The
concept of associative economy was first expounded by Rudolf Steiner
in a number of public talks and writings in the years from 1917-1919.
It has been developed in theory and practice by many others in
the following decades. As an economic approach it is still very
much in the embryonic stage of development, a lot like CSA itself.
The
basic idea of associative economics is for people to make free-will
associations with one another around mutual economic interests.
Interested parties identify true needs in a given situation, such
as a farm, and then strive to cover those needs with the least
input of substance, energy and labor.
In
practice, this means that all the participants in a given economic
process try to listen to the needs of all the other partners.
In an ideal CSA farm, for example, the active farmers listen to
the needs of the member families; the member families listen to
the needs of the farmers. On this basis they proceed.
No
one asks, "How can we make a larger monetary profit?"
That's not the motivation. All the people try to identify the
true needs of the farm and its particular hoop, or community,
and then to work out ways to meet them.
This
is an ideal, of course, and rarely reached in practice. Nonetheless
it is a new economic approach that has guided many CSA farms in
demonstrably beneficial directions -- economically, agriculturally,
environmentally, socially, and educationally.
Thus,
the economic idea underlying CSA farms implicitly acknowledges
the reality of the Sacred Hoop, and strives to be in right relationship
with it, not via philosophical or scientific discourse, but through
praxis - real, gritty, day-to-day labor, decisions, resources, and transactions.
*****
In
the context of these three points, one may question whether CSA
farms fall outside the box of globalization, which so often is
disruptive of local community life. Perhaps not.
The
surging high-tech aspects of global culture are on an apparently
unchangeable ascendancy. Yet if electronic networks are to transmit
messages and impulses ennobling to the human spirit, they must
be grounded in something wholesome and stable.
While
CSA farms cannot provide the entire wherewithal for such a civilization,
they can provide an important part of the foundation.
CSA
Potential
While
CSAs confront many challenges and questions, they do work. They
feed people, they save energy and money, they take care of the
land, they make it possible for people to farm the land on a sensible
scale, they provide healthy employment, they encourage a healthy
diet, and they bring networks of independent households back into
direct connection with each other. The farmers serve as ambassadors
to the Earth for the families, and the farm as both embassy and
sanctuary.
While
the US alone has lost over 300,000 farms since the mid-1980s,
CSA farms have generally prospered. There are now more than 1,200
such farms in America, directly involving more than 120,000 families.
CSA appears poised to grow even more, albeit gradually.
In
the century ahead, though, why not 150,000 CSA farms in North
America? Or more? Why not millions of shareholder families? Why
not at least one CSA farm in every city, suburb and town? The
proven benefits could help renew and revitalize the foundation
of thousands of communities and farms on Turtle Island.
These
CSA farms, however, cannot be imposed externally or top-down from
a hierarchy, whether governmental, academic, or corporate; nor
are such farms likely to arise from what inspiration may emanate
from academic papers or inspirational rhetoric.
To
be true community farms, and to succeed long-term, they must rise
from the grass roots based upon fully informed and free-will choices
of farmers, land owners, holders of other capital, and shareholder
families. People have to want to do it because they see clear
benefits to themselves, their families, their neighbors, and the
Earth.
Because
CSA is in keeping with the basic philosophical precepts of the
Sacred Hoop, and also with the physical realities described by modern science,
the CSA initiative holds tremendous potential. Ultimately, it
could serve as a basis for renewal not just of specific farms
or communities, but possibly also for renewal of the larger human
relationship with the Earth.
Might
CSA eventually grow to the point where it is recognized as inside
the box of evolved 21st Century agricultural approaches? We shall
see. There is no certainty that CSA farms will fare well, or become
significant features of culture and agriculture in the 21st Century;
however, there is a distinct possibility that they will.
References:
1. Agriculture, by Dr. Rudolf Steiner, Rudolf Steiner Press, London,
1972.
2. Basic Call
to Consciousness: Haudenausenee Elders Address to the Western
World. Akwesasne Notes, Rooseveltown, NY, 1977.
3. Community
Supported Agriculture: Can it Become the Basis for a New Associative
Economy? by Gary Lamb, article in Threefold Review (P.O. Box 6,
Philmont, NY 12565), No. 11, Summer/Fall, 1994.
4. Debating
Darwin: Adventures of a Scholar, by John C. Greene, Regina Books,
Claremont, CA, 1999.
5. Farms of
Tomorrow Revisited: Community Supported Farms, Farm Supported
Communities, by Trauger Groh and Steven McFadden, Biodynamic Assoc.,
Kimberton, PA, 1998.
6. Little
Book of Native American Wisdom, compiled by Steven McFadden, Element
Books, Shaftsbury, UK, 1994.
7. Profiles
in Wisdom: Native Elders Speak About the Earth, by Steven McFadden,
Bear & Co., Santa Fe, NM, 1991. See Chapter 4: The Mind of
Scientist, the Heart of a Mystic: Eunice Bauman-Nelson, Ph.D.
8. Superstrings:
A Theory of Everything, by P.C.W. Davies, New York, Cambridge
University Press, 1995.
9. Superstrings
and the Search for the Theory of Everything, by David F. Peat,
Chicago, Contemporary, 1988.
10. Wholeness
and the Implicate Order, by David Bohm, Routledge, NY, 1996.
Author:
Steven
McFadden is director of Chiron Communications, and the
author of many non-fiction books.
The Classic Book on CSA farms
Farms of Tomorrow Revisited: Community Supported Farms, Farm
Supported Communities
by Trauger Groh and Steven McFadden
ISBN # 093825013-2($17.50
US/ $26.25 CAN)
Order online
by clicking
this direct link to the book on Amazon.com
Ask at your
local bookstore.
Order by phone
from:
Chelsea Green Inc.
(also the distributor
for bookstores)
1-800-639-4099
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