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NEWS & REPORTS

index of papers
June, 2004
Coop News
TIERRA, LIBERTAD . . . AND COOPS!
in Hidalgo, Mexico
by Betsy Bowman
These days it takes more than "Tierra y Libertad"
-- Land and Freedom, the rallying cry of the Mexican revolution - for
third world campesinos to get by with subsistence agriculture and raising
a few animals. It takes planning, government funding and cooperatives.
GEO editors Bob Stone and Betsy Bowman visited a small network of coops
in the state of Hidalgo in central Mexico in Nov. 2003 and again in
June, 2004.
Thanks to a change in the Mexican law of cooperatives
in 2001, local organizations can get government monies directly from
the Dept. of Agriculture. Luis Martinez and Patricio Bravo, the two
local organizers, have already established and formally registered four
cooperatives in the area around Luis' home town of Alfajayucan and fifteen
coops around Patricio's home town of Chilcuautla. Luis says there are
applications pending for eight more coops in his area and four more
in Patricio's area. They have also organized a second degree coop, the
Empresa Integradora para el Desarrollo Rural or Integrated Company for
Rural Development; they call it simply the "Integradora."
This coop provides technical assistance such as legal and accounting
help as well as marketing assistance.
Once the coops are legally registered, they can then apply
for government funds for specific cooperative projects. The government
funds 70% of the project and the "cooperativistas" fund the
other 30%. All but three of these coops are for agricultural or livestock
coops; the remaining three are for buying tractors. Farm labor is still
all done by hand or with the help of a few animals. Most of the coops
we visited were in the early stages of their development. Two projects
are to build a second hot house and grow tomatoes. To market tomatoes,
they need a certain volume of tomatoes, more than can be grown in just
one hot house. One of these hot houses got irrigation water by a set
of three photo voltaic panels which pumped water uphill to a big holding
tank. The World Bank provided funds for the solar powered water pumps.
We sat on the front porch eating delicious tomatoes between the machine
which turns kernels of corn into flour and the machine which turns the
flour into dough for tortillas. From the porch we had a breath taking
view of the valley and mountains beyond and the homes of the other members
of the extended family who live there. Another project to grow chile
peppers was just a cleared field with tall metal trustles in the ground
ready for the plastic covering to make the hot house. These campesinos
have gotten the approval for 70% government funding for their project,
but they don't have the 30% cash they need. If they could just get low
interest loans for rather modest amounts of money - from $2,000 to $15,000
- they would quickly move from the 19th century to the 21st century.
The state of Hidalgo is the home of the Otomi Indians,
the descendants of those who built Teotihuacan in the second half of
the first millenium. Teotihuacan, outside of Mexico City, is one of
Mexico's largest and most famous pre-Columbian sites. The Otomi, like
fully one half of the planet's populaton, have survived until today
with subsistence agriculture and a few animals. They live outside the
money economy. But increasingly the money economy is coming to them.
For example, they need cash for their children's education. Even though
education is "free" in Mexico, the parents often have to buy
uniforms, books, paper and pencils; they also must transport their children
some distance to get to school. And also there simply aren't enough
schools; often high school education is far enough away that students
have to be boarding students. This is usually too expensive for their
parents. So the purpose of the coops is to produce a crop that can be
marketed commercially to earn cash to complement the subsistence lifestyle
of these indigeneous people.
The crops they grow are high profit ones such as Zeta
mushrooms, tomatoes, chile peppers, peaches and olives. They are raising
goats to make goat cheese. The young people hope to start a rabbit coop.
So far they have gotten a building for it, but not yet the funding they
need. A major concern of the communities is to provide a livelihood
for the young people so they won't be tempted to go to the United States
to work. Higher up in the mountains is a women's coop which makes a
nutritious spread from the Maguey cactus called "miel de Maguey,"
or Maguey honey. The Otomi people have one hundred different varieties
of cactus.
The coop growing Zeta mushrooms in Nov. when we visited
them had just lost an entire crop due to a very unusual freeze. We visited
the sterilized room where the keep the sterilized straw and mulch hives
into which the mushroom fungus germinates for 30 to 45 days. We visited
the plastic tent-like building they had built and the rows of shelves
where the mushroom hives used to sit and grow mushrooms. In addition
to getting more fungus to start a new crop of Zeta mushrooms germinating
in their straw and mulch hives, they also need a dark room for the first
few weeks of growth, for the gestation period. Dona Paula, the President
of the coops and the most out-going of the group, explained to us how
they worked in groups of 2 or 3 doing different jobs. They discussed
ideas and problems together to find solutions. They much prefer working
as a group than working alone. She also explained that though she can't
read or write, she knows how to work in a group and make a success of
their endeavor.
We were very touched by this group. As I wondered to myself,
"Well really, how much money would they need to get more mushroom
fungus, get a heating and cooling system and get production going?"
The answer is they need a low interest loan for about $1,800. They have
applied to the Mexican government for about $7,000. If they can raise
$1,800, they can get the government monies and be back in businesss.
The teenagers need a low interest loan of only $2,000 to get their coop
going. Loans for modest amounts of money can make all the difference
to them.
To those of us who are used to a first world standard
of living, these peasant farmers appear very "poor." Most
don't have electricity or running water. But they are not hungry and
they work for themselves. They are not subject to a factory or plantation
boss. And the smiles on their faces and the spark in their eyes told
us that they were hopeful for the future. They were working together
to meet their needs by themselves. They just need a little help from
their friends, the world's cooperators.
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