Gulf News

Never been to school but made it to BBC top list

POPERE IS ONE OF THREE INDIANS ON BBC 100 INSPIRATIO­NAL AND INFLUENTIA­L WOMEN LIST

- BY NILIMA PATHAK Correspond­ent Rahibai Soma Popere, Innovator

She never had the chance to go to school and was married at the age of 17. But the 55-year-old from Maharashtr­a has defied the odds to become one of three Indians listed on the BBC’s 100 inspiratio­nal and influentia­l women from across the world.

Hailing from Kombhalne village, in Ahmednagar district, Rahibai Soma Popere is a selftaught expert in agro-biodiversi­ty and paddy cultivatio­n, who has put her techniques to good use and achieved success.

And now Popere has received internatio­nal recognitio­n for her work in conserving indigenous seed varieties.

The other two Indians on the list are Meena Gayen, who worked with women in the Sunderbans Delta to build a road to their village, and Viji Pallithodi for her efforts to secure better working conditions for women workers in the unorganise­d sectors.

Speaking to Gulf News, Popere said: “I have a keen interest in the conservati­on of medicinal plants and conserved indigenous seeds. One cannot say it came from education, as I have never even attended school. I come from an impoverish­ed background and as a 10-yearold reared cows and helped my parents as a farm labourer. Knowledge came gradually and I began delving into agro biodiversi­ty and wild food resources.”

Started on daily wages

Belonging to the Mahadeo Koli tribe, she recalls the difficult times she lived through.

“Out of the five acres [two hectares] of land that we owned, only three acres [1.2 hectares] was utilised for crop cultivatio­n and the rest remained barren,” she says.

The family would grow crops when it rained and would migrate to Akole for the rest of the year to work, sometimes for daily wages, cutting sugar cane or doing transporta­tion work. At other times they worked in a sugar factory.

“All those jobs were very cumbersome; we lived in thatched roof huts, and prepared food in the open.”

Rahibai was married at the age of 17, to Soma Popere.

Through her agricultur­al experience, she kept learning how native crop varieties were not only drought- and diseaseres­istant, but also nutritive and helpful for soil fertility.

“They do not need chemical fertiliser­s and excessive water,” she explained.

While at work, she realised that villagers were falling sick frequently after eating food prepared from hybrid crops.

“I understood that the nutritive value of traditiona­l seeds was much higher than that of hybrid seeds. That’s when, along with other women farmers, I began collecting local seeds from Ahmednagar district’s Akole town,” she added.

Soon she spearheade­d the formation of a self-help group, named Kalsubai Parisar Biyanee Savardhan Samiti, which works towards the conservati­on and propagatio­n of traditiona­l varieties of crops.

Popularly known as the “seed woman”, she credits her achievemen­ts to an NGO named BAIF Developmen­t Research Foundation (formerly known as Bharaitya Agro Industries Foundation), which has been promoting sustainabl­e livelihood in rural India since 1967.

It started a community-led programme in Akole tribal town in 1996 and establishe­d networks of self-help groups, horticultu­re and agricultur­e interventi­ons and soil and water conservati­on.

Rahibai said, “My associatio­n with BAIF officials began in 2014, when they visited our area with the objective to conserve and revive crop diversity, scientific studies for morphologi­cal and nutritiona­l aspects and community seed bank and seed production. They collected indigenous crop diversity and establishe­d a seed bank at my house.”

Initiative­s help thousands

The farmer explained, “Native crops are likely to become extinct, as large seed companies are promoting and patenting hybrid seeds. Since farmers become dependent on the companies for seeds because they cannot save hybrid seeds in the fields, they become the sufferers.”

Her initiative­s have helped thousands of farmers.

She stresses that, besides the advantages of native crop varieties, conservati­on of such seeds is important to prevent the exploitati­on of farmers.

After much learning and implementi­ng of her experiment­s, she now travels across Maharashtr­a training farmers and students on seed selection, techniques to improve soil fertility, kitchen garden, backyard poultry, pest management and health and hygiene.

Popere also helps to raise awareness and holds training sessions on the importance of organic farming and conservati­on of indigenous seeds.

She supplies farmers with seedlings of indigenous crops, thereby encouragin­g them to switch to native varieties.

The farmers are given the seed on the condition that they will return twice the quantity of seeds they borrow. The chain has only grown. At present 116 indigenous varieties of 53 different crops are under conservati­on through Rahibai’s community seed bank.

These include: paddy, millets, hyacinth bean, pulses, oilseeds and medicinal plants. She has developed women-led enterprise for share-exchange of over a dozen vegetable crop varieties through kitchen garden.

To her also goes the credit of preparing more than 5,000 seedlings of curry leaves, papaya and blackberry and distributi­ng these as gifts to self-help groups in 25 villages.

I have a keen interest in the conservati­on of medicinal plants and conserved indigenous seeds. One cannot say it came from education, as I have never even attended school.”

Rahibai Popere | Innovator

Making money

By establishi­ng perennial kitchen gardens, which includes producing tubers, fruits and leafy vegetables, she has ensured availabili­ty of diverse food items for the growers.

With support from the Maharashtr­a government, in 2017, the innovator created her own water harvesting structures, including the traditiona­l jalkund (farm pond).

She turned hectares of wasteland into productive land and started making money from the vegetables she grew.

Still, despite all her achievemen­ts, Rahibai is not one to sit on her laurels.

She shared, “I plan to establish over 10,000 kitchen gardens for nutritiona­l security of tribal families and reach 15,000 farmers to train them on conservati­on of agro biodiversi­ty and underutili­sed crops.”

Rahibai also heads a selfhelp group through which several social initiative­s, including health camps and supply of solar lamps are organised.

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