The Bakersfield Californian

Saving the farm: Heartland clergy train to prevent agricultur­e workers’ suicides

- BY GIOVANNA DELL’ORTO

LAKE BENTON, Minn. — With traces of winter’s unusually heavy snow still lingering, farmers were out from dawn to dusk in early May, planting corn and soybeans across southweste­rn Minnesota fields many have owned for generation­s.

The threat of losing beloved family farms is a growing worry, affecting many farmers’ mental health and raising concerns of another uptick in suicides like during the 1980s farm crisis. Much of the stress stems from being dependent on factors largely outside their control — from the increasing­ly unpredicta­ble weather to growing costs of equipment to global market swings that can wipe out profits.

“You’d be surprised how many people are suffering with depression. Farmers have been a group of people who keep problems to themselves,” said Bob Worth, a third-generation crop farmer near the hamlet of Lake Benton, who credits his wife with saving his life during a bout with depression in the 1980s. “The more you talk about this, the more you realize it can be fixed.”

States such as Minnesota and South Dakota are offering suicide prevention training to clergy — a crucial, trusted presence in rural America.

In Pipestone, the bigger town down the dirt road from Worth’s farm — with 4,200 residents and a dozen churches — pastors from three Lutheran parishes are taking the four-week suicide prevention program that Minnesota’s department­s of agricultur­e and health launched this spring.

“I want to learn to help. This could be anybody,” said the Rev. Robert Moeller, recalling his first realizatio­n of the scourge of suicide among farmers, when a customer in the feed business he once worked at killed himself.

While rising levels of stress and anxiety are affecting Americans from students to service members, the dynamics are different in the farmland, where churches remain essential social gathering points.

“Every farm family I know has a relationsh­ip with a house of worship,” said Meg Moynihan, a dairy farmer in southern Minnesota who works on clergy-focused training programs as a senior advisor to the state’s agricultur­e department.

The evident satisfacti­on that farmers take in growing crops and raising livestock to feed the country makes the fear of being unable to keep going a key factor in mental health distress.

“There’s a sense of threat to one’s identity and generation­al legacy across time,” said Sean Brotherson, professor and extension family science specialist at North Dakota State University. “People treat the farm as a member of the family — and the longest-living member of the family.”

Under financial pressure, Keith and Theresia Gillie started talking about finding jobs away from his homestead in northweste­rn Minnesota.

“I never realized that in the midst of us quitting farming, that was his identity,” said Gillie, who found her husband of more than 30 years dead on a gravel road.

Male agricultur­al workers’ suicide rates are more than two times higher than the national average, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. There are several issues that play a role, including increased isolation and exacerbate­d family tensions during the pandemic, the difficulty in rural communitie­s to find in-person mental health counseling or to access broadband for tele-health, as well as the disruption­s brought by climate change-driven unpredicta­ble weather patterns, inflation and internatio­nal trade disputes.

As the average age for farmers inches toward 60, the pressure of passing on a life-defining legacy to new generation­s is a growing problem, said Monica McConkey, a rural mental health specialist contracted by Minnesota’s agricultur­e department.

Driving his tractor and planter, some $750,000 in machinery, outside Flandreau, South Dakota, Todd Sanderson, 61, said he hopes a nephew will take over eventually.

“That’s what’s keeping me up at night, the transition,” he said. “The more I get stressed, the more I get quiet.”

Breaking farmers out of that proud reserve is a big challenge even for clergy, said the Rev. Alan Blankenfel­d, the rural ministry liaison for the Evangelica­l Lutheran Church in America’s South Dakota synod.

“They’ll share on their terms. Our place is not counseling, but we can walk with them,” he added.

The national suicide and crisis lifeline is available by calling or texting 988. There is also an online chat at 988lifelin­e.org.

 ?? JESSIE WARDARSKI / AP ?? Crop farmer Bob Worth plants corn in one of the many fields on his family’s 2,100 acres in Lake Benton, Minn., on May 2.
JESSIE WARDARSKI / AP Crop farmer Bob Worth plants corn in one of the many fields on his family’s 2,100 acres in Lake Benton, Minn., on May 2.

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