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| Greenhouse-grown: Nissim
with tomato slips |
Nissim Sroussi, a specialist in arid land
cultivation and a second-generation Israeli farmer, moved to the
Gaza Strip twenty-seven years ago. His expertise proved useful
for the growth of the settlement he founded, Gan Or, and ultimately
for the success of Jewish growers throughout the Gaza Strip, whose
produce, today, is shipped all over Israel, Europe, and the U.S.
Sroussi's work in arid-land farming has taken him far beyond the
borders of the Gaza Strip. In the Gobi Desert of China, he demonstrated
how a drip-irrigation system developed in Israel could be used
to grow grapes, apples, peaches, and pears. In Central Africa--in
Zaire, Senegal, Mali, Nigeria, Burkina Faso, and Cameroon--Sroussi
has worked with the World Bank, UNESCO, USAID, and other international
organizations to train local farmers.
A yearlong project on the Hopi Indian reservation in Arizona was,
in many ways, the most complicated, Sroussi says. The Hopi tribal
leader visited Israel and was amazed by the agriculture. Sroussi,
who was on the agriculture faculty of the Hebrew University, was
invited to live on the reservation and teach his farming techniques.
At first, he says, "it was very difficult to convince them
to work with our ways, because ... the farming there is a part
of their religion.... Everything is by dance and by praying....
"I came with tractors to sow the land. They said, Wow, you
cannot go with steel on the earth. It's a sin. They used to plough
with sticks. We brought a complete irrigation system, with computers
even. They said, If you put the valves and open the water whenever
you want, when are we going to dance? They used to wait for the
monsoons and dance for the monsoons.
"I had to get into their minds to convince them to cooperate
with us.... We just took a small land, forty acres, and we made
a pilot, to show them what we can grow in our ways. We [both] started
cropping. They have their field. I have my field. And we put corn
in both fields and tomatoes and cherry tomatoes and cucumbers.
And, after a few months, my corn is about a meter and a half, two
meters, and their corn is very small. And they didn't know what
to do."
Slowly, Nissim says, he converted the Hopi to new farming techniques,
though the project ended prematurely when funding ran out. After
a year on the reservation, however, Sroussi says that the Native
Americans called him an uncle, so he felt that he had succeeded.
--William Feldman
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