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Time for change
The story of Tilth’s remarkable birth also charts the beginnings of the sustainable agriculture movementBy Dan Sullivan |
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| Tilth's first regional planning meeting takes place Aug. 22, 1977, at Pragtree Farm near Arlington, Washington. | |||||||||
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As we dive headfirst into another conference season, it seems fitting to look back across the decades to the humble beginnings of the sustainable agriculture movement. So let’s jump back in time to the 1974 World’s Fair, where poet, author, and farmer Wendell Berry is speaking from a panel at an “Agriculture for a Small Planet” symposium in Spokane, Washington, about the way it was in his youth:
“The farms were generally small. They were farmed by families who lived not only upon them, but within and from them. These families grew gardens. They produced their own meat, milk, and eggs. They were highly diversified.” Berry explained how one of the key components of this system for these tobacco farming families was the existence of markets for these “minor products.” But changes in American values hand-in-hand with the industrialization of our food system upset all that, he said. “…Nowhere that I know is there a market for a hen or a bucket of cream or a few dozen eggs,” he said back in his 1974 address. “Those markets were done away with in the name of sanitation—but to the enormous enrichment of the large producers…It is, of course, one of the miracles of science that the germs that used to be in our food have been replaced by poisons.” Berry went on to chronicle some of the other casualties of industrial agriculture, from the loss of farming communities and the culture and values that went with them to the destruction of fertility and tremendous waste of energy engendered by such a behemoth, impersonal system. Berry’s basic message: We’re all in real trouble if we don’t fix our food system and rediscover the intrinsic value of a healthy and committed relationship with the land. (read his full presentation and the conversation that followed at: www.tilthproducers.org/berry1974.htm).
By his own admission in a follow-up letter sent to symposium organizers Gigi Coe and Bob Stilger, Berry hadn’t expected much when he made the trip from Henry County, Kentucky to eastern Washington to be part of the program meant to draw a broad spectrum of opinion about the future of agriculture (read the entire letter at www.tilthproducers.org/berry1974-2.htm). In one way, those limited expectations were met. “…The overwhelming message that came out of the symposium is that the agricultural establishment is going to go right on trusting ‘American ingenuity’ and reciting specialists’ statistics until the case against it is proven by its failure—which will be the failure of much else that is more worthy,” Berry wrote. But he also reflected on a pleasant—and inspirational—surprise in meeting the likes of Gigi, Bob and others who shared a different vision for the future of American Agriculture. “…Your symposium, as well as a lot of other meetings I’ve been to in other parts of the country, proves the existence of a thoughtful and even knowledgeable constituency for a better kind of agriculture. And this constituency is yet powerless because it has no programs. It has no coherent vision of what is possible. It is without the arguments and proofs—the language that will make it coherent.” Thirty years ago—the same year that his classic agrarian novel “The Memory of Old Jack” was published—Berry, in the simple and eloquent manner that characterizes his prose, defined the problem and then articulated a solution. “…The crisis is not in land use,” he writes. “It’s in the lives and minds of land users. That’s why I don’t believe it can be helped very much by any kind of official policy. Good land use is going to come about either by hard necessity or by some kind of teaching.” But how? “…Can you see any possibility of another kind of agricultural symposium—not, this time, that would represent a broad spectrum of opinion, but rather one that would try to bring together the various branches of agricultural dissidence and heresy?” This gathering together for change, Berry suggested, might include “representatives of farm workers’ unions, NFO [National Farmers Organization] and any other such groups, family farmers, urban consumer cooperatives, small farm co-ops, organic farming and gardening co-ops and organizations, the publications of dissident agriculture, and the conservation organizations, wilderness societies, etc.” “Could such a meeting be made to happen?” Berry asked. “And if it could happen, don’t you think it would be directly useful? I’m not sure what unanimity might by made, but I am sure that it would be the start of something or other that would be useful.” Rising to that challenge, Gigi Coe shared the letter with her friends Mark Musick, Woody and Becky Derryckx, and Michael Pilarski and the Tilth movement was born (Becky Derryckx is credited with coining the name the reflects a careful cultivation of both the land and spirit). The first Tilth conference—the Northwest Conference on Alternative Agriculture—took place November 21-23 in Ellensburg, Washington, with more than 800 people in attendance from as far away as Arizona, South Dakota, Ohio, and North Carolina.
Today, Tilth stands as a beacon and is but one in a host of organizations and conferences across the country advocating for a new agriculture that respects the land and the communities that live it, celebrating the diversity and interconnectivity of us all from farm to city. As you attend your various meetings this conference season—whether its Eco-Farm in California (celebrating its 25th anniversary this year), MOSES in Wisconsin (turning 16 this year), or Southern SAWG in New Orleans (turning 14)—consider the roots of this movement, the dire need for the work at hand, and the poignant words of Wendell Berry at the World’s Fair 30 years ago: “…Food is a cultural, not a technological, product. A culture is not a collection of relics and ornaments, but a practical necessity, and its destruction invokes calamity.” Dan Sullivan is senior editor at The New Farm. |










