THE CHIKUKWA PROJECT is a feel good story out of Africa. For the last 20 years an incredible permaculture project has been growing in Zimbabwe. Where once the people of the Chikukwa villages suffered hunger, malnutrition and high rates of disease, this community has turned its fortunes around using permaculture farming techniques.
“Permaculture actually solves all the problems that we face in human
life. So this is considered to be the right approach for us to live - if you
want to save the earth.”
(Julius Piti, one of the project’s
founders)
THE
CHIKUKWA PROJECT
"An amazing story of African villagers who turned their lives around”
ABOUT THE PROJECT
THE CHIKUKWA PROJECT is a feel good story out of
Africa. For the last 20 years an incredible permaculture project has been
growing in Zimbabwe. Where once the people of the Chikukwa villages suffered
hunger, malnutrition and high rates of disease, this community has turned its
fortunes around using permaculture farming techniques.
Complementing these strategies for food security, they have built their
community strength through locally controlled and initiated programs for
permaculture training, conflict resolution, women’s empowerment, primary
education and HIV management.
Now they have a surplus of food and the people in these villages are
healthy and proud of their achievements. Their degraded landscape has been
turned into a lush paradise. A brother and sister team travel to Zimbabwe to
make this film to learn how this has happened.
BACKGROUND TO THE CHIKUKWA PROJECT
Hunger, land degradation and community breakdown
are the key problems of most of Africa. The Chikukwa Project has been
remarkably successful in dealing with these problems. Almost all projects
designed to deal with these issues have failed in the long term. The effective
strategies used in the Chikukwa villages deserve the attention of those seeking
to help the people of the African countryside.
Our film shows in detail how this community functions. We meet the
villagers who have changed their methods of farming. They show us their crops,
animals and trees. We can see the immense changes in the landscape over 20
years.
We also meet the leaders of various committees who look after the old
people, develop strategies to empower women, help prevent AIDS, promote
nutrition and teach permaculture techniques. We also meet some world masters of
conflict resolution and watch them run a two-day workshop to solve a conflict
between some farmers in the village. We find out how the CELUCT organisation is
run from the bottom up. We discover that this is one of the most successful
projects in the whole of Africa.
This film can help to spread the message and
give inspiration to those working to solve problems in Africa. When so much
that is said about Africa portrays African villagers as inevitable victims this
story celebrates their strength, their hard work and their capability.
When we arrived at the Chikukwa villages we met up with local people who
worked with us and helped us do the filming. It was hard work in wet
mountainous country but it was always exciting.
As
Julius Piti says “Pemaculture is how to live if you want to save the earth”.
Explaining what this means in a particular context is the point of this film.
In the near future, knowing how to live sustainably will be important for all
of us. This film provides an optimistic model of what it might be like to live
in a sustainable and democratic community.
ABOUT US – THE FILM
MAKERS
The Director, Gillian Leahy, is an Australian Film Institute Award winning
documentary maker (My Life Without Steve,
1986). She has directed over 16 films, most of which have been about improving
people’s lives. Her film, Our Park,
(1998 http://www.documentaryaustralia.com.au/user/my_films/op/add/) was a poem
to the wild and the tame in her local park. She is based
in Sydney.
Co-producer, Dr Terry Leahy,
(her brother) is convenor of the Master of Social Change and Development
Program at the University of Newcastle. His research expertise is in
sustainable development and food security in Africa. (http://www.newcastle.edu.au/staff/research-profile/Terry_Leahy/)
He was invited by some of the villagers in Zimbabwe to come and visit their
project and make this film.