Santa Barbara Permaculture
Network
Permaculture Around the World
Series
with Juan Rojas of
the
Institute for Mesoamerican
Permaculture
Thursday, June 11, 7pm
2009,
Donation $5
Santa Barbara Central Library, Faulkner Gallery
Santa Barbara Permaculture Network continues to learn about
the world and it's people with its special series
“Permaculture
Around the World”, this time focusing on Central America with a
talk by
Juan Rojas of the
Institute of Mesoamerican
Permaculture (IMAP).
Mesoamerica is a term that recognizes the
cultural, ecological, traditional, and sociological similarities,
rather than political boundaries of what currently makes up the
countries of Central America. Juan Rojas is a certified
permaculture instructor and one of the founders of both the
Institute of Mesoamerican Permaculture and the
Permaculture
Institute of El Salvador who has worked with others to acknowledge
these similarities along with the comparable dilemmas and obstacles
that countries in the regions share.
Juan Rojas was born in El
Salvador, who after qualifying as an industrial electrician became
involved in the trade union struggles of the 1980's. Forced into
exile by a brutal military regime, he spent four years in Mexico, and
later eight years in Australia where he studied Permaculture as a
useful tool for rebuilding his home country following the peace
accords of 1992.
Rojas has been instrumental in establishing grassroots
organizations aimed at appropriate methods of farming and land
restoration, always seeking the skills and expertise of local
farmers. Since 1994 Rojas has been a part of the thirty
year old
Campesino a Campesino (Farmer to Farmer) movement that
has helped farming families in the rural villages of Latin America
improve their livelihoods and conserve their natural resources by
individual farmers sharing their wealth of wisdom directly with each
other.
Rojas will speak about his experience convening
with Permacultura America Latina and the Institute for Mesoamerican
Permaculture, an eight day
Mesoamerican
Convergence on Sustainable Development and Permaculture on the
shores of Lake
Atitlan in the highlands of
Guatemala. With the pressures of globalization, free trade
agreements, privatization, and open market approaches to poverty
reduction, the Convergence hoped to address the urgent environmental
and social threats facing the region, and create a Mesoamerican
alliance. Forty grassroots organizations from the region
attended including
representatives from Panama,
Costa Rica, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Mexico, Belize, Honduras, and
Guatemala. Since devastating hurricane Stan had recently impacted the
area, participants discussed how vulnerable Mesoamerican countries
could better prepare and mitigate the effects of disasters such as
earthquakes, mudslides, and hurricanes.
The event takes place at the
Santa Barbara
Public Library, Faulkner Gallery, 40 East Anapamu St, in downtown
Santa Barbara,
on Thursday, June 11, 7pm, 2009. No
reservations are required, donation $5. For more information please
call (805) 962-2571, or email
margie@sbpermaculture.org; www.sbpermaculture.org. Sponsored by the Santa Barbara
Permaculture Network Non-Profit.
~Permaculture (PERMAnent agriCULTURE), a design
system based on ecological principles for creating sustainable human
environments ~
~Permacultura (agriCULTURA PERMAnente), un sistema de diseño a
base de principios ecológicos para crear un medio ambiente
sostenible.~
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Friday,
June 12, 9-10am, Sustainable World Radio,
Interview
with Robyn Francis from Australia
Sustainable World Radio, KCSB 91.9 FM PST
and
streaming live on www.kcsb.org, interviews also posted on
www.sustainableworldradio.com.
Join
Jill Cloutier of Sustainable World Radio for an interview Juan
Rojas
-end-
More resources/websites:
Institute for Mesoamerican Permaculture (IMAP)
www.permacultura.org
Campesino a Campesino, by Eric Holt-Gimenez.
Author spent over 25 years in Mexico and Cenral America as a community
organizer and agricultural outreach worker, learning that only when
farmers taught each other, many times with parables, stories, and
humor, was knowledge successfully transferred. His is executive
director of Food First/Institute for Food & Development
Policy.
Santa Barbara Permaculture
Network
an educational
non-profit since 2000
(805) 962-2571
P.O. Box 92156, Santa Barbara, CA 93190
margie@sbpermaculture.org
www.sbpermaculture.org
"We are like trees,
we must create new leaves, in new directions, in order to grow."
- Anonymous