Inquirer Northern
Luzon
Nuns' organic
farms in 'Garden of Eden'
By Johanna
Morden
Inquirer Northern Luzon
First Posted
21:10:00 08/31/2010
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/regions/view/20100831-289802/Nuns-organic-farms-in-Garden-of-Eden
Filed Under:
Philippines - Regions, Environmental Issues, Churches
(organisations)
DEEP IN THE
backwoods of Villasis town in Pangasinan, a congregation of nuns is
making its own version of the Biblical Garden of Eden.
"The Garden of
Eden existed at a time in history when the Earth blossomed, when it
was full of life and every living thing had a home of its own," says
Sr. Anne Bellosillo, 70, one of six members of the Medical Mission
Sisters who have made Sitio Maburac West in Barangay Capulaan their
home.
But Bellosillo says
the Garden of Eden ceased to exist when people started abusing nature
and robbing other life forms of their habitat for economic profit and
technological advancement.
"Now we are
feeling the effects of our actions-the turmoil in the weather, the
floods, the death of animals and plants, the homeless and the new diseases," she
says.
As a response, the
Medical Mission Sisters has put up the Haven for Ecological and
Alternative Living (HEAL), a center that its members describe as a
"place of hope" where people could reconnect with nature and be
inspired to become protectors and healers of
the
planet.
"We have lost
touch with nature because we only see it as a source of gain,
forgetting that we are part of it and it is part of us," says
Bellosillo, the HEAL coordinator.
Set in a sprawling two-hectare property at a hilly portion of the
town, HEAL features organic farms, eco-friendly human settlements, renewable energy
sources and
alternative
healing
remedies.
Ecological
living
The project aims to
promote ecological learning and ecological living to all, Bellosillo
says.
Guests who stop by
for a day tour or who stay overnight are treated to educational
activities and a home-brewed iced tea in a mix of avocado, pandan and
calamansi.
"We have been taught that the soil is dirty, but we encourage our
guests to touch the earth with tenderness and love," Bellosillo
says.
To the sisters,
working in the fields while using the five senses-sight, sound,
smell, taste and touch-is the most important way of getting back in
touch with nature.
At HEAL, six nuns, aged 38 to 86, till the fields and care for animals
to help nurse the Earth back to health.
As members of the
Medical Mission Sisters, they belong to a community of religious women
who have stopped wearing habits. They are professionals from the
medical field, counting nurses, midwives and nutritionists among their
ranks.
"Healing is our [calling] and part of this is healing the Earth,"
says Bellosillo, a former hospital administrator.
Permaculture
To the nuns, the key to healing the Earth lies in "permaculture."
Bellosillo says permaculture is permanent agriculture, or cultivating
the land in an ecological and equitable way, the benefits of which
would still be reaped by generations to come.
"In permaculture, everything in nature is linked and nothing is
wasted," she says. "All cultures of the world have one thing in
common, and that is agriculture or the culture of the
land."