Bengal youth lead revival of heritage rice varieties
A bunch of young professionals have chosen to stay back in their villages in Uttar Dinajpur, West Bengal, to revive the heritage of folk rice varieties once cultivated by their ancestors
Twenty-eight-year-old Madhu Das is a computer professional from Uttar Dinajpur district of West Bengal. After completing his studies, unlike other youth around him, he did not migrate to a big city in search of a job. Instead, he chose to return to his native village of Hatiapaluibari and continue with his ancestral occupation of paddy cultivation — but with a difference.
“I was appalled by the frequent news of farmers’ suicides, their escalating debts, growing cost of farming inputs, worsened by crop failures due to changing and unpredictable weather patterns and above all, irreparable losses to environment,” said Das, who turned to his roots to revive some indigenously grown folk paddy seeds.
Salim Sarkar, a graduate from Nakair village of Dakshin Dinajpur, who also decided to stay in his village after his studies, said, “The aroma of my native soil was hard to resist and I decided to practise organic farming by integrating my modern learning with the traditional knowledge of my forefathers. After all, they did not use any chemicals in their fields then and yet managed to grow so many more diverse varieties of native paddy, besides other vegetables and crops.”
Like Das and Sarkar, at least 30 other young educated youth from villages in West Bengal are treading on the steps of their forefathers with passion and a mission: to bring back the glorious paddy heritage of Bengal, by cultivating heirloom (folk rice) varieties using environment friendly agricultural practices and eventually ushering food security into their villages.
Modern traditional
Motivating them further is the Forum for Indigenous Agricultural Movement (FIAM), a grassroot organisation of “modern traditional” farmers active in Uttar and Dakshin Dinajpur districts of West Bengal. What started in 2011 with around six members who were against conventional cultivation of chemical-intensive, high-yield crops, has, over the last few years, grown into a movement of about 75-80 farmers, from nearly 20 villages.
“Our efforts kicked off with just 10 varieties in barely 5.5 bighas (0.73 hectares) of land,” recalled Sudipta Mukhopadhyay, one of the founding members of FIAM. Bigha is a traditional unit for land measurement in India.
Today, the area of cultivation is nearly 100 bighas (13.3 hectares) with the revival of at least 100 landrace (indigenous) paddy varieties. “This agricultural season, we have set a target of covering at least 150 bighas with a range of 120 kinds of native paddy,” he said.
Commending the work of FIAM, agricultural scientist Anupam Paul informed that West Bengal has a rich legacy of more than 5,500 varieties of traditional paddy seeds. “However, more than 90 percent of them are today extinct and cannot come back by any scientific means,” he rued.
A passionate seed conservator himself, Paul is the assistant director in the Nadia-based Agricultural Training Centre (ATC), under the government of West Bengal. He is credited with conserving more than 400 varieties of indigenous paddy seeds in ATC’s biodiversity conservation farm.
Food security
Paul explained that these traditional paddy cultivars are soil and region-specific, grown with organic manure and pesticides. This makes them inherently hardy and more pest resistant.
“The impacts of climate change, resulting in erratic increase/decrease in temperatures, humidity etc. are breeding new pests and diseases, making chemically grown paddy particularly vulnerable to fungi attacks or reduced efficacy of pesticides,” he said.
However, according to him, folk varieties are not only faring better in this regard, but also require much less water in comparison. Further, they are largely climate-resilient, able to withstand weather aberrations, while maintaining the yield per hectare, as against their chemically grown counterparts.
The practical aspect of his contention with chemically grown paddy was testified by Pravin Burman, from Bhattadighi village of Uttar Dinajpur.
“Our native rice varieties are the best solutions to the problems of erratic rainfall, whether excess or scanty. Last year there was flood in the region and chemically grown high yield varieties were all lost,” he said. “However, many of our indigenous seeds managed to survive.”
The bold, short-grained Jaldhapa, Kalam, Shole, Langalmuthi, Kerala Sundari, Hetomari, continued to sustain under about three-four feet of water for over a week. Others like Sabita, Narayankamini, Patnai held on in flooded lowlands, beneath 1.5 feet-2 feet of water. “This was an eye opener for many of our conventional village farmers, who were unable to cope with their crop losses, put together with their increasing cost of chemical inputs, lowering of soil fertility, and yields,” Burman added.
Revived varieties
While Burman’s examples highlight the flood tolerance of seeds, there are certain drought-tolerant land race varieties that have also been revived. The small-grained bold rice Bhutmuri, Kelas and Kakri, Pari, Zinni, for instance do not require much water and are ideally planted on highlands, said Ramen Burman, Pravin’s neighbor from the same village. They mentioned yet another unique folk rice variety called Gamrah (a native of Kosi river bank of Bihar) that is both flood and drought tolerant.
Before the transplantation of paddy, while the soil is being prepared, the farmers have a natural way of replenishing the soil with nutrients. “Cultivation of root legumes or green manure crop as Sesbania (locally called Dhoncha) is very common in these villages,” said Abhijit Kundu, an officer with the government of India’s Agricultural Technology Management Agency (ATMA), deputed in Gangarampur block of Dakshin Dinajpur.
These plants, either grown in the field or outside, are ploughed down with tractors or power tillers after about 30- 45 days and crushed with the soil. They are then left to putrefy for about a week. Both the roots and stems of Sesbania bear nodules hosting the friendly Rhizobium bacteria, which trap atmospheric nitrogen, particularly from the soil.
“Decay of these plants thus releases large quantities of this nitrogen back to the soil, besides organic matter, thus enriching it,” explained Kundu. According to him, they are ideal substitutes for chemical urea, which require almost double the amount of Sesbania for similar output of nitrogen.
Needless to say, paddy grown with such natural fertilisers retains its flavour, taste and characteristics, said 65-year-old Sukur Mohammad Sarkar, a traditional farmer from Nakair village of Dakshin Dinajpur. ”The fragrance of rice varieties as Radhatilak, Tulsimukul, Kalonunia, Goindobhog, Chiniatope, Badshahbhog produced in our fields is irresistible,” he stated with pride. According to him, FIAM has been able to revive nearly 25- 30 of such scented varieties of traditional paddy.
Due to the taste, fine and slender appearance, such varieties are hot favorites for payes (rice-based dessert) often prepared during religious occasions and other rice-based delicacies as biryani and pulao.
However, nothing beats the slim, medium-sized aromatic grains of Tulaipanji, which is considered the “rice of the soil” for the twin districts of Dinajpur. The local farmers claim that this home-grown rice had even made its way to the food festival of the 2012 London Olympics. The state government has also applied for GI (geographical identification) tag for this variety, to assign it an assurance of quality and uniqueness of the region.
Rich in nutrition
But folk rice is not just about the taste and flavour alone. According to Sudeb Saha, a medical practitioner from Raiganj in Uttar Dinajpur and FIAM’s vice-president,
“Traditional rice cultivars are inherently endowed with at least 30 percent to 70 percent higher nutritional value than their chemically grown counterparts.”
The pigmented (brown/red and black) folk rice varieties as Bhadoi, Kabiraj Sal, Shatia, and Agniban are rich in iron and anti-oxidants. Bhadoi is particularly prescribed to expecting mothers and anaemic patients. Kabiraj Sal on the other hand gives strength and is advised for recuperating patients.
Further paddy varieties as Shatia and Kartiksal that are among the fastest to mature (within 60-70 days) are also rich in fibre and low on carbohydrates, thus ideal for diabetic patients. Likewise, landraces as Bhutmuri and Kelash are very filling even with low intake for similar reasons, Saha informs.
Kalabhat, a black paddy variety originally from Maharashtra, is yet another prized folk seed for FIAM. The rare rice with its purplish black bran is particularly rich in anthocyanin, a powerful cancer fighting substance, besides being replete with fibre, vitamin B complex, minerals, protein, and more. Further, its lower Glycemic Index makes it a highly suitable diet for diabetic patients, Saha said.
“We too have the famous Chamarmani variety of fine-grained rice which would be taken by none other than the Nobel Laureate poet Rabindranath Tagore for its taste and medicinal values,” he added.
Making choices
When it comes to making choices against chemical-intensive modern varieties of high-yield paddy, production per hectare happens to be an important consideration among farmers. “But not to worry! We have desi high-yielding folk rice varieties too,” informed Mushtaq Ali from Hazratpur village of Dakshin Dinajpur.
According to him, Bahurupi, Kerala Sundari, Megha dambur, Rabansal are farmers’ favourites, with their production ranging from an average of four tons to seven tons per hectare. “In comparison, the chemically grown modern varieties may just about provide marginally more yield than their indigenously grown counterpart, but increased requirements of inputs and their soaring costs are drastically affecting our community. Hence, the organically grown folk paddy is certainly more cost effective and ecologically sustainable,” he asserted.
While the farmers are elated to share their experiences with folk seeds, scouting for them is not easy for FIAM members. “We identified old-time farmers who continued their traditional organic ways of farming in different parts of the country and approached them for seeds,” informed Chinmoy Das, General Secretary, FIAM.
For instance, the rare Gobindobhog variety was obtained from a farmer in Burdwan district whose family was cultivating it for the past few decades. Seeds were also exchanged with native farmers from various Indian tribal states of Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand. However, more than 70 types of folk seeds were obtained from Nadia-based ATC’s biodiversity conservation farm alone.
The seeds being thus acquired are first put out on trial by FIAM members for the three-four months, before being introduced to fellow farmers. The organisation has developed an experimental plot of about 2 bighas (0.26 hectares) of land for the purpose.
“It is a natural laboratory for us, where we analyse various morphological features of the developing rice plants, including their size, leaf length and breadth, size and shape of panicles, special traits, comparative yields etc.,” said Tipu Mandal, FIAM member. Such tests and experiments are regularly supervised by agricultural scientist Anupam Paul and his team.
Organic way of life
While using traditional practices in cultivation, the farmers are quite adept with the use of modern technology for marketing their products.
“We upload them daily through WhatsApp and social media to reach out to our consumers, who requisition them as per their requirements,” said the computer professional-turned-farmer Madhu Das. Rice varieties as Tulaipanji, Hetomari, and Kalabhat have even attracted overseas buyers in the United States, aside from those in Indian metros like Kolkata and Mumbai.
Organic fairs are organised regularly to bring consumers face to face with the farmers from the fields. The farmers get the opportunity to directly showcase and speak about their “fresh from the farm” products.
The photographs of the respective farmers and their contact numbers are also displayed to enable consumers to directly contact them as per their needs. So far, the demand for their products far outweighs supply.
Chaasighar (farmers’ home) developed by FIAM as a cooperative system at Raiganj, headquarters of Uttar Dinajpur, also serves a similar purpose. Apart from growing interest in eating healthy, some of the consumers are also buying seeds and saplings for doing a bit of kitchen gardening themselves, using natural fertilisers.
“In short, our work is not just about cultivation and business alone, but to promote organic culture and make it a way of life in society,” said FIAM-member Chinmoy Das.
Disclaimer: This article was first published in VillageSquare.in. The views expressed by the author are his/her own and do not necessarily reflect that of YourStory