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Reclaiming Corn & Culture

by Dan Clore <clore@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jun 20, 2008 at 06:10 PM

News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo

http://tinyurl.com/4nxr6g
Reclaiming Corn and Culture
by Wendy Call

For 14 years, NAFTA has displaced farmers and spurred migration. The 
answer from Mexico’s grassroots: co-ops and fair trade.

“The fatal date has arrived,” announced one of Mexico’s largest 
newspapers, El Universal, on New Year’s Day 2008. The last trade 
barriers between Canada, Mexico, and the United States fell on January 
1, completing the North American Free Trade Agreement’s 14-year phase-in 
process. While this milestone passed with little comment in the United 
States, more than 100,000 teachers, college students, activists, 
farmers, and ranchers marched in Mexico City.

The New Year’s Day protesters demanded their government reopen 
negotiations on NAFTA. When that didn’t happen, about twice as many took 
to the streets again on January 31, 2008. Another newspaper summed up 
the situation: “Head-on struggle against NAFTA explodes.”

For nearly two decades, Mexican farmers have spoken out against NAFTA -- 
a trade agreement they suspected from the beginning would wreak havoc on 
their country’s agricultural sector. They have sounded their voices 
loudly in Mexico’s capital, while quietly developing their own answers 
to NAFTA in farming communities throughout the country -- working models 
of “fair trade” that consider people and the environment, not just 
profit margins.

By 2003, 1.3 million Mexican peasants had lost their livelihoods because 
of NAFTA. Many of the displaced farmers came north in search of work. 
Mexican migration to the U.S. increased an estimated 75 percent in the 
five years after the trade agreement took effect.

Even outside Mexico’s agricultural sector, NAFTA has been no boon. 
Mexico’s World Bank representative recently admitted, “[We] haven’t seen 
any progress [in Mexico’s economy] in the last 15 years.”

North of the border, there has been only slight progress. In 2003, the 
U.S. Congressional Budget Office estimated that NAFTA had increased the 
U.S. gross domestic product only “a very small amount … probably a few 
hundredths of a percent.” Meanwhile, Wal-Mart has become Mexico’s 
largest retailer.

With the last tariffs lifted on beans, chicken, powdered milk, and -- 
most im****tant -- corn, Mexican farmers fear the deepening of an already 
extreme crisis. Mexican organizations challenging NAFTA have gathered 
under the banner Sin maíz, no hay país -- without corn, there is no
country.

Seeds of a Fair Economy

New Year’s Day 2008 also marked 14 years since the Zapatista uprising 
began in Chiapas, Mexico. The communiqué they issued in January 1994 
said their struggle was for “work, land, housing, food, health care, 
education, independence, freedom, democracy, justice, and peace.” The 
Zapatista communities set about building their own schools, health 
clinics, and fair trade initiatives -- giving the Zapatistas political 
autonomy and a more prosperous local and regional economy.

In 2001, a group of 383 Zapatista coffee farmers founded the Yachil 
Xojobal Chulchan coffee cooperative. The name means “new light in the 
sky” or “new dawn” in the indigenous Tzeltal language.

Today, 1,500 co-op members have successfully navigated the complicated 
process of organic certification and created a farmer-controlled 
processing and ex****t system, so that more income flows to coffee 
growers. Chris Treter, co-founder of the Higher Grounds Trading Company, 
a U.S. vendor of Yachil’s coffee, notes that the cooperative’s goals 
extend from getting a better price for coffee farmers in the near term 
to building an autonomous society in the long term.

West of Chiapas, in Oaxaca state, the Association of Indigenous 
Communities in the Northern Zone of the Isthmus (UCIZONI) shares many 
goals and strategies with the Zapatistas. The group’s 20,000 members run 
agricultural cooperatives, train local health care workers, pressure the 
government to build schools, fight for secure land tenure, promote 
organic agriculture, challenge human rights abuses, and defend members’ 
legal rights.

The group operates in a region that is feeling the pressure from 
economic globalization. Local vendors in open-air markets must now 
compete with a superstore owned by Wal-Mart called Bodega Aurrera, which 
opened in 2005.

Last year, UCIZONI’s peasant members grew 12,000 tons of corn. With the 
entry of heavily subsidized U.S. corn to the Mexican market, it’s 
increasingly difficult for the association to find buyers for their 
higher quality, more expensive harvest.

Oaxaca may be home to the widest diversity of corn varieties in the 
world. More than 5,000 years ago, corn was domesticated from an inedible 
progenitor, teosinte, not far from where UCIZONI members grow their 
crops today. The Florentine Codex, one of the oldest surviving Mexican 
texts, says, “Corn is our sustenance, our life, our being.” According to 
Mayan cosmology, people are descended from corn.

Corn provides nearly 60 percent of the calories in the Mexican diet -- 
eaten as tortillas, tamales, and in UCIZONI’s region, baked totopos. A 
large, round cracker that stays fresh for months, the totopo represents 
local culture as much as maize represents Mexican culture. Baking 
totopos is a special skill, passed from mother to daughter to
granddaughter.

A few years ago, UCIZONI began connecting its corn farmers to totopo 
bakers in villages that don’t produce their own corn. Carlos Beas 
Torres, the group’s coordinator, explains, “UCIZONI buys directly from 
our producers at a fair price, and that pressures the local market to 
offer a higher price.”

In the process, UCIZONI is also creating fledgling local economies. A 
product is produced, processed, sold, and consumed locally, employing 
farmers and bakers, and keeping all the money in the local area.

So far, the program is tiny -- last year the bakers bought just 350 tons 
of UCIZONI corn. Nonetheless, the group can replicate this pilot 
program, and give local farmers some control in an out-of-control economy.

People’s Trade Agreements

Latin America’s fair trade initiatives extend far beyond coffee and corn 
to new models of international trade policy. The two most im****tant 
examples are the People’s Trade Agreement, proposed by Bolivian 
President Evo Morales, and Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez’s 
“Bolivarian Alternative for Latin America and the Caribbean,” or ALBA. 
Bolivia, Cuba, Dominica, Nicaragua, and Venezuela have all joined ALBA. 
Both the People’s Trade Agreement and ALBA operate on the premise that 
trade should not be an end in itself, but rather a means to sup****t 
human and community development.

These government-led initiatives are essential, says Miguel Pickard, 
co-founder of the Center for Economic and Political Research for 
Community Action in Chiapas (CIEPAC). But “building power from below is 
the only guarantee that there will be sustainable solutions. What if 
Chávez or Morales is toppled tomorrow?” he says. “Grassroots processes 
are very long term. A two-pronged approach is needed: strong, 
independent grassroots movements at the base, and radical leaders in 
positions of state power.”

Pickard has been a vocal critic of a new trade initiative under the Bush 
Administration that broadens NAFTA with increased emphasis on border 
security and cor****ate access to natural resources. The initiative, 
called the “Security and Prosperity Partner****p,” or SPP, was launched 
two years ago in a series of negotiations with the Mexican and Canadian 
governments. Because the SPP is not a treaty, there is no congressional 
oversight, nor any process for citizen comment. The only input comes 
from a council of 30 advisors, ten selected by each government. The list 
reads like a Who’s Who of cor****ate North America, including the CEOs of 
Bell Canada, Chevron, Ford, General Electric, General Motors, Home 
Depot/Canada, Kimberly-Clark/Mexico, Lockheed Martin, Scotiabank, and 
Wal-Mart.

Pickard believes the secretive, anti-democratic nature of the SPP is a 
response to growing grassroots power. “Fourteen years after NAFTA, civil 
society is better organized, informed, networked, and mobilized,” he 
says. Not only have fair trade networks sprung up, but public opinion 
throughout North America has turned against NAFTA, spilling into the 
U.S. presidential campaign.

With U.S. elections on the horizon, might U.S. trade policy take a new 
turn? What if our next president listened to the New Year’s Day marchers 
in Mexico City? What if Carlos Beas Torres, of UCIZONI, rather than the 
CEO of Wal-Mart, was an SPP advisor?

The question surprised Beas Torres. “It’s so hard to imagine myself part 
of the SPP Council; better that I just list a few elements of a fair 
trade policy.” His priorities include subsidies to rural producers, 
protections for native crops, rural investment programs, and most 
im****tant, a total rejection of “the Wal-Mart business model, which 
destroys small and local businesses.”

Wendy Call wrote this article as part of A Just Foreign Policy, the 
Summer 2008 issue of YES! Magazine. Wendy is co-editor of Telling True 
Stories: A Nonfiction Writers’ Guide. She is currently at work on a book 
about the intersection of economic globalization and village life in 
southern Mexico.
http://www.WendyCall.com

Interested? Read Manuel Pérez Rocha and Sarah Anderson on the real deals 
behind new NAFTA negotiations:
http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5152

-- 
Dan Clore

My collected fiction: _The Unspeakable and Others_
http://tinyurl.com/2gcoqt
Lord Weÿrdgliffe & Necronomicon Page:
http://tinyurl.com/292yz9
News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo

Skipper: Professor, will you tell these people who is
in charge on this island?
Professor: Why, no one.
Skipper: No one?
Thurston Howell III: No one? Good heavens, this is anarchy!
-- _Gilligan's Island_, episode #6, "President Gilligan"
 




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Reclaiming Corn & Culture
Dan Clore <clore@[EMAI  2008-06-20 18:10:02 

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tan12V112 Mon Dec 1 20:40:50 CST 2008.