Newsletter

May 31, 2006

 

Japanese Farmer-Philosopher Masanobu Fukuoka: Natural Farming Greening the Deserts

Keywords: Newsletter 

JFS Newsletter No.45 (May 2006)

A farming method called 'natural farming' needs no tilling, no fertilizers, no pesticides, and no weeding. For about 60 years, Masanobu Fukuoka, Japan's renowned authority on natural farming, worked on methods based on his own unique theories, insights and philosophy. His seminal book, "One-Straw Revolution," first published in 1975, was later translated into English, French, Spanish, Chinese, Russian and other languages, and has been read around the world. The book addresses not only the practical aspects of natural farming but also the root causes of environmental deterioration. Fukuoka's thoughts and philosophies have inspired many people worldwide by pointing out a way of life. Here we introduce his thought and practices.

Fukuoka was born in 1913 in Iyo, Ehime Prefecture, on a southern island of Japan. After graduating from an agricultural high school, he took a job at the Yokohama Customs Office. At the age of 25, however, he caught acute pneumonia and was hospitalized. Those days spent alone became a turning point in his life. Even after leaving the hospital, he continued to agonize in his mind about matters of life and death. After spending many days in emotional hardship, one morning, a flash of insight came to him: "There is nothing in this world. No matter what humans try to do, they can never achieve anything. Every thought we have and every action we take is unnecessary." This was the birth of Fukuoka's philosophy, "the theory of uselessness of human knowledge," or the theory of "mu" (nothingness).

To demonstrate his theories in some concrete and practical way, he decided in 1937 to return to his native village and become a farmer at his father's orange orchard. In 1939, when Japan's situation in World War II began to deteriorate, he started to work at an agricultural research station in Kochi Prefecture as an instructor and researcher of scientific farming, and continued there until the end of the war. He returned to Iyo in 1947, and thereafter continued to work on his unique natural farming system.

When he visited America in 1979 and saw California's desertified land, the thought occurred to him that his natural farming method would work to green these regions. Visiting American communities working on natural farming, he kept telling people that modern large-scale farming and cattle-raising were causing desertification. During one of these speaking tours, the head of the United Nations department in charge of combating desertification asked him for technical advice. This was the starting point of Fukuoka's initiative for desert greening all over the globe: in China, India, the Americas, and Africa.

In 1988 Fukuoka received the Deshikottam Award, India's most prestigious award, and the Philippines' Ramon Magsaysay Award for Public Service, recognized as Asia's Nobel prize. In 1997 he received the Earth Council Award, which honors politicians, businesspersons, scholars, and non-governmental organizations for their contributions to sustainable development. Today, the 93-year-old Fukuoka has retired from the greening movement, and lives a quiet life in his home village, Iyo. His fields are now closed to the public.

Natural Farming Based on Spiritual Philosophy

Fukuoka's natural farming method begins with the absolute rejection of science. He says in one of his books, "My study started off with the rejection of conventional agricultural technologies. I absolutely reject science and technology. My view is based on the rejection of Western philosophy, which supports today's science and technology."

He continues, "Natural farming, in my mind is, in fact, not part of so-called scientific agriculture. I aim to establish a new farming method from the view point of Oriental philosophy, thought, and religion, standing away from the framework of scientific agriculture." He values not the Western way of thinking, that nature is for the use of humanity, but the Oriental thinking that we are part of nature. Through natural "do-nothing" farming he tried to demonstrate that humanity's science is imperfect and unnecessary.

In another book, "The Road Back to Nature," Fukuoka notes, "Dietary abnormality results in abnormality of the body and mind, and affects everything. A sound body comes from healthy food. A sound idea comes from a healthy body." He considers food the most significant factor for human life, and he repeatedly uses the Taoist or Buddhist term "shindo-fuji" in his books, which literally means that body (shin) and earth (do) are inseparable (fuji). He says that humans and the environment are united. When people eat food in season and grown on the very land where they live, their bodies can be sound and in harmony with the environment.

Fukuoka's Natural Farming

Currently, most farmers in Japan practice chemical farming with chemical fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides. Recently, however, as people are paying more and more attention to food safety, an increasing number of farmers practice sustainable agriculture, through reduction of herbicides and pesticides and/or through the use of organic fertilizers. At supermarkets and retail stores, consumers are able to buy agricultural products bearing the Organic JAS logo, issued by the Japanese Agricultural Standard to certify that food has been produced in accordance with international guidelines. The JAS certification is given to the agricultural products from farms which had not used agrichemicals and chemical fertilizers for more than three years, in principle, but applies organic materials such as manure.

How about Fukuoka's natural farming? Is it just one type of organic farming? Fukuoka rejects scientific farming based on human knowledge and, instead, has established a farming method that requires as little human intervention as possible. Organic farming, in which people spread organic fertilizers, is different from what he has been aspiring to prove.

Fukuoka explains natural farming in his writings: "We can make healthy rice, healthy and rich soil that requires no fertilizer, and have productive soil without tilling if we just accept the fact that such excessive efforts-tilling, application of either organic, chemical fertilizers, or pesticides-has never been necessary A farming method that develops the conditions under which people do not have to do anything--this is what I have been pursuing. After thirty years I finally came to the point where my natural farm could yield, without any effort, virtually as much rice and wheat as typical scientific farms."

JFS interviewed Muneo Matsumoto, who has been attempting Fukuoka-style natural farming in Saitama Prefecture, in the suburbs of Tokyo. According to him, a few farmers are now practicing what they claim to be "natural farming" across Japan. But the name "natural farming" does not necessarily mean the same thing, because there is no set definition and each person is trying in his own way. Many of them, however, once learned natural farming from Fukuoka and have adapted it to their circumstances. Fukuoka's natural farming could be described as the prototype, or at least one of the sources of a stream.

The principles of Fukuoka-style natural farming are no tilling(cultivation), no fertilizers, no pesticides, and no weeding. Although "no tilling" may be a difficult concept for regular farmers to understand, the rationale is clear to Matsumoto. "Tilled soil easily dries out." He continues that. the application of fertilizers, including manure, will overprotect plants, by contrast, the plants without fertilizer can grow to be robust and tasty. Regarding the principle of no weeding, he cuts weeds when they bloom, instead of pulling them out. And the mowed weeds are laid flat on the ground to keep soil moist in summer and warm in winter; in the end they decompose into natural fertilizer.

Moreover, Matsumoto rarely waters the plants so that the roots search for water and stretch deep. If water is abundant, he says, plants will have shallow roots and become weak from getting water too easily.

When seeding, Matsumoto scatters a mixture of seeds. A plant sprouts only when it best suits the place, and thus he cannot anticipate in advance what will grow where. To those who do not know better, Fukuoka-style natural farms may appear to be untended, with plants growing randomly. Neighbors often despise such farms, thinking that they look disorderly. In this country, where most farms have vegetables growing in neat rows, natural farming may be hard to understand for most people.

An agricultural method that requires no tilling, no fertilizers, no pesticides and no weeding sounds very easy to do. But in reality it is not. In his books Fukuoka stressed repeatedly that the "natural" in natural farming is different from noninterference. Matsumoto elaborates: "Nature without human intervention just follows its course automatically. However, nature once tampered with by humans will not return easily to its original condition without human intervention." Restoration of the original natural conditions is rather difficult to accomplish and certainly requires expertise. Fukuoka was able to establish his natural farming method only through repeated attempts and errors to return his own farming fields to the natural condition.

The rapidly growing demand for petroleum in recent years is causing conflicts all over the world. In chemical-based agriculture, petroleum is not just the material used to make fertilizers and pesticides but also the fuel to power cultivation machinery. In contrast, natural agriculture does not require cultivators, fertilizers or pesticides. Since it does not depend on petroleum, it is really a more sustainable form of agriculture.

Greening of Deserts with Clay Balls

Fukuoka's natural rice farming method is a "no-tilling, direct sowing, rice-barley double cropping" system in which rice and barley grow in the same field alternately in a year, from seeds sown on non-tilled fields. Knowing that bare seeds tend to be eaten by birds, Fukuoka came up with the idea of inserting seeds into clay pellets before sowing them on fields. In general, such clayballs are made by (1) mixing clay, water and various kinds of seeds, (2) removing air bubbles from the mixture as much as possible, (3) forming small, round balls, and (4) drying them for 3 or 4 days.

Clay-coated seeds are prevented from being eaten by birds or insects and also from drying up. The globular shape of these clay pellets makes them hard to break. Clayballs contact the ground with a small area where dew is formed due to differences daytime and nighttime temperatures, which facilitates the rooting of seeds.

Clayballs are which require no watering or no fertilizers, are especially suited for sowing in deserts since they require no watering or fertilizers in addition to their low-cost nature. Fukuoka called for people to collect seeds, launched a movement for desert-greening with clayballs, and succeeded in greening activities in Greece, India, Tanzania, the Philippines, and worldwide. Although Fukuoka is now retired from the movement, activities initiated by him are continuing in many countries.

It takes years before the deserts can be transformed into green areas filled with germinating seeds, small plants, vegetables and trees. In other words, it is rather easy to destroy nature, but restoring nature once lost takes a tremendous amount of time and energy.

Bringing Nature Back Into Our Lives

After the World War II, Japan has been expanding its economy, and grown to be a country that imports materials from all over the world. Even the food which is essential for our survival comes from as far away as the other side of the planet. But through this change, Japan has achieved material affluence. On the other hand, agriculture is now largely detached from the lives of most people in this highly technological society.

Humanity cannot live without nature. The farmer-philosopher Fukuoka has shown us that natural agriculture allows us to live without the aid of technology. We should always remember that it is nature that sustains our lives. Scattering seeds to bring back nature and agriculture close to our daily lives may certainly be one step toward a sustainable society.

(Staff writer Yuriko Yoneda)

Japanese  

 

このページの先頭へ