On The Ground: An Open Dialogue
On The Ground: An Open Dialogue
On The Ground: An Open Dialogue
Pa r t ne r s f or C ha n g e
An Open Dialogue
In May 2009 Pete Jones, Director of Partners for Change Ethiopia, visited the Community Managed Disaster Risk Reduction Committee (CMDRR) in Dire Dawa. The Committee, funded by Comic Relief and individual donations from the public, was set up to address the issue of climate change in the semi arid and fragile ecosystem of eastern Ethiopia. Also in attendance were two independent consultants who were in Dire Dawa evaluating JeCCDO programmes in the city. The meeting took place on a hot and humid evening with a group of twelve people sitting on a mud floor drinking bottles of Fanta in a tin shack next to the Committees seedling and tree nursery. The following is an overview of the meeting, in which the community explained their activities and the main issues facing them using, their own words translated into English by an interpreter.
Hirut: Before the CMDRR we used to think we were cursed by God. There has been a big change in thinking. Now we know it is not our fault. We know we can do something to change our lives. We now meet and brainstorm ideas, learn from each other and help each other. We meet many times in the week after our work in the fields, often we are here until very late talking. We forget about the time because the changes we need to make are big. It is exciting but also tiring! Bogale: When we talked with JeCCDO we realised we would have to change our livestock because of the climate. Traditionally we have always farmed cattle, now we farm chicken and goats, they are more capable of enduring hard, dry weather. This has made a big difference to our families
were running in the darkness alone, now we are running together in the light.
Salam: Now we protect because we have seen how it can disappear and make us open to flood. JeCCDO encouraged us to come together. We talked about our future and soon we realised we had to work together to survive. Now we join hands. Before we had no strategy, now we talk and plan together. Tesfay:It is like this; before we were running in the darkness alone, now we are running together in the light. Fasar: Daylight hours are not enough now we work into the night to make up for the lost days. We spend night after night talking together, anybody is welcome to come and contribute their knowledge
Tesfay: Yes and now we keep our ears and eyes open all the time, we talk together about the weather and listen to upstream communities. They tell us when it is raining and what direction the rain is heading. We now sow seeds often. The window of opportunity is more open now. Ichigew: In the past six weeks I have harvested 6 quintiles of maize. This is much more than I would have done previously. Bogale:Now (May) we have already reaped one harvest in previous years we would just have started sowing Ichigew: Yes and we have learnt how to retain water in different ways. The rains fall differently now, much harder and shorter. We have learnt how to capture the water, we have built the check dam on the hill and are soon going to build another one. We are digging wells. As soon as we hear about rain from the upstream community we are out in the fields creating channels for the water to flow to irrigate our crops.
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On the Ground
Hirut: This is true, because of this we discuss things and look for opportuniMesfin: We show ties. Previously we them how fragile the The demonstration plot looked for handouts. ecosystem we live in is We were dependent on government and now they are now learning from officers. We used to get seedlings from us. them. Often they were not the right seedlings. Now we have learnt how to Hirut: Before this we did not like
Benefits of Change
change. Our families lived the same way for generations. It was the way we were taught to live by our parents. But we understand we have to change if we are going to give our children a life free from hunger and misery. We have learnt how to be strategic Bogale: Yes this is true but also we have moved from dealing with our problems on our own to helping each other and looking to solve our problems as a community Hirut: That is what I mean by strategic we plan together and look ahead together Bogale: Oh, ok yes you are right, if this is what strategic is then that is what we are Hirut: Once we see the clues now we solve the riddle before we werent even looking for the clues. We were blind to change. Abebe: We need to build regional network this issue is bigger than our immediate area. First we realise this problem is bigger than us as individuals and we learnt we have to work together as a community and now we realise this problem is bigger than our community we have to work with other communities hand in hand
Teaching Americans
Tesfay: It is not just the government, do you remember when the American army came and dug wells but only dug 80 metres deep but didnt find any water? We helped them and dug 20 30 metres and found it. We know where to look. We forgot how much we know, now we talk together we realise we have the solutions through our knowledge of the land. When we were alone we forgot now we remember and put our knowledge to the new problems. Mesfin: This is true, so now we teach the government and the Americans!
Volume 1, Issue 1
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PostMeeting Reflections
This is the most incredible meeting Ive been to in many, many years. I have been very depressed about Ethiopia in recent years but what these people are doing gives me real hope for the future of this country Ato Tadele, independent consultant The really impressive thing about this committee is the way they have turned a crisis into opportunity. To do that they have had to change their attitudes to one another, the government, the way they work, the crops they grow. Pete Jones, Director St Matthews Childrens Fund Ethiopia Sometimes, late at night, I decide to check on progress and I arrive to find the committee talking together, every time they are there, they do this every night. I often find myself joining them, the enthusiasm and commitment to improve is contagious. Ato Abebe, Manager, JeCCDO Hawassa Community Development Programme Office
Update as of 2010
In late 2009 a regional conference on the issues of DRR and Climate Change Adaptation was organized by JeCCDO in cooperation with the Regional Agriculture and Rural Development Bureau. Sixty six persons from different levels of government and 34 community representatives participated in the workshop. The conference concluded with strong recommendations for the formation of a Regional DRR and Climate Change Adaptation forum and the need for creating interregional linkage among the four neighbouring regions (Harare, Oromya, Somali regions and Dire Dawa Administration). JeCCDO and the Dire Dawa Administration Environmental Protection Bureau have been nominated to take this forward. Following this the Federal Affairs Advisor to the Prime Minister and the Director of the Federal Revenue Authority visited JeCCDOs CMDRR work in late 2009 and commended them on their work and supported the formation of regional forums.