Photo story by people of Alxa, Inner Mongolia

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Ann Waters

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Apr 18, 2009, 6:14:11 AM4/18/09
to fldonli...@googlegroups.com, Irene Bain FF, dingp...@sina.com
Dear all,
 
In case this has not already been circulated to this list, here is a review of an outcome of farmer (pastoralist)-led documentation. The review can be downloaded from the FLD website in pdf format (go to www.prolinnova.net/fld.php and scroll down to the bottom of the page). 
 
This review -- and, even moreso, the book itself! -- may interest those of you who are trying to support local people to document their own innovations and experiments under the Prolinnova “umbrella” or are otherwise involved in supporting local people to express their achievements and concerns in their own way and to make their voices and images more widely heard and seen. It is about a book made together with people living in Alxa, the "Land of Camels" in Inner Mongolia, describing the people's lives, hopes and fears in their own photographs and words. If you are interested in obtaining this book, contact either the publisher (xuey...@sina.com; www.book001.com/en) or the Society of Entrepreneurs and Ecology of Alxa (SEE; laur...@hotmail.com), one of the local NGOs that was involved in implementing this “Photo Story” project with the support of the Ford Foundation Beijing Office.

 

AWB

 

 

Book review

 

Gazing at the cradle of the dust storm: a photo story of humans and environment in Alxa

 

In Alxa, the largest and most westerly of the twelve Leagues in the Autonomous Region of Inner Mongolia, China, the Ford Foundation supported a project in participatory communication using the technique of photo “novella”: local people are provided with still cameras with which they are free to photograph anything they want in order to make up a picture story of their everyday lives. This process is meant to give them the opportunity to record and reflect their needs, to learn together by engaging in dialogue among themselves and with “outsiders”, to encourage community-led action and to inform policymakers.

 

The “Photo Story” project was implemented by three environmental non-governmental organisations: Society of Entrepreneurs and Ecology of Alxa (SEE), the Development Institute for Tradition and Environment in Kunming (DITE) and the National Culture and Gender Research Institute in Lijiang (CGRC). The main purposes were to explore local people’s perspectives on and understanding of their environment, their livelihoods and their traditions; and to stimulate them to reflect on environmental protection and community development.

The project also helped “outsiders” understand local views, concerns and aspirations. The project was coordinated by a young Han Chinese woman from Zhejiang Province, Ding Pingjun, working together with a young Mongolian woman, Meng Gen.

 

Over a period of one year, local people -- men and women, young and old, from two ethnic groups (Mongolian and Han Chinese) -- at two sites in Alxa League were given simple cameras and “plenty of film”, and were trained how to use them. They took pictures of whatever was important to them; a total of about 2000 pictures were developed and printed. The selection of photographs to be published was made by the project coordinator who, together with her colleague Meng Gen, interviewed the local photographers and other members of their families on the basis of their pictures. In 2008, they produced a book of photographs and accompanying texts that depict Alxa through the “eyes and hearts” of the farmers and herders in the area. The roughly 100 photographs selected for the book were taken by 23 farmers and herders -- a well-balanced number of women and men, ranging between 24 and 63 years of age, 70% of them Mongolian.

 

The photographs are clustered in seven sections on: 1) the general history and ecology of the area; 2) the key and scarce resource, water; 3) the desert vegetation; 4) the local ways of production inextricably linked to their religion; 5) the local traditions and ways of life; 6) the camel festival – which appears to be a dying tradition; and 7) environmental activities of the local people. The book concludes with some photographs of the project process, showing, for example, how the herders toured with an exhibition of their photographs to raise wider public awareness about environmental issues. Each section has an introductory text by the author, and quotations to accompany the photographs, which the author selected from the interviews made with the photographers. The participatory communication methodology is described only briefly in the forward. However, the process was documented in another book produced in Chinese in 2006: Participation and Development: A Guide to Photo Novella (Yunnan Minorities Press).

 

Alxa is an extremely dry area that lies just south of the border to (Outer) Mongolia. The Alxa desert is more or less an extension of the Gobi Desert. Here, for centuries, transhumant herding of camels, sheep and horses had been practised in a way that was ideally suited to the dry and highly variable climate with extremes of heat and cold. In recent decades, however, the population in Alxa increased from 30,000 in the 1950s to about 200,000 now. This was due to a strong influx of Han Chinese farmers from famine-struck Gansu Province, who were resettled in Inner Mongolia. Today, over 70% of the population in the Alxa League are Han Chinese. Government policy promoted land privatisation and distribution to individual households. Mongolian herders were encouraged to settle and taught to farm like the Han.

 

The pressure of this influx of people on the sparse arid resources was immense. The resulting environmental disaster and human suffering are clearly depicted in the photographs in this book and in the words of the photographers. Rivers were dammed to allow irrigation of the land, which was ploughed up by the Han farmers. Grazing areas diminished as a result, but livestock numbers grew. Water tables dropped, lakes dried up, the irrigated land became increasing saline. Dust storms began to have serious effects on more densely populated areas of China, Korea and Japan, and the government and the press identified Alxa as the source. In the last few years, the Chinese government has undertaken massive interventions intended to rehabilitate the environment. Livestock are being excluded from degraded rangelands. People are being moved out of these “ecologically vulnerable” areas to closely spaced housing blocks on the edge of towns. The idea is that grazing land should return to grassland.

 

Through their photographs and the accompanying texts, the local people have been given the opportunity to express their views on these developments and on their future. They show and tell how land use has changed from mobile herding to cultivation, accompanied by deforestation, pollution, desertification and sandstorms. They question the ecological wisdom of the development interventionists, such as the construction of dams, the use of barbed-wire fences and pesticides, and the restrictions on herd size and on seasonal movements of the livestock. They see the interrelations of livestock and vegetation in other ways than do the development planners. They mourn their departure from the free-standing yurts in the open spaces of the steppe to the grey rows of “immigrant houses” into which they have to move. They realise that the freedom and laughter of their old way of life is coming to an end. But the book also shows how, through this project, the local people have organised themselves to try to rehabilitate the environment through tree planting, more ecological methods of pest control and use of alternative sources of energy (biogas, solar, fuel-saving stoves) to reduce the pressure on the woody vegetation. The author reports that the “Photo Story” project has allowed local people to develop their own ideas for environmental protection and community development.

 

The book of 112 pages is well presented in terms of photographs and layout, although not particularly well language-edited. It is a book that, at first glance, contains glossy pictures of the fascinating Inner Mongolian desert and the colourful traditions of the Mongolian people. However, a closer look reveals this to be a moving expression by the local people of immense sorrow and fragile hope and also -- in an indirect way -- protest at what has happened to their land and to their lives.

 

Gazing at the cradle of the dust storm: a photo story of humans and the environment in Alxa, by Ding Pingjun. Academy Press, Beijing, China, 2008. ISBN: 978-7-5077-3071-5. To order a copy for 128 Yuan (about USD 19), contact SEE (laur...@hotmail.com) or the publisher (xuey...@sina.com; www.book001.com/en).

 

Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC EcoCulture, Netherlands

,

Pelum Uganda

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Apr 20, 2009, 5:58:43 AM4/20/09
to fldonli...@googlegroups.com, xuey...@sina.com, www.book0...@mail3.utlonline.co.ug, laur...@hotmail.com

Dear Ann,
Thanks for sharing this link.

There are surely a number of lessons to learn from our colleagues.

How easily can we obtain this book? Is it on sale,if yes how much and if it
is not on sale,please let us know how we can get it.

Thanks and kind regards,

Nancy



Ann Waters writes:

> Dear all,
>
> In case this has not already been circulated to this list, here is a review of an outcome of farmer (pastoralist)-led documentation. The review can be downloaded from the FLD website in pdf format (go to www.prolinnova.net/fld.php and scroll down to the bottom of the page).
>
> This review -- and, even moreso, the book itself! -- may interest those of you who are trying to support local people to document their own innovations and experiments under the Prolinnova "umbrella" or are otherwise involved in supporting local people to express their achievements and concerns in their own way and to make their voices and images more widely heard and seen. It is about a book made together with people living in Alxa, the "Land of Camels" in Inner Mongolia, describing the people's lives, hopes and fears in their own photographs and words. If you are interested in obtaining this book, contact either the publisher (xuey...@sina.com; www.book001.com/en) or the Society of Entrepreneurs and Ecology of Alxa (SEE; laur...@hotmail.com), one of the local NGOs that was involved in implementing this "Photo Story" project with the support of the Ford Foundation Beijing Office.
>
>
> AWB
>
>
>
>
>
> Book review
>
>
>
> Gazing at the cradle of the dust storm: a photo story of humans and environment in Alxa
>
>
>
> In Alxa, the largest and most westerly of the twelve Leagues in the Autonomous Region of Inner Mongolia, China, the Ford Foundation supported a project in participatory communication using the technique of photo "novella": local people are provided with still cameras with which they are free to photograph anything they want in order to make up a picture story of their everyday lives. This process is meant to give them the opportunity to record and reflect their needs, to learn together by engaging in dialogue among themselves and with "outsiders", to encourage community-led action and to inform policymakers.
>
>
>
> The "Photo Story" project was implemented by three environmental non-governmental organisations: Society of Entrepreneurs and Ecology of Alxa (SEE), the Development Institute for Tradition and Environment in Kunming (DITE) and the National Culture and Gender Research Institute in Lijiang (CGRC). The main purposes were to explore local people's perspectives on and understanding of their environment, their livelihoods and their traditions; and to stimulate them to reflect on environmental protection and community development.
>
> The project also helped "outsiders" understand local views, concerns and aspirations. The project was coordinated by a young Han Chinese woman from Zhejiang Province, Ding Pingjun, working together with a young Mongolian woman, Meng Gen.
>
>
>
> Over a period of one year, local people -- men and women, young and old, from two ethnic groups (Mongolian and Han Chinese) -- at two sites in Alxa League were given simple cameras and "plenty of film", and were trained how to use them. They took pictures of whatever was important to them; a total of about 2000 pictures were developed and printed. The selection of photographs to be published was made by the project coordinator who, together with her colleague Meng Gen, interviewed the local photographers and other members of their families on the basis of their pictures. In 2008, they produced a book of photographs and accompanying texts that depict Alxa through the "eyes and hearts" of the farmers and herders in the area. The roughly 100 photographs selected for the book were taken by 23 farmers and herders -- a well-balanced number of women and men, ranging between 24 and 63 years of age, 70% of them Mongolian.
>
>
>
> The photographs are clustered in seven sections on: 1) the general history and ecology of the area; 2) the key and scarce resource, water; 3) the desert vegetation; 4) the local ways of production inextricably linked to their religion; 5) the local traditions and ways of life; 6) the camel festival - which appears to be a dying tradition; and 7) environmental activities of the local people. The book concludes with some photographs of the project process, showing, for example, how the herders toured with an exhibition of their photographs to raise wider public awareness about environmental issues. Each section has an introductory text by the author, and quotations to accompany the photographs, which the author selected from the interviews made with the photographers. The participatory communication methodology is described only briefly in the forward. However, the process was documented in another book produced in Chinese in 2006: Participation and Development: A Guide to Photo Novella (Yunnan Minorities Press).
>
>
>
> Alxa is an extremely dry area that lies just south of the border to (Outer) Mongolia. The Alxa desert is more or less an extension of the Gobi Desert. Here, for centuries, transhumant herding of camels, sheep and horses had been practised in a way that was ideally suited to the dry and highly variable climate with extremes of heat and cold. In recent decades, however, the population in Alxa increased from 30,000 in the 1950s to about 200,000 now. This was due to a strong influx of Han Chinese farmers from famine-struck Gansu Province, who were resettled in Inner Mongolia. Today, over 70% of the population in the Alxa League are Han Chinese. Government policy promoted land privatisation and distribution to individual households. Mongolian herders were encouraged to settle and taught to farm like the Han.
>
>
>
> The pressure of this influx of people on the sparse arid resources was immense. The resulting environmental disaster and human suffering are clearly depicted in the photographs in this book and in the words of the photographers. Rivers were dammed to allow irrigation of the land, which was ploughed up by the Han farmers. Grazing areas diminished as a result, but livestock numbers grew. Water tables dropped, lakes dried up, the irrigated land became increasing saline. Dust storms began to have serious effects on more densely populated areas of China, Korea and Japan, and the government and the press identified Alxa as the source. In the last few years, the Chinese government has undertaken massive interventions intended to rehabilitate the environment. Livestock are being excluded from degraded rangelands. People are being moved out of these "ecologically vulnerable" areas to closely spaced housing blocks on the edge of towns. The idea is that grazing land should return to grassland.
>
>
>
> Through their photographs and the accompanying texts, the local people have been given the opportunity to express their views on these developments and on their future. They show and tell how land use has changed from mobile herding to cultivation, accompanied by deforestation, pollution, desertification and sandstorms. They question the ecological wisdom of the development interventionists, such as the construction of dams, the use of barbed-wire fences and pesticides, and the restrictions on herd size and on seasonal movements of the livestock. They see the interrelations of livestock and vegetation in other ways than do the development planners. They mourn their departure from the free-standing yurts in the open spaces of the steppe to the grey rows of "immigrant houses" into which they have to move. They realise that the freedom and laughter of their old way of life is coming to an end. But the book also shows how, through this project, the local people have organised themselves to try to rehabilitate the environment through tree planting, more ecological methods of pest control and use of alternative sources of energy (biogas, solar, fuel-saving stoves) to reduce the pressure on the woody vegetation. The author reports that the "Photo Story" project has allowed local people to develop their own ideas for environmental protection and community development.
>
>
>
> The book of 112 pages is well presented in terms of photographs and layout, although not particularly well language-edited. It is a book that, at first glance, contains glossy pictures of the fascinating Inner Mongolian desert and the colourful traditions of the Mongolian people. However, a closer look reveals this to be a moving expression by the local people of immense sorrow and fragile hope and also -- in an indirect way -- protest at what has happened to their land and to their lives.
>
>
>
> Gazing at the cradle of the dust storm: a photo story of humans and the environment in Alxa, by Ding Pingjun. Academy Press, Beijing, China, 2008. ISBN: 978-7-5077-3071-5. To order a copy for 128 Yuan (about USD 19), contact SEE (laur...@hotmail.com) or the publisher (xuey...@sina.com; www.book001.com/en).
>
>
>
> Ann Waters-Bayer, ETC EcoCulture, Netherlands
>
>
> ,
> >

Michael Malinga

unread,
Jul 27, 2009, 6:50:24 AM7/27/09
to fldonli...@googlegroups.com
Hi Grace
In our meeting with Monique we talked about write shop but we were not well informed on what is happening ,Could you please give me and insight on this -where ,when ,who is involved .
How is Mr Lutalo great him for me and tell him that I am going to be at PID refresher on ly if he was still Prolinnova family ,but he can still be where ever he goes.
 
 
Michael  Malinga
Project facilitator, Farmer Support Group
Country co-ordinator, PELUM South Africa
Tel +27 33 260 6014 / 6275
Fax +27 33 260 6118
Cell +27 72 561 9239
mali...@ukzn.ac.za
FSG, Private bag X 01
Scottsville 3209
PELUM SA, PO Box 101715
Scottsville 3209

Please find our Email Disclaimer here-->: http://www.ukzn.ac.za/disclaimer

Michael Malinga

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Jul 27, 2009, 8:17:08 AM7/27/09
to fldonli...@googlegroups.com
Sorry
Sorry to group members ,used the group emeil instead of Grace's Email -My apologies

Pelum Uganda

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Aug 3, 2009, 1:42:36 AM8/3/09
to fldonli...@googlegroups.com

Dear Michael,

The FLD write shop will be here in Uganda in September or October 2009

I will communicate the final dates as well as details of participation.

Regards

Stella

 

Participatory Ecological Land Use Management

PELUM Uganda Country Desk

P.O.Box 35804, Kampala

Plot 67, Kira Road, Kamwokya

Tel: 0414 533 973

pelum...@utlonline.co.ug

pelum...@yahoo.com

www.pelumrd.org

 


Nageeb Bakheit

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Aug 6, 2009, 4:26:31 PM8/6/09
to fldonline forum, Jean-Marie Diop, Majzoub M, Noureldin Ahmed
Dear Colleagues:
I have links with Practical Action/Prolinnova Sudan. Currently I am writing the proposal for Sudan FLD pilot project. As part of the fldonline forum I would like to participate in this great event, FLD write shop, in Uganda in September or October. Regards,
Nageeb Ibrahim Bakheit

 

From: pelum...@utlonline.co.ug
To: fldonli...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [FLD] Re: FLD write shop
Date: Mon, 3 Aug 2009 08:42:36 +0300

Pelum Uganda

unread,
Sep 2, 2009, 3:53:03 AM9/2/09
to fldonli...@googlegroups.com, Jean-Marie Diop, Majzoub M, Noureldin Ahmed, Ritah Lumala, Ritah Lumala

Dear Nageeb and all,

 

Warm greetings!

 

Please find attached the write shop concept

We have slots for 2 self sponsored participants, preferably with good FLD cases

Those interested in participating in this write shop could send an expression of interest to PELUM Uganda (email address below), briefly describing the FLD case to be shared.

This should be done not later than 7th September 2009

 

Best wishes

Stella Grace Lutalo

Country Coordinator

 

Participatory Ecological Land Use Management

PELUM Uganda Country Desk

P.O.Box 35804, Kampala

Plot 67, Kira Road, Kamwokya

Tel: 0414 533 973

pelum...@utlonline.co.ug

pelum...@yahoo.com

www.pelumrd.org

 


</html
size=2 face=Verdana>

Write shop concept.pdf

Nageeb Bakheit

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Sep 5, 2009, 1:25:13 AM9/5/09
to fldonline forum, Jean-Marie Diop, Majzoub M, Noureldin Ahmed, rlu...@africa2000network.org.ug, ritah...@yahoo.co.uk
dear Stella Grace Lutalo:
Thank you for sharing iconcept note on Fld write shop. I will soon present Sudan FLD Pilot case, Massaffi.
Thanks,

Nageeb Ibrahim Bakheit
 

From: pelum...@utlonline.co.ug
To: fldonli...@googlegroups.com

Subject: [FLD] Re: FLD write shop
Date: Wed, 2 Sep 2009 10:53:03 +0300

Pelum Uganda

unread,
Apr 8, 2010, 4:21:21 AM4/8/10
to fldonli...@googlegroups.com, laurent...@yahoo.co.uk, Nicole Metz, precious kabaso, Dorine Ruter [ETC Foundation], Ritah Lumala, ugandaenv...@yahoo.com, ueef, y_tib...@yahoo.com, Pelum Zambia, Maryleen, Zachary Makanya, PTz pelumtanzania, Ritah Lumala, Thur de Kuijer, c.wett...@etcnl.nl, greenlivi...@yahoo.com, fr_c...@yahoo.com, ESAFF Uganda, simon...@yahoo.co.uk, LAELA AGRICULTURAL CENTRE LAC, Gaudens Masebe, Smart Initiative, Charles Oduor Ogada, rachel...@gmail.com, REN Empower, f...@isicad.org, jimmym...@yahoo.com, hakimba...@yahoo.co.uk, kafnak...@yahoo.com, nbamu...@envalert.org, Agnes VEDCO, agnes...@vedco.or.ug, awa...@kendat.org, aew...@yahoo.com, ruth...@yahoo.com, seali...@yahoo.com, JOHN BAPTIST WASSWA, Mulyanga Stephen, Martin van der Steen, Kennedy Igbokwe, Jean-Marie Diop, Majzoub M, Noureldin Ahmed, Ritah Lumala

Dear FLD friends

 

Many greetings from PELUM Uganda!

 

I am happy to inform you that we successfully finalized FLD phase 2 last month, which was crowned by the production of a publication on “Farmer Led Documentation and Knowledge sharing; Case studies from Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia.” An electronic version is attached herewith. Many of you should have already received copies of the book by now.

I hope you will find it useful in enabling you to implement more FLD projects with your farmers, as well as integrating the approach in your development work.

 

Remember to share any valuable feedback.

 

Best wishes,

Stella Lutalo

 

Participatory Ecological Land Use Management

PELUM Uganda Country Desk

P.O.Box 35804, Kampala

Plot 155, Kira Road, Kamwokya

FLD final publication.pdf

Nageeb Bakheit

unread,
May 7, 2010, 5:51:26 AM5/7/10
to fldonline forum, Pelum Uganda
Dear Stella Lutalo
Thank you for keeping me informed with your pelumuganda fld activities. Because of time constrains in my University I cannot share with you my fld experiences. So I need your personal help and touch to be linked to the online group. Best wishes,

Nageeb Ibrahim Bakheit
 

From: pelum...@utlonline.co.ug
To: fldonli...@googlegroups.com; laurent...@yahoo.co.uk; Nicol...@oxfamnovib.nl; pmwans...@yahoo.com; d.r...@etcnl.nl; rlu...@africa2000network.org.ug; ugandaenv...@yahoo.com; senyonjo...@yahoo.co.uk; y_tib...@yahoo.com; pe...@coppernet.zm; mary...@pelum.net; mak...@pelum.net; in...@pelumtanzania.org; ritah...@yahoo.co.uk; Thur.de...@oxfamnovib.nl; c.wett...@etcnl.nl; ritah...@yahoo.co.uk; greenlivi...@yahoo.com; fr_c...@yahoo.com; esaff...@yahoo.com; simon...@yahoo.co.uk; lael...@yahoo.com; gauden...@yahoo.com; smartin...@yahoo.com; charle...@swift-mail.com; rachel...@gmail.com; ren_e...@yahoo.com; f...@isicad.org; jimmym...@yahoo.com; esaff...@yahoo.com; hakimba...@yahoo.co.uk; kafnak...@yahoo.com; nbamu...@envalert.org; agnes...@yahoo.com; agnes...@vedco.or.ug; awa...@kendat.org; aew...@yahoo.com; ruth...@yahoo.com; seali...@yahoo.com; jbwa...@hotmail.com; muly...@yahoo.com; Thur.de...@oxfamnovib.nl; Martin.van...@oxfamnovib.nl; awa...@kendat.org; igbo...@yahoo.com; ruth...@yahoo.com
CC: jm....@etcnl.nl; majz...@practicalaction.org.sd; noure...@practicalaction.org.sd; ritah...@yahoo.co.uk
Subject: [FLD] FLD publication 2010
Date: Thu, 8 Apr 2010 11:21:21 +0300
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