EZLN and Chiapas school launch project to reduce genetic contamination
TheNewsMexico.com
February 2, 2002
By Janet Leslie Schwartz
SAN CRISTOBAL DE LAS CASAS, Chiapas - The Zapatista National Liberation
Army's autonomous education committees and students from January 1st
Secondary School in Oventic, recently launched a seed preservation project
called "Mother seed of resistance" to reduce genetic contamination.
Genetically engineered strains of maize threaten to destroy plants that
Chiapas communities cultivated for thousands of years.
"An effort must be made to save the seeds that grow in our community
since genetically engineered seeds arriving to our land threaten to
destroy the plants that our ancestors cultivated," a schoolteacher
said. "Our seeds are specially adapted to our land and climate and we
must preserve them."
Teachers, education committees and students will work together to
identify, preserve and cultivate original maize seeds found throughout
Chiapas.
Collected seeds will be stored according to Mayan tradition in clay pots
with ash and eucalyptus leaves to protect against insects. The pots are
then covered with fabric, tied with woven twigs and placed upright on
concrete slabs in a building built with funds collected by a California-
based non-profit organization, Schools for Chiapas.
The project planners hope to eventually include regional seeds from bean,
calabaza, chile and medicinal plants, and conserve them in a building
with refrigeration and genetic analysis capabilities.
Students will record information about the seeds, document recipies,
history, legends and songs from community elders in the local language,
Tzotzil.
"The mother-seed project extends to all areas of the school's
curriculum," explained the Zapatista educator. "It will have a profound
impact on our work for the years to come. Students will have the
opportunity to discuss various topics with our oldest and best campesinos
and write about their experiences in our own language."
"Sometimes our youth thinks that modern is better," another community
leader commented. "We hope that the students see the value and importance
of their cultural roots through this project."
The January 1st Secondary School, the first autonomous Indian secondary
school in Chiapas, opened on the first day of 2002. According to Schools
for Chiapas, the school is "an important grass-roots effort to preserve
Mayan cultural heritage in Chiapas."