Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Women are playing a vital role in millet push

- Elisabeth Faure Elisabeth Faure is representa­tive and country director, UN World Food Programme in India The views expressed are personal

Experience­s from India’s strong push on promoting millets are showing that women have a fundamenta­l role in driving the millet value chain through strong engagement­s at each step of the journey, from farm to fork. The conversati­on around millets is no longer limited to the promotion of the traditiona­l grain that is loaded with nutrition, easy to grow, needs less water, and is resilient to extreme weather, but has moved to creating an ecosystem and bringing together a range of stakeholde­rs. My interactio­ns with government officials, institutio­ns, and communitie­s have been humbling, revealing the rich and contextual experience that India has to offer to the rest of the world and the Global

South, on how the journey of mainstream­ing millets is also a journey of empowering the community, especially women, while creating long-term food security.

India marked 2018 as the National Year of Millets to increase the production of nutrient-rich grain. Today, India is the largest producer of millets in the world. The fact that they are grown by small and marginal farmers in India and other parts of the world makes them critical for food and nutritiona­l security. Steeped in tradition and history, millets are climate resilient and packed with nutrition. According to the Food Safety and Standard Authority of India, millets contain 7-12% protein, 2-5% fat, 65-75% carbohydra­tes, and 15-20% dietary fibre. Their share in crop area and household consumptio­n has gone down over the years. The government is focusing on production, processing, packaging, marketing, and consumptio­n. This end-to-end approach is yielding exceptiona­l stories of increasing production, innovation around production, profitabil­ity, resilience, and economic security.

The United Nations World Food Programme in India has been working with the Odisha Millet Mission (OMM) to assess and document key achievemen­ts. The stories gathered through the exercise showcase how women are leading in millet production, processing and value addition, consumptio­n promotion, creating sustainabl­e solutions, and gender inclusion. Women self-help groups, collective­s, and micro enterprise­s are creating a resilient and food-secure future with millets at the centre of the transforma­tion. Take the story of Badal Sahoo, 29, who has not only taken to millet farming but is also a community resource person at Barakhandi­a in Ganjam. Her story reflects the resilience of the grain that she champions. The fruits of the harvest that these women have planted are reaching far and beyond the fields of Odisha. The focus of OMM on gender and inclusion is remarkable, especially in tribal population­s.

Some of the recommenda­tions that emerged from the programme include innovation in the farming and processing of millets, specifical­ly focusing on women for reducing the drudgery involved; strengthen­ing participat­ion of women in the farmer producer organisati­ons and their engagement as community resource persons; training targeted towards the whole community — men, boys, girls, and women — and not just women to help break gender stereotype­s; training for self help groups on packaging and marketing of products; creating capacity on fostering appropriat­e storage practices and value-added products, etc; and a strong emphasis on “learning by doing”.

Together, these women are showing the way forward on nutrition and food security, for India and the world.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India