Muneer Hinay and his nine-year-old daughter Raaina cofounded Kids Who Farm (KWF), which Muneer explains is a “food production plus education advocacy initiative which aims to teach kids and women farming and the importance of food production. It’s our way of contributing to the education part of building the next generation of food producers.”
Muneer, who hails from Butuan, relocated to Zamboanga, where his Tausug wife, who is a human rights lawyer, is from. He has a background in social work and is currently the project manager of the World Wide Fund for Nature’s (WWF) Sustainable Food Systems Program, which aims to provide food security and decent livelihoods to marginalized communities by means of agriculture. He says that the idea had been germinating in his head for a while because he’s seen firsthand the gaps in the agriculture industry. “There’s a number of new technologies out there that you can introduce... to small farmers, but the challenge is... limited access to information. And (farmers are) really getting older,” Muneer explains. “The idea of Kids Who Farm is really about transferring these technologies to the young ones who can appreciate or are interested to learn about farming technologies and food production.”
SAVING A SCHOOL GARDEN
This story is from the December 2019 edition of Agriculture.
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This story is from the December 2019 edition of Agriculture.
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