New Internationalist

The sheltering forest

As we drive along a dirt road up into the hills towards Gedeo in southern Ethiopia, the forest becomes noticeably denser and the air increasingly humid. I roll the window all the way down, close my eyes and smell the fresh, sweet air flowing in.

I am on my way to the district of Bule, home to the Gedeo people, who practice a unique form of agroforestry on their land. The United Nations reports that nearly eight million people in Ethiopia do not have adequate food. But while poverty levels are high in Gedeo, food does not run short.

To understand why this is, I’ve come to meet Aster Gemede, 32, a farmer and mother of six. She appears at the entrance to her bamboo-fenced compound, flanked by three daughters and a small barking dog. I’m welcomed in with a warm smile and one of her elder daughters starts to roast coffee beans.

‘We grow it here in our yard,’

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Internationalist

New Internationalist1 min readGender Studies
Every Body
written and directed by Julie Cohen 92 minutes This sensitive, revealing and purposeful doc traces the US practice of surgically assigning exclusively male or female gender to intersex children. That is, babies who were born with characteristics of b
New Internationalist2 min readDiet & Nutrition
Between Meals
by A. J. Liebling (Penguin Modern Classics, ISBN 9780241637975) penguin.co.uk The US journalist AJ Liebling was an Olympian eater. He could have had a successful career as an ASMR-style videoblogger: his performative gourmandise smacks of that made p
New Internationalist2 min readGender Studies
Star Ratings
Uruguay stands out in Latin America for its relatively egalitarian society and high income per capita. Extreme poverty is almost non-existent. Its middle class is the largest on the continent and represents more than 60% of its population. The Covid-

Related Books & Audiobooks