Many South Africans are losing the tradition of gardening. The majority of young men see gardening as women’s work. However, studying nutrition and reading the creation story in Genesis chapters 1 and 2 is proving to be a powerful catalyst for action in all of our health builder groups. As health builder student Nokwanda from Umlazi put it, “We cannot afford to buy vegetables. The only way we can have vegetables is if we grow them ourselves.”
Health builder trainer Jabulile lives with her husband and two 2 year-old twin girls 30 miles north of Durban in a metal shack surrounded by weeds and tall grass next to a sugar cane field. Behind her house are fruit trees including mango, avocado, guava and citrus planted by a previous farmer. The children come at different times of the year to pick the fruit. Jabulile’s grandmother lived into her 90s and had a large garden on the spot where Jabulile and her husband built their shack about three years ago. Jabulile used to help her grandmother with the garden as a child but never gardened as an adult. Jabulile’s elderly neighbor who used to garden with her grandmother advised her on how to establish her new garden. This year Jabulile planted vegetables including squash, spinach, onion, chaya and kale. This garden has been an excellent source of nutritious food for her family and for others.
We provide our health builder trainers with chickens, a dome to house them and an incubator. The chickens provide fertilizer for the garden. Jabulile is hatching her own chicks and selling chickens and eggs to her neigbors.
Jabulile’s labors are bearing fruit in other ways as well – this year she has completed the training of two health builders.
Then the Lord God took the man and put him into the garden of Eden to cultivate it and keep it. -Genesis 2:15