For true! Says a New York Times story, For Dinner (and Fast), the Taste of Home, a great look at how different immigrant communities recreate their traditional foods in fast paced NYC.

Jennifer Gray-Brumskine, who immigrated from Liberia as a 19-year-old in the 1980s and now lives on Staten Island, does not stray too far from her native cuisine. Every Sunday, her family eats Western foods like corn bread and collard greens, she said, because that was the custom in Liberia, a country founded by freed American slaves.

During the week she hews to African cuisine because, she said, it is healthier than American food. “My whole family is skinny,” she explained. It’s also because African cuisine is all her husband will eat.

Ms. Gray-Brumskine often makes fufu, a rib-sticking mash of potato starch and mashed potatoes from a box, a common American substitution for roots or yams that are used in Africa. She also makes cassava greens; she washes and grinds the leaves, then boils them in a pot with water and baking soda until they turn olive green — a process that can take two hours and often isn’t done until 11 at night. Her husband will wait and eat them then.

But when she comes home late — she works as a community organizer in Stapleton, the Staten Island neighborhood — and wants fast, satisfying food for herself and her daughter, she often makes fish like red snapper or kingfish. She slices right through the whole fish, bones and all, to make fish steaks. She sprinkles them with garlic powder and black pepper and fries them in oil. When they are browned, she adds sliced hot peppers, tomatoes and water and boils until the sauce thickens, about 20 minutes. Fried red plantains are served on the side.

0bd466f6801b890920a53b257553cbea Photo of the Day

e989300b13451b2f5bf304de24951ed3 March 27, 1997Link.

… photography is a career of long hours, little pay, no stability, and generally a sacrifice of comfort and ease in the search for photos. If after hearing all that you still want to be in the field, you belong in it.

-Joshua Wolfe on the Digital Journalist

6dcb15dac2969c9651ff2ef26a923ae5 Hungry Caterpillars Spread Misery in West Africa

When you read this feature, you may notice that I write Martha lives a forty five minute trek from the main road. That would be a trek I did, with heavy equipment and kit, under the mid-day West African sun. Along with a TV stringer for Reuters, I crossed bridges that were just a few logs tied together, ate some bush meat, and then watched our host kill a rat with his bare hands by twisting its small weak neck: tomorrow’s lunch?

By Glenna Gordon

GBOLUMUE, Liberia, Feb 6 (Reuters) - Martha Kermel holds out rail-thin arms covered with a latticework of scratches from her encounter with a plague of caterpillars that has devastated crops and spread fear through this corner of West Africa.

“They scratched my arms when they moved,” said Kermel, a mother of four, telling how the small creatures poured down onto her from the tree branches overhead as she set out from her village to a rice farm cultivated by her community in Liberia.

That was two weeks ago. Now the millions of caterpillars which covered the road and nearby bushes have retreated into cocoons, or hatched already into moths ready to spawn a new generation of grubs here or further afield.

10b93c235240e6143459e7b70b3cc8fd Hungry Caterpillars Spread Misery in West Africa

The insects can travel up to 60 miles (100 km) a day, and have already crossed the border to Guinea, an agriculturally rich country and the source of many of Liberia’s food imports.

That has set alarm bells ringing in neighbouring Ivory Coast, the world’s top cocoa grower and an important producer of coffee, rubber, palm oil and other cash crops.

The creatures were first thought to be army worms, a moth caterpillar, but they were identified this week as the young of another kind of moth, the Achaea catocaloides, which are also known to damage cocoa and other tree crops.

For the time being, the moths are headed north, and experts in Ivory Coast said this week they should avoid Ivory Coast’s valuable cocoa belt, which produces about 40 percent of world supply.

But they remain a risk to Ivory Coast’s central borderlands, which produce around 100,000 tonnes of cocoa and 70,000 tonnes of robusta coffee a year.

THREAT

For Kermel, the threat is more immediate.

She and her family, subsistence farmers like most people in the area, live 10 miles (16 km) south of the border with Guinea and 45 minutes by foot from the nearest passable road.

When the bugs attacked, Kermel had nowhere to go, and worried about feeding her children.

She said the “kotin”, as locals call the pests, fouled the creek near her home with their faeces, turning the water black.

Every day since then, she and her children have had to walk several miles to the main road to gather water at a borehole.

The Liberian governent has said the caterpillars are threatening the food security of 350,000 people, and President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf declared a national state of emergency.

Jewel Howard Taylor, a senator who was married to Charles Taylor, a former president and warlord in Liberia’s devastating 1989-2003 civil war who is now on trial for war crimes, donated 150 bags of rice and tarpaulins, clothes and blankets.

That kind of help will be insignificant if the moths continue to spread and multiply.
8f57c0ec41c063e802f4f14d70eb56c8 Hungry Caterpillars Spread Misery in West Africa

The infestation may be linked to a long rainy season, cold weather at the start of the year, or climate change and deforestation forcing caterpillars to seek food elsewhere, scientists and Liberian ministry officials said this week.

“I think this is a seasonal threat. From our experience in Benin, the moth will disappear by early or mid-March,” Georg Goergen, an entomologist at the International Institute for Tropical Agriculture (IITA), told Reuters.

While the caterpillars feed on trees, adults belong to a group known as fruit-sucking moths for their penchant for piercing ripening fruit and sucking out the juice, often causing the fruit to rot and drop prematurely.

Spray teams, each member with a plastic tank of insecticide strapped to their back, have started work. But Jobson Momo, an agricultural programme officer in the town of Carey, said his team did not have enough pesticide, protective gear or vehicles.

The entire first wave of Liberia’s caterpillars has now turned into moths. Scientists at the Ministry of Agriculture fear they are are now reproducing and could cause secondary and tertiary waves of infestations that, if uncontained, may destabilise an already volatile region.

6dcb15dac2969c9651ff2ef26a923ae5 Hungry Caterpillars Spread Misery in West Africa

“WAKE-UP CALL”

“This is a wake-up call, a call that gives neighbouring countries adequate time to mount an early warning system to detect and manage this problem,” said Braima James, an IITA project manager.

Ivory Coast’s National Centre for Agronomic Research has sent experts to Liberia to find out more about the caterpillars and see if any are headed towards their border.

Guinea, which borders both countries and is in a chaotic state after a December military coup, says a string of villages near the Liberian border is already infested.

“The equipment we have means we can only spray up to a height of 6 metres (yards), whereas some trees are 30 metres high. We absolutely must have air support,” Sikoun Wague, spokesman for Guinea’s Agriculture Ministry, told Reuters.

“These insects suck the sap from trees and leave tonnes of waste in channels and water courses, which are then unusable for two weeks,” he said.

Across the border in Liberia, Kermel has, luckily, already harvested her rice crop. But while she and her relatives waited for the caterpillars to disperse, they should have been planting for the next season.

The delay could cause a weak yield next harvest.

John Kulah was less lucky. He had cropped his upland rice but lost all his swamp rice, which ripens later, to the bugs.

“They eat and eat and eat, so greedy,” he said angrily.

“We have to farm to live,” said Kulah, who has now slashed out a new field in the bush, well away from the dahoma trees which attract the caterpillars. With nine children to feed, he hopes the next wave of caterpillars doesn’t come.

“What are we supposed to do then?”

6f3dab24a987c8142e30b26a6c799d8f Hungry Caterpillars Spread Misery in West Africa

d4ffcfc0d79a7fc35171866d065b2883 Trading weapons for makeup brushes, but still no jobsAn IRIN story I worked on last week.

MONROVIA, 2 February 2009 (IRIN) – Tony Clarke traded two grenades for a set of combs, makeup brushes, nail varnish and a short course in cosmetology.

“They help me beautify myself,” said the 32-year-old who sports a carefully trimmed goatee and wears a flashy knock-off designer watch. “As a cosmetologist, you have to groom yourself before you can groom anyone else.”

Clarke, who fought in the country’s civil war, is set to graduate from his training in March. But given skyrocketing unemployment and poorly developed private industry in Liberia, he might end up like many other trained ex-combatants – unable to find a job.

Clarke was one of hundreds of thousands of Liberians, many of them children at the time, who fought in the war, which left over 330,000 displaced, tens of thousands of injured and an unknown number dead.

He is also one of 101,000 former fighters to take part in a UN-led disarmament, demobilisation, rehabilitation and reintegration (DDRR) process following the end of the war six years ago.

Through the DDRR scheme – funded by the governments of Norway, the US and the UK among others, and executed by the UN and NGOs – ex-combatants hand in their weapons in exchange for cash and in some cases vocational training in mechanics, carpentry, agriculture, cosmetology or other trade.

Clarke and his friends prefer to be called beneficiaries rather than ex-combatants according to Kpangbala Sengbe, a programme manager for the government-run National Commission for DDRR, who says the shift in terminology represents a positive attitude change.

No jobs

But for now it is not clear how far the benefits will go, as many trainees who participated in the programme still have no jobs. Liberia’s unemployment rate stands at 70 percent, according to Ministry of Labour statistics.

“The private sector was not developed so the people [who did vocational training] were not employed,” said an official from the UN Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) who preferred not to be named. “People need money yesterday.”

Clarke is looking forward to setting up his own beauty salon, but to afford to do so and support his family he would have to leave the capital Monrovia for somewhere where the cost of living is lower. In April – when the DDRR programme is set to shut down – he will lose the US$30 monthly allowance the UN paid him to help him cover transport and supply costs.

Agriculture overlooked

More jobs would have been created had training schemes emphasised agriculture, the national DDRR commission’s Sengbe said.

Just four percent of Liberia’s lowlands are currently irrigated, according to the Agriculture Minister Chris Toe, leaving the country highly dependent on imported food to get by. Liberians import 90 percent of their rice from Asia and the United States, making the country vulnerable to price fluctuations.

UNMIL offered agricultural training but – despite the fact that two-thirds of Liberians live rurally – only four percent of trainees chose to focus on agriculture, according to UNMIL.

Though a return to the land brings job opportunities, many ex-combatants are not interested.

Matthew Karr, 31, comes from Nimba County where his mother cultivates rice, but he does not plan to return. “I came here [to the capital] to hustle on my own. If I had a choice, I’d become an accountant.”

DDRR to finish

Despite the DDRR scheme’s flaws, many are worried about the consequences when it shuts down. Even with few jobs going, the UN’s US$30 monthly training allowance helps people get by, according to Clarke.

7cccf29fee184a90403c50f7b3fde0ed Trading weapons for makeup brushes, but still no jobsAn UNMIL official who preferred not to be named said other kinds of employment schemes such as the UN-funded and Liberian government-run emergency employment programme – which started in 2006 – have been more effective than UNMIL’s training.

This programme used labour-intensive methods to repair roads, dig ditches, and build up infrastructure destroyed by the war, employing 60,000 people for six weeks, and paying them with a combination of food and money.

Donors should look to these work-creation projects in the future, to try to stimulate the economy, build up infrastructure and give people jobs, Sengbe said.

There are lots of ways to get started as a photographer or journalist. I wrote about a few of them here, and I wrote about a portfolio review and some great advice from the lovely Jamie Rose.

I met Jamie and her colleague John Anderson when they were in Uganda running a Momenta workshop. I didn’t take the workshop, just helped them with some logistics. But I saw firsthand how a photographer could benefit from their format and instruction.

With fifteen students, and three instructors, everyone who participated got one-on-one feedback on an ongoing basis and a solid foundation of professional photo skills, as well as career guidance and an understanding of the options for working photographers.

They’re running another workshop in Uganda this spring – Project Uganda 2009: Photography as a Force of Change - and it’s definitely worth considering if you’re not quite sure how to take your passion for making images and run with it, or if you want to take your skills to a new level, or if you just really want to meet Jamie.

Here are a few photos from last year’s students. You too could make these kinds of images, so sign up soon, and tell them I said hello icon smile Workshops with some very, very tall instructors: Momenta .

808095a7c2f59ae08681689bf6aafdd2 Workshops with some very, very tall instructors: Momenta

A relative comforts a man dying of AIDS in rural Uganda. AIDS has reached epidemic levels in sub-Saharan Africa. (Photo by Christian Bobst/Momenta)
Please visit www.momentaworkshops.com to learn more.
All photographs are © 2008 Momenta Group LLC.

863452c02de21ae4be1d3ba65baf3e44 Workshops with some very, very tall instructors: Momenta

Bashil James, 17, an orphan learning motorcycle repair, works at Century Motorcycle Spares in Masaka on Saturday, October 25, 2008. Vocational training by nonprofit organizations like UWESO are the last hope of many orphans to learn a valuble skill to provide for them as they grow and have families. (Photo by T.J. Kirkpatrick/Momenta)
Please visit www.momentaworkshops.com to learn more.

All photographs are © 2008 Momenta Group LLC.

5d9923e02659c55309177529136c611b Workshops with some very, very tall instructors: Momenta

A young Ugandan family cooks a meal in their home outside of Kampala. Despite rich natural resources, Amost 40% of Uganda lives below the poverty line. (Photo by T.J. Kirkpatrick/Momenta)
Please visit www.momentaworkshops.com to learn more.
All photographs are © 2008 Momenta Group LLC.

a445ba5df47a1ed38e008b2bb4dbe5f7 Links and gratuitous foliage photo

I went to a press conference at the Ministry of Agriculture this morning where I learned this, and therefore details of my trip remain uncertain. My bags are packed, and for now I’m waiting at a Lebanese cafe in Sinkor enjoying AC and a good internet connection.

Crop pest not army worms, species unknown -Liberia
02 Feb 2009 11:27:52 GMT
Source: Reuters
MONROVIA, Feb 2 (Reuters) – Pests that have ravaged crops in Liberia, sparking a national emergency, and are threatening other countries in West Africa, are not army worms and remain unidentified, the ministry of agriculture said on Monday.

The creatures, first identified as the destructive “army worm” moth caterpillars, are threatening the food security of some 350,000 Liberians. Agricultural experts fear they could spread in a region that is home to top cocoa growers Ivory Coast and Ghana.

“They are not army worms, though we haven’t determined what they are,” Liberian Agriculture Minister Chris Toe told reporters on Monday. Toe said samples were being dispatched to the United Kingdom for further testing. (Reporting by Glenna Gordon; Editing by David Lewis)

Either Monday or Tuesday, I will go to either Bong or Nimba, or perhaps Lofa, to try and find some of those crazy army worms. It will be one of my first big upcountry trips in Liberia, so stay tuned.

I’m expecting very limited internet, so this blog will be quiet for a bit, but, in the meantime:

Around the web…

And some shameless self-promotion:

  • Vote for me in the Bloggies before the deadline (Feb 2).
  • Some of my photos will very soon be for sale as pretty greeting cards from Awava (check here for homepage, blog, facebook group and Foundation). Run by friend, money benefiting good people.
  • Bill who writes on the blog Common Sense and Whiskey sent me a few questions about my work a bit ago, and I just sent him the answers which he’ll post soon. Check back there.