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Khasi people from Nongtraw, NESFAS, TIP awarded prestigious Hallbars Sustainability Publication Award 2021

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Shillong, Oct 1: Hallbars, a Sustainability Research Organisation, has awarded The Indigenous Partnership (TIP), NESFAS, and the Khasi People of Nongtraw with best 2021 Sustainability Publication Award for their contribution towards the award winning publication “Indigenous Peoples’ Food Systems: Insights on Sustainability and Resilience from the front line of climate Change”

The Indigenous Partnership (TIP), NESFAS, and the Khasi People of Nongtraw are among the 58 individuals,  organisations and communities awarded by Hallbars.

Speaking at the virtual award ceremony held on  September 30, Edouard Cointreau, President Hallbars, called the book as the book for the next 20 years. “The global food system will break down soon but indigenous systems have existed for centuries. This book is key for us because of the food systems crisis. It will be inducted to our ‘Hall of Fame,” he remarked, addressing all the participants from across the globe. He also congratulated the overall effort of the co-authors, contributors and communities who participated and contributed towards the population.

Pelle Agorelius, CEO of Hallbars, hosting the award ceremony at the Alfred Nobel Museum, Sweden, likened the award winning publication and other sustainability reports as seeds of knowledge that can be handed down as documents for the generations that are to come.

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Documentation of Jhum Cultivation in Nongtraw village

Among the many Indigenous Food Systems (IFS) that were documented, the shifting cultivation (jhum) practices in the Himalayan evergreen forest region of the Nongtraw village in East Khasi Hills constituted one of the chapters of the book.

The chapter documented the Jhum practice, fishing and gathering food systems of the Khasi people of Meghalaya. A major factor behind the resilience of the Khasi IFS is the strong local governance which has the confidence of the community. Entitling the ownership of land to women who have a profound respect and understanding of Mother Warth has played a huge role in the Khasi community.

Phrang Roy, who was one of the panellists in the event, shared, “While we must be proud of our systems, as Indigenous Peoples we must have the ability to acknowledge the help of non Inidgenous Peoples and organizations that gave us friends and supporters.”

“The Nongtraw community members, through their collaborative studies with NESFAS and FAO of the UN, have demonstrated that severe food insecurity is virtually non-existent in traditional food systems that have not been marginalized by cash crops like broom grass, and other unsustainable initiatives,” Phrang Roy said in his address to the local media following the award ceremony.

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