Why Did Traoré Order Half-Moon Pits?
Inside Africa's Largest Food Forest Project<
answer did not come from aid. It came
from hands. The cracked hands of
farmers, the steadfast minds of
engineers, the fiery hearts of the
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youth, the brave steps of soldiers
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returning from the frontier. They did
not carry rifles to the fields. They
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carried shovels. And instead of bullets,
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they forged a weapon silent yet fierce,
the crescent-shaped pits. Across the
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barren land, tens of thousands of half
moons were dug like scars etched upon
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the desert's skin. They captured every
rare drop of rain, held on to every
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fragile seed of life. Each pit became an
oath. We will not bow. Young engineers
from Wagadugu returned to villages side
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by side with farming mothers, with
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veterans transforming dead land into
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zone of the world. International
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organizations are gradually forced to
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recognize this. The UNCCCD, United
Nations Convention to Combat
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Desertification report affirms if the
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land restoration model in Burkina Faso
is scaled up, the entire Sahel belt
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could become a global food basket,14:58
and challenging. President Ibrahim Trare
does not hide his indignation. No IMF,
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no great power will save us from hunger.
It is our own people who save each
other. That is not only a political
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declaration, but a moral oath affirming
national dignity. For in the 21st
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century, there is no humiliation greater
providing food not only for Africa but
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also for world markets. The numbers are
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no longer a dream. Every hectare
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no longer a dream. Every hectare
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restored in Burkina revives three
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neighboring hectares thanks to water
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infiltrating aquafers and ecosystems
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rebooting. Burkina has set a target to
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restore 1 million hectares by 2030,
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meaning the impact could reach 3 million
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hectares of land, an area equal to the
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entire nation of Belgium. At
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international conferences, Burkina's
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voice is beginning to rise, different
from another man's table. And the world
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is forced to listen. While Western news
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reports still try to frame the Sahel as
a crisis hot spot, satellite images
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expose another truth. Green patches
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spreading, replacing sand. While aid
agencies speak of chronic famine,
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Burkina's new green markets display
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maize, millet, beans, and fresh
Burkina's new green markets display
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maize, millet, beans, and
vegetables. Products grown by the same
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hands once thin with hunger. That
reflection raises a bitter question for
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the international community. Does the
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world have enough humility to learn from
a nation once called the poorest? Do
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industrial economies, the very ones that
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