At
the end of October 2014, thirteen delegates from the Schumacher Center
for a New Economics traveled to Cuba to study its progress in developing
sustainable food systems. We
visited family farms in the Pinar del Rio Province, a large cooperative
farm in the Alamar district on the outskirts of Havana, and the gardens
of an ecological village in the Sierra del Rosario mountains, receiving
a warm welcome everywhere we went. We met with agricultural agencies
and their research counterparts. We even received an unexpected request
for a meeting with the Foreign Ministry. We ate well; listened to
exceptional music in the troubadour tradition; danced late into the
night; and were amazed by the range and sophistication of Cuban
contemporary art. We fell in love with the landscape of the countryside
and the architecture of Havana. All of which gave us a chance
to witness an economy and culture in transition.
Greg
Watson, then the Massachusetts Commissioner of Agriculture and now
Director of Policy and Systems Design for the Schumacher Center, was
part of the delegation. Below are excerpts from his report on lessons
learned from the trip and his suggestions for the Schumacher Center's
continued exchange with the people of Cuba:
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