Gardens could provide a safe haven for Venezuelan women. Photo: UN News

Venezuela’s rural, remote, Indigenous communities have been particularly affected by COVID-19 and the country’s socio-economic crisis; community gardens help Wayúu women from Rio Negro to make ends meet and provide a haven from violence.

Venezuela has suffered a widespread decline in public services, such as electricity, domestic gas supplies, and public transportation in recent years.

This crisis has driven some members of the Indigenous communities on Venezuela’s western border with Colombia, including Río Negro, to make frequent border crossings to purchase basic goods, including food items. When their relative or partners leave on these essential trips, the women of the Wayúu Indigenous community have found themselves vulnerable to gender-based violence.

Community gardens could be an answer to the problems of self-sufficiency, and safety. A garden created by a local women’s network, Jieyúú Kojutsuu (“Women of Value”) is supporting local women and their families and helping them to meet their subsistence needs.

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There are currently twenty-six members of the community working together to grow corn, tomatoes, bell peppers, celery, black beans, cantaloupe, and other vegetables and fruits in Río Negro.

They include many of the Wayúu Indigenous community’s most vulnerable groups, including young people at risk of being recruited by armed groups, unemployed women at risk of gender-based violence, and elderly people who had resorted to begging and heavy work to survive.

“Can you imagine? There are more women than men working in the garden!” says Guillermina Torres, one of the members. “We are going to harvest our own food without having to depend on our husbands’ income. And the young people who used to hang around in the streets have also joined this project”.

“Traditionally, agriculture was one of the main livelihoods in the region. Elderly people have been able to integrate themselves and share ancestral knowledge with younger members of the community,” says Diego Moreno, a UN refugee agency (UNHCR) Protection Assistant in Maracaibo, who has been monitoring this initiative.

“Women who were most at risk of gender-based violence while their relatives or partners undertook back-and-forth trips to Colombia now have a safe space where they gather every day to grow food that will later benefit their families,” he adds.

Sustainable solutions

With limited financial resources, the Wayúu Indigenous community had to think of new innovative and sustainable ways to grow their crops. A positive side-effect has been a move towards sustainable agriculture, which is less harmful to the soil.

To support these efforts, UNHCR has donated agricultural tools, seeds, water tanks, and solar streetlights, helping to ensure that the community has a clean and sustainable source of energy and water irrigation.

In addition, the UN migration agency (IOM) has trained local families to make organic fertilizers and natural insect repellents, using ingredients—including animal waste—that are easily found in the community.

“We don’t have to spend money buying chemicals that can also affect our crops and the environment. Instead, we learned to make our own 100 percent natural fertilizers and repellents with ingredients we can find right here in our community,” says Ms. Torres.

“The replacement of chemical fertilizers with organic fertilizers and of agro-toxins with natural insecticides made of neem leaves, tobacco leaves, and vegetable ash, as well as the creation of seed banks, guarantees a sustainable and eco-efficient way of life, as well as a healthier diet for the families and the community as a whole,” explains Wolfgan Rangel, IOM’s Productive Projects Monitoring Officer in Maracaibo.

Hundreds of gardens supported

In total, more than 660 community garden projects have been supported in the states of Zulia, Táchira, and Barinas.

Both UNHCR and IOM have donated the necessary tools and resources to support communities through the development of sustainable small farming initiatives. In some of these communities, local markets have also been created to sell vegetables, helping generate alternative sources of income.

Given the remote location of the communities and the lack of public transportation, it is vital that the community garden projects continue to be scaled up. This way, more Indigenous families will be able to take part in these subsistence farming initiatives and stop relying on trips to neighboring countries to buy food. (UN News)