I started the project in Dausa farmers club in first of June and I begin to work in Biogas activities in Mandawar, in the beginning I knew just a little about biogas,” I remember from my first year of quimics class long time ago, my teacher told us about it and the scientist that first thought of that in the time end up in to being arrest cause the farmers that use it stop paying electricity and the government said that he was decreasing the taxes of government and it was a bad idea, after he was release and they gave him a prize cause it was a genial idea after all and biogas plantslegal to farmers and was install in a lot of zoos.”
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Podívejte se na 4 reporty od Janise z Lotyšska, který pracoval v Indii od října 2013 do března 2014. Green action, rarmer's club, community development, homeless projects.
After Iran, Indonesia is our second main destination. It holds the 4th largest population in the world and it’s rapidly changing into a modern industrial developed country. It has an overwhelmingly rich history and culture: over 300 ethnicities live on Indonesia’s 17.000 islands and more than 300 languages are spoken. From its paradise seas, to lush rainforests to hundreds of active volcanoes, Indonesia’s nature holds the 2nd largest biodiversity in the world.
Can the modern developing society, the traditional cultures and the pristine environments coexist in Indonesia? Our investigation aims to take us across the Indonesian life, from urban Jakarta to wild rainforests; it will give us an overview of Indonesian society as well as an inside knowledge to problems that affect not only Indonesia, but our entire world. Because of Indonesia’s sheer size – from Banda Aceh in Sumatra to Jayapura in East Papua it’s 13 hours by flight or 6000km on roads and boats – we decided to focus on a single island: Java. It is the most populated – 110 million out of Indonesia’s 240 million – the most developed and it holds the capital city Jakarta and the informal cultural capital Jogjakarta. So let’s dive into Indonesia’s heart. The idea of a Farmers’ Clubs is a nation wide mobilization of small scale farmers in a progressive production move towards prosperity.
The present global strategy for feeding the people has failed. Another strategy is a must for the majority of the people. Such a strategy must include the many millions of small scale farmer families in the third world. It must include these farmers as producers of own food, of food to the local market place and, with time, as producers to the national and global market. It must include these farmers as a dynamo of development of their own countries and for the world. The tiles were dirty and cold. The snow carried by the boots of the hurried passengers filthy melted in the diffuse layer on the whole length of the cold corridor. A guy with a floor cleaning machine was struggling without any chance to remove the dirty water from it. I searched some drier spots and seemingly untouched by steps of the travelers that were transiting the room.
On the 6th of December we arrived after a very long train ride from Ankara Turkey to Tabriz Iran. Our host, Asad and his friend BAmeen picked us up at the train station in less than 30 minutes. Soon after we arrived a bunch of their friends arrived at their place and we soon started talking about everything. Iranians are mostly curious about how their country is perceived in other parts of the world. We approached various topics, but the one that stayed with us during the entire travel was the Islamic political regime and its restrictions. There seems to be a huge gap between the younger population and the very intolerant political government. Iran, unlike other countries has a supreme leader who is the religious representative of Islam and who is also the most powerful person in the state. Therefore the President has limited power and the Islamic form of government dominates democracy.
Golden Cut Report
A Romanian writer said once that living is like driving a car, you always have to use the windshield, to look forward, and to progress, but sometimes you have to look through the mirrors, see what you’ve accomplished, what you can improve, and always share. This is what I will try to do now, look back a little bit, but suddenly my thoughts go to a place that not so long ago I used to call home. I remember reading the reports from previous DIs in Hornsjo, and being curious about their adventures, their experiences, their stories, and the stories of the people they’ve met. Mathare Slum- fighting with the poor
Mathare is one of the biggest slums in East Africa and the oldest in Kenya, counting officially around 70.000 inhabitants and still expanding, but in the community the rumors are that the population is around 500.000 living in around 25.000 households. Situated only 5 km from the center of Nairobi, a part of the world that nobody remembers, Mathare is bursting with dirt, poverty, overcrowd, misery, nevertheless life. This was my prejudice and my 1st impression of India when I arrived there in November 2011. Contrary to the ideas and impressions of other DIs who have been there before and shared the experience, I did not find India so loud, dirty and polluted. For me it was a strange feeling that there is no order and no rule, not in the traffic, not in terms of people or prices. J. I spent six months there, mostly in Rajasthan where together with 2 other DIs , joined the Green Action , Dausa .
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