Students at Dr P Dayananda Pai and Satish Pai Government First Grade College in Mangaluru were beaming as they ate their usual mid-day meal this week.
The meal was the result of a five-month endeavour, during which the students cultivated rice by themselves on a four-acre plot of land in Konaje on the outskirts of the city.
A cumulative effort involving over 200 students, teachers, local gram panchayat members and residents of Konaje saw a fallow plot of land turn into a thriving hub of activity.
The students, who are also National Service Scheme (NSS) volunteers, began cultivating in the plot on 15 August 15, 2017.
A six-acre plot of fallow land in Konaje was identified as the ideal place for the project. The land was lying fallow for years as efforts by the Kittel Church to grow crops there had failed. NSS coordinators Naveen Konaje, Jeffrey Rodrigues and Nagaveni coordinated the extensive operation starting 15 August.
“It was our way of contributing to the nation by saluting our farmers,” recalls Naveen Konaje, who also held conversations with local residents and gram panchayat members in his hometown to orchestrate the group effort.
While the students cultivated rice on the four-acre plot, the rest of the land was used for other plants and trees.
Students were initially apprehensive about getting their hands dirty in the field.
“I had never worked in the field before,” says Nikshita, a student and NSS volunteer who participated in the farming activity.
But, her initial apprehensions were dispelled when she took to the field and found that she enjoyed working there.
Nikshita, along with over 200 other NSS volunteers, set aside their Sundays to work in the fields, travelling the 17 km road down to Konaje on the outskirts of Mangaluru. The students took turns to tend to the fields in batches every Sunday.
“I went countless times. I don’t have a track of how many times. I planted seeds, sprayed the pesticide and finally helped in harvesting,” she says with a smile.
The students also went to over 250 homes in the area, spreading awareness about the ill-effects of plastic.
Narsu Gowda, a local resident of Konaje, came forward to provide the students with food on the days they were working in the fields.
The endeavor saw the students harvest 8 quintals of rice earlier this month.
But he is quick to point out that the project was never about feeding the students but instead about making students aware of the effort that goes behind growing crops.
“We don’t know if they will get a job in the future but if they know agriculture, at least they can grow crops in a small plot of land,” adds Hebbar.
(This article was published in arrangement with The News Minute)
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