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Survival
recipe book
IRIN
News
October
29, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=81185
BULAWAYO, 29 October
2008 (IRIN) - Rural Zimbabweans have always turned to an emergency
larder of wild foods to see them through hard times, but in this
year of shortages and dizzying prices for all basic foodstuffs,
the fruits and roots foraged from the bush are keeping many alive.
In the southern province
of Matabeleland North, villagers are relying on a variety of wild
fruits, tubers and okra-like vegetables, which become more abundant
as the rainy season progresses.
"Everyday we eat
the wild fruit that are available in the bush, but the fruits are
not good to eat every day. And school children are no longer going
to school but spend the whole day looking for the wild fruits,"
Samuel Ndlovu, from Dakamela village, told IRIN.
The World Food Programme
(WFP) said in a recent statement: "A large number of farmers
harvested little - if anything - this year, and have
now exhausted their meagre stocks. Many hungry families are reportedly
living on one meal a day, exchanging precious livestock for buckets
of maize or eating wild foods such as baobab and amarula."
About 28 percent of children under five are already chronically
malnourished.
Esnath Nyoni, in the
Lupane area of Matabeleland North, said her family had last eaten
a decent meal in the previous week. They are now surviving on a
bland porridge made from ground roots of the cassava tree, into
which she squeezes the sweet juice of the brown plumb-sized cork
fruit for flavour.
Households that still
have maize-meal can stretch it by mixing it with the ground cassava
tree roots. "The porridge doesn't taste good, but it gives
people energy throughout the day when there is no food available;
and for families with livestock, they then mix the meal with sour
or fresh milk," said Nyoni.
Dried bean leaves
(umfushwa in the Ndebele language) were a useful emergency
ration when boiled, Nyoni said. "The advantage with dried umfushwa
is that you can keep it for a long time from the last harvest, and
it will still be fine until the next harvest, and it has a high
nutritional value compared to some of the foods that people eat
during droughts."
An alternative
cookbook
The survivor's
cookbook also includes, in the Shona language, the potato-like madhumbe
and mufarinya, and several other edible and reputedly medicinal
tubers, a range of berries, and wild vegetables such as derere
- a type of okra - and nyeve, a bitter-tasting plant that
can be boiled in a soup or eaten dried.
Care needs to be taken
when foraging for wild foods: there have already been reported cases
of accidental poisoning due to people picking the wrong plants,
or preparing them incorrectly.
"This is now the
time when the elderly, who have survived in previous droughts, play
a crucial role, as the young people have no idea which trees have
edible roots and which ones do not," said Themba Dlomo, another
Lupane area villager.
A lack of inputs -
seeds and fertiliser - drastically cut last season's harvest.
The UN estimates that more than five million Zimbabweans - nearly
half the population - will require emergency food assistance in
the first quarter of 2009.
The hardship is exacerbated
by an inflation rate of 231 million percent, which has pushed even
price-controlled maize - in theory available from the state-run
Grain Marketing Board (GMB) - way beyond the reach of rural Zimbabweans.
Villagers in Lupane alleged
that maize delivered to the local GMB depot was finding its way
onto the parallel market. "The maize arrives on a weekly basis
but we do not get any, as it is transported to as far as Victoria
Falls [on the border with Zambia], where it is sold in foreign currency,
and we are left to scavenge for wild fruits with the wild animals,"
said Laiza Ncube.
For most Zimbabweans,
eating wild plant foods is an indication of crisis, but since last
year the University of Zimbabwe has tried to promote consumption
as a sensible food security option.
"The nutritional
properties and traditional knowledge of wild foods have been dismissed
as 'old wives tales' or 'poor man's food'. Little is known about
their health and nutritional benefits," Dr Maud Muchuweti of
the Department of Biochemistry has maintained.
"We want to create
more awareness of the value of indigenous wild plant foods and promote
their effective utilisation."
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