Skip to main content

The female food heroes of Indonesia – part 5

 

HELP SAVE LIVES

Right now Oxfam is responding to emergencies around the world, including the recent earthquake and tsunami in Indonesia.

Donate now

Gotong Royong: the secret to a fast harvest

By Juan Martorana – blogging from Indonesia

So how does one female farmer harvest around 1,250sqm of rice in just two hours? “Gotong Royong”.

On the day of Ibu Par’s harvest — a Female Food Hero from Wareng Village south of Yogyakarta — both men and women worked side by side. The landscape was full of the traditional round peaked bamboo hats, but there was also the odd faded baseball cap and a lone canvas trilby. There was a pair of tracksuit pants, but many batik shirts and skirts. Bare feet were de rigour. The grasshoppers were cleared and backs were bent as rice was cut at its base, bundled, tied with bamboo strips and hoisted to a neighbour’s head to make the muddy journey out to the road and the waiting truck.

Women make up a large proportion of the workers, and when we return to Ibu Par’s house that night, we see women still hard at work under the verandah of the house opposite, separating the rice from the stalks well into the night.

Harvest time is an extremely busy one for farmers everywhere. But in a country like Indonesia where much of the work is done manually using simple scythes and other hand tools, the philosophy of Gotong Royong helps get things done. It involves farmers pooling their labour, moving alternatively through each other’s farms, both receiving the labour of others, but also giving their own to ensure a successful harvest of everyone’s crops. Women play a huge role in the farming sector of Wareng Village – but not everyone is “invited”.

The perempuan-perempuan of Wareng, or the women of Wareng village, do not all have the same opportunities. Hear the story of one “less prosperous” woman farmer next post.

Read part 1 | part 2 | part 3 | part 4 | >> part 6

Read more blogs

South Sudan: Shaima Ali, a refugee and mother of four who is among Oxfam cash assistant program participant sitted outside her home feeding her daughter Fahima in Renk, South Sudan. Photo: Herison Philip Osfaldo/Oxfam

The East Africa Food Crisis: Understanding the Causes, Impacts and Response

The East Africa food crisis is one of the most urgent and complex humanitarian challenges in the world today. Right now, more than 56 million people across the region are...

Read more
Mekko, Indonesia: Said (33) stands in front of his fishing boat. He now struggles to catch enough fish for his family's daily needs, due to climate change and the fish moving further and further out to sea. Oxfam acknowledges the support of the Australian Government through the Australian NGO Cooperation Program (ANCP). Photo: Vikram Sombu/Oxfam

What Is Climate Change? What You Can Do to Help

Climate change refers to long-term shifts in temperature, rainfall, wind and other elements of the Earth’s climate system. The climate has always changed over time. But what we’re seeing today...

Read more
Cambodia: Siphon is a community activist who was trained and coached by 3SPN to advocate for community issues with the local authorities. She is a leader in her community and a part of the local fisheries network. Photo: Patrick Moran/Oxfam

Siphon’s story

“My name is Siphon. From 2017, I worked as a volunteer in the community fishery management committee. I want to protect natural resources both in the water and on land…...

Read more