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Together they can: In Palestinian village, a model of self-sufficiency

In the West Bank village of Farkha, residents are building on a centuries-old tradition of small-town cooperation – blended with modern volunteerism – to create their own model: social solidarity for self-sufficiency.

Just as in the old days, everyone here pitches in when a neighbor needs to patch a roof, a farmer is struggling to finish the harvest, or the girls’ school needs a coat of paint. But today all community works are highly organized. The coordination can be seen in the 230 home gardens that have popped up in recent years in Farkha so that everyone’s food needs are met.

Why We Wrote This

Growing food, distributing water, making home and municipal improvements: Residents of a West Bank village are blending a cooperative tradition with modern volunteerism to enhance their autonomy from Israel and the inefficient Palestinian Authority.

This ambitious initiative is the work of a new generation of political leaders who are merging a passion for community service with a reverence for a lost way of farming life in the West Bank that was once sustainable and self-reliant.

“Others may say volunteering will only take a bit of your time, but in Farkha that is not the case,” says the village’s youthful mayor, Mustafa Hammad. “In this village, volunteering means work, time, and effort. But at the end of the day there are real results, and everyone is stronger together.”

Next up for Farkha’s young visionaries: spreading their model to other Palestinian communities.

Pausing to reflect as she tends to sprouting tomato plants, Hanin Rizaqallah, a 40-something mother of two, says she never imagined she would become a farmer.

But standing in the 100-square-foot, plastic-canopied greenhouse behind her traditional stone-and-concrete home, she says she now feels a connection to her land, her village, and her “elders.”

“I never thought I would be farming like my grandparents, but having a home garden is not only economical, it is something that is ours,” she says, speaking over the moos of her neighbor’s cow from behind the fence.

Why We Wrote This

Growing food, distributing water, making home and municipal improvements: Residents of a West Bank village are blending a cooperative tradition with modern volunteerism to enhance their autonomy from Israel and the inefficient Palestinian Authority.

Last season she sold 11,000 pounds of molokhiya, a leafy green obtained from jute plants, supplying her village and several area markets with the Palestinian staple. And she is constantly studying village and market needs for the next season, with her dutiful husband, Maher, working alongside, under her watchful eye.

Part traditional farmer, part entrepreneur, in two short years Ms. Rizaqallah has become a pillar of her village community and a provider of food for dozens of households.

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