Honestly, this looks like one of the few projects that have clearly defined goals and processes for how to get there while remaining sustainable for local people to continue without heavy outside funding. To all working on this, great job!
@Mansikkacake9 ай бұрын
This is the best video I watched this year so far. so many criminals, stupid videos all over and info like this one restores the faith in humanity for sure.
@hotspot15649 ай бұрын
yes but whats very important is that for the rainforests they rely on the fertilization from the Sahara. If you were to turn the sahara green or a bit of it. its gonna have an effect on that.
@hacep1609 ай бұрын
@@hotspot1564 could you elaborate a bit more? Never heard this thing
@terminallyonline52969 ай бұрын
@@hotspot1564 True, but the efforts to create this great green wall are to push back against the 10% of growth (1% a decade) that the Sahara has had over the past century. The rainforests' fertilization did just fine in the 19th century with the Sahara being 10% less.
@sleepinonmezzz53749 ай бұрын
+1 ! I've seen videos concluding the great green wall as a failure of a project, as in many places there just has not been great organization or sustained focus because of other issues occurring. But from this I feel like success is possible
@RudeBoy777779 ай бұрын
This should be on the major news channels to show that despite all the destruction in the world, there is a lot of positive stuff happening. Thank you to everybody working in these projects!
@Rustbolt22229 ай бұрын
Wouldn’t make them money
@SadBoysCollectiveCirca969 ай бұрын
the earth is in a greening period right now
@graham5819 ай бұрын
Unfortunately most news outlets are only interested in scandals, what some 'celebrity' is up to or some disaster/tragedy. Good news stories are not of interest to them.
@dancooper60029 ай бұрын
The optics on this are bad
@B-52H9 ай бұрын
if it doesnt bleed it doesnt read
@WorldFoodProgramme9 ай бұрын
Thank you so much, Andrew, for joining our team in Senegal and highlighting WFP's crucial work that is supporting Sahel communities to restore the landscapes that sustain them, reduce humanitarian needs, create jobs, and make the desert green again. 💚 We look forward to hosting you again soon!
@ShiratoriIsOffline9 ай бұрын
hi
@ShiratoriIsOffline9 ай бұрын
love yall
@tomjr.9 ай бұрын
of all the UN agencies, you the realest.
@diekritischestimme9 ай бұрын
You guys from UN are creepying me out. Money swamps! All big organizations are corrupt machines in the hands of the powerful. Tell me why the EU and other partner organizations even make it harder for private people to grow their own veggies, when they want to do permaculture themselves, which works best on small scale projects. You do some of these PR things on the large scale, but for us normal permaculture enthusiasts, everything gets worse and worse. In the end I prefer NO big organizations "rescuing" our planet, power to the people, not the big money swamps!
@SoloLevellor9 ай бұрын
The only UN department that is doing some actual work, good job
@nickzgreat75854 ай бұрын
THIS is how you help africa. Not blindly throwing money or fighting wars against everyone or spontaneously creating advanced institutions that you expect to sustain. Build things from the ground up. LOCAL AGRICULTURE not food shipments. Social coheasion can be created by working together, anyone who has been part of a productive team can agree with that. I have loved people I would've never otherwise interacted with thanks to us just working on something together. We dont agree on everything, we dont have too much in common, our backgrounds are different. But if either of us asked the other for help now, even when the work is over, you can bet the whole group will show up in solidarity, with love in their hearts. That is the power of society. No greed, no ego, not even thinking of our individual gain. Simply the will to advance civilization and live right.
@Stan-jq8jr3 ай бұрын
You think just by building it you will help africa? Nope.. you will have to build it, pay for it, maintain and fix it, harvest it and so on. You still don't get that people over there are nearly useless in terms of developing ANYTHING. Even when they move to Europe or USA, most of them are still end up so useless that they go on path of crime.
@ciandoyle33153 ай бұрын
except nearly all saharan african countries have refused to even upkeep the program and so its already failing and not to mention their outright refusal to move away from pastoral intensive farming that caused all of this in the first place
@S0RNG2 ай бұрын
@@ciandoyle3315 Hey, it's a start! Let's try and stay positive!
@asonofharoldgodwinАй бұрын
And Labour throw 11 Billion at an open wound while Pensioners freeze !!!
@DaBaSoftwareАй бұрын
@S0RNG not everyone is gifted the blessing of staying positive in the face of political reality. Geopolitical cooperation still eludes humanity in 2024 and there are countries south of the Sahara who have no interest in participating on the global stage. Yes, this project is an amazing start and it is indeed good to find that silver lining, but let's not be so hasty to be enveloped by the hype and excitement of this wave of news. I am hopeful, but at this moment in time, only cautiously so. When thinking of what would be required for all the countries who sit along the great green wall, I see centuries of pain and division that will absolutely need to be reconciled with if we are ever to see this beautiful path to redemption come to its full fruition. To blanket my last wall of text, i would like to share with you my excitement and positivity about the garbage cleanup project that has slowly been scaling up. Every few months that pass, i see the project has received another greenlight. Like the great green wall, i too, hope that the global community can find the humanity, compassion, and serenity to see this through to completion. Until then, i wait and pray
@laurawoodall339 ай бұрын
I absolutely love that this project solves a problem for a people, but still puts the solution into the hands of the population that needs the help. This is creating a livelihood and agency for those individuals that need it most. The biggest problem with many non-profit organizations (NPOs) is that they come in a just hand out resources. Handing out resources is absolutely fine in an emergency, but it is not sustainable. Handing a long-term solution in the DIRECT hands of those affected is a way to build back stability and autonomy for a people. This project even goes a step forward and helps humanity as a whole from an environmental standpoint. Bravo!
@DaneInTheUS9 ай бұрын
I agree with every word you said
@cristrob9 ай бұрын
😊sim, ensina a pescar para pegar o peixe
@elliottlung27299 ай бұрын
Give a man a fish, you feed him for a day. You teach him to fish, you feed him for a lifetime. You teach him and his whole village how to responsibly fish and how to give back to the earth instead of taking from it. And you feed them all for generations to come.
@charlesdao40009 ай бұрын
this is an amazing paragraph for my English Class too, Thank you All!
@Microphunktv-jb3kj9 ай бұрын
"un is holding it back|" because deserts are part of the ecosystem... wtf u think will happen if sahara desert dissapears and becomes green, where does the desert move? .... dont people understand geology and biology anymore ? good luck with the natural disaster waves europe/russia
@vivalaleta9 ай бұрын
Outstanding! Permaculture heals the land and our hearts.
@pattibrown18099 ай бұрын
If we heal the soil, we heal the planet!😊
@vivalaleta9 ай бұрын
@Ni-dk7ni Gabe Brown is Patti's uncle. The times are achanging.
@will0ughby9 ай бұрын
@Ni-dk7ni ...have you ever met a U.S. farmer? Some of the most educated guys I've ever met.
@prophecyrat29659 ай бұрын
@@will0ughbyyet they still cant even devote an acre to Permacultre because Corporations own it.
@vivalaleta9 ай бұрын
@@prophecyrat2965 Make that shit illegal.
@NafaratMiyaMiya8 ай бұрын
The fact that we can restore such degraded line is a fantastic effort, well done to all involved.
@Kurry347 ай бұрын
Those involved.. which ofc do not include African Americans.
@Dubdubdubdubdub7 ай бұрын
@@Kurry34 just appreciate that the people are getting food?
@Moonlight123-z8m7 ай бұрын
I know right! We nowadaya tend to get so pessimistic about future.
@Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman7 ай бұрын
@@Moonlight123-z8m let's not pretend their isn't a reason for that
@AwesomeHairo7 ай бұрын
You misused a comma.
@thefarmlifechannels2 ай бұрын
Truly, this is one of the rare projects where the objectives are clearly laid out, and there’s a well-thought-out path to reach them, all while empowering local communities to sustain it independently of significant outside funding. Hats off to everyone involved-excellent work!
@gaskofromEU9 ай бұрын
Projects like this one really do repair the world - ecologically, socially and economically as well. Thanks for your inspiring work Andrew!
@PyromancerRift9 ай бұрын
Molding nature to human's will is not repairing the world. This is what leftist lunatics tell us all day long. But when it suits them and it looks green, it become good.
@sancte39829 ай бұрын
i know it sounds crazy, but it would actually hurt us in the long run if all of the deserts got overgrown like this
@SadBoysCollectiveCirca969 ай бұрын
the world is already repairing itself. we're in a massive greening period.
@sdwqbvlwdslbvlbwflbunlwbf9 ай бұрын
@@sancte3982 If people who don't eat enough eat until their belly explode, it'll be really bad. Do you feel like telling every hungry person that they could die if they eat that much? I don't get what's your point?..
@sancte39829 ай бұрын
@@sdwqbvlwdslbvlbwflbunlwbf i dont get yours either? I agree it will be really bad if people ate so much their bellies explode, but i did not talk about food. Deserts play a vital role in the global climate system. They contribute to the regulation of atmospheric circulation, they can influence weather patterns. Overgrowth could potentially alter these patterns, impacting not only the local climate but also having broader regional and global effects.
@kittimcconnell26339 ай бұрын
The river should become cleaner too, less silting, as this Great Green Wall is built! Congratulations to all of the people who participate in building it.
@HameedMalik19 ай бұрын
Very true, besides cleaner river, it will improve soil moisture and in the longer run ground aquifer too
@forbaldo19 ай бұрын
and less water because it's been diverted by humans
@mrsnayarlhats42429 ай бұрын
Well the silt kind of give those plants some nutrients
@clamhammer24639 ай бұрын
@@mrsnayarlhats4242 There is very little to no nutrients in sandy silt. Possibly some salts and nitrogen which is good for fruiting plants but that's about it.
@Exquailibur9 ай бұрын
@@forbaldo1 Diverting water this way doesnt reduce the amount of water, its just slows the flow. If the water takes the shortest path to the sea it helps no one and nothing but the river swells and floods. The slowing of water through making pits just allows the water to sink in the ground and stay longer instead of drying out or flowing to the sea. It does not change the amount of water but increases how much of it can be used by humans and the wildlife, wildlife doesnt necessarily do well in farmland but it does even worse in a wasteland
@cexeodus9 ай бұрын
Man this kind of turnaround is universally inspiring. How cool is it that its even possible to bring life back to the ground in a place so dead and dry. That river is a gift
@slevinchannel75899 ай бұрын
!! Author here: The Green-Wall, could it always have been done, no matter the Time, no matter the Era? Does it make sense for my Timetraveling Protagonist to go around and tell people to plant Trees exc essively on the Border to Deserts?
@crix_h3eadshotgg9929 ай бұрын
@@slevinchannel7589yup. As long as you have the knowledge.
@ZennExile9 ай бұрын
They didn't bring life back to the ground, they stuck life on top of it and are artificially maintaining it with manure from farmed animals. Animals that were fed food from somewhere else. They have done nothing at all to rehabilitate the most important part of this ecosystem, and have no means to pay the life tab. Life costs Life. You can't start from nothing. You have to bring the soil back to life so it can digest organic waste. And that thriving soil is what needs to form the foundation of any Life you want to sustain above it. What they are literally doing is digesting remote life, and using that digested pulp to fuel an unsustainable agricultural model that has very nearly destroyed all terrestrial life on Earth. Everything is dead because we chopped it all up to create artificial ecosystems that support vast herds of city-bound human livestock. Life costs Life. We've only managed to open a tab and rack up a massive environmental bill. It has to be paid back. In full.
@danielmanly47939 ай бұрын
Parts of the Sahara were once flooded/green and turned into desert without human intervention. Surely this will happen again and again all over Earth regardless of our effort.
@tigerninja98439 ай бұрын
@@slevinchannel7589 if not exactly how presented here, probably. Like they mentioned, a lot of these agricultural practices are indigenous practices that have been around for hundreds of years in some form or another
@edmilsonaraujo47163 ай бұрын
9:15 I was recognizing all this explanation and examples (that the guy started in 8:38), because here in Brazil, they explain this whole process and how it is done/origin/advantages we learn at school when we are still children; I never thought that one day this would be applied on a large scale in Africa. What an incredible thing. Great content, congratulations.
@markrowland13665 ай бұрын
Forty years being developed in Australia, permaculture, is no longer a lie. It can work and is working all over the world.vwe don't care that this is not acknowledged. That doesn't hurt us. That it is working is so very important. Starving villagers are being lifted from poverty and the weather is changed so rains might further progress this success. Love the people who teach these skills.
@blushingralseiuwu22225 ай бұрын
I always forgot that only like 10% of Australia is habitable, you guys actually have similar climate.
@matthewburke30135 ай бұрын
What is Australia’s role in this?
@blushingralseiuwu22225 ай бұрын
@@matthewburke3013 they're the one who researched on how to do the method to have greenery in that kind of area.
@Christoff0705 ай бұрын
You make this project all sound so rosy and perfect. It is FAR from it.
@darkmantlestudios5 ай бұрын
@@Christoff070 elaborate
@orchidpanda22539 ай бұрын
Rooting for this project to succeed in every way! The very definition of sustainability -- not just a buzz word. Thanks for the vid and the work.
@slavb0i6469 ай бұрын
@@dang3304 western countries do not have more efficient and scalable ways to retain water(otherwise water would be free everywhere) , we simply just rely on the vast amount of rain, green landscape and expensive irrigation to get the job done.
@NothingIsKnown009 ай бұрын
"Rooting for"... well played, sir.
@slavb0i6469 ай бұрын
@@ruska9773 live here duh
@slavb0i6469 ай бұрын
@@damien7157 they would have all the resources in the world if the silly little politicians wouldn't corrupt their country to the fullest
@JustinS069 ай бұрын
@@dang3304 I think they chose this method because it's really cheap (when it comes to material costs). For so much land to be restored, cost is usually a very important factor. Sure, there might be more efficient ways but I doubt they're just as cost effective.
@kloqueman3 ай бұрын
Fascinating! Rome wasn't built in a day and I wish these hard workers every success. I will look for more news on this project in the future. Many thanks for a great video.
@zemasterbenb9 ай бұрын
This is not only healing the planet, but also give jobs and foods for people and help economic development of the area . This project is truly amazing and a light of hope in a darkness world. Congrats to all people who contributing with the Great Green Wall !
@changen41259 ай бұрын
healing the planet? lmao. The Sahara has been in a rainforest/desert cycle for millions of years before humans even existed.
@beegees219 ай бұрын
What exactly heals the planet, now?
@zemasterbenb9 ай бұрын
What do you mean with your question, i don't understand ? @@beegees21
@Qfren029 ай бұрын
The Sahara desert has been growing for years@@beegees21
@Knight_Eon9 ай бұрын
@@beegees21plants absorb CO2
@lilyswan9 ай бұрын
I just watched this all the way through before I realized the narrator is my friend who helped me set up a grey water system at my house. Amazing work Andy! And WFO and the workers. What a green blessing!
@amillison9 ай бұрын
Hi Lily. You will always have a place in our hearts. My daughter Myana went to sleep with your music for YEARS!
@lilyswan9 ай бұрын
@@amillison awww, I love hearing that! So overjoyed to see your work being received in the world. You taught me so much about how to look for green belts for water, for growth around edges where different kinds of land meet--whole new perception. The woman who bought Maggie's Farm was from China, and one of her few English words at the time was permaculture. She could appreciate what you helped me create. Take care my friend. Big hugs across the waters.
@ririlub9 ай бұрын
Wholesome
@capvux9 ай бұрын
@@amillisonjust dont plant the whole desert or amazon goes
@NoFailer9 ай бұрын
@@capvux The Amazon Rainforest is in South America not in Africa....
@rebirthresurrection5 ай бұрын
Whoever designed and planned this should be awarded a lot. Great work for the whoever joined this project.
@boston_octopus_4424 ай бұрын
7:18 The individual water-containing half circles "is the indigenous knowledge of the Sahel people which had been forgotten over time." There are other comments further down where Yacouba Sawadogo is mentioned for his leadership and contributions to Sahel traditional restoration. 9:14 Syntropic agriculture (the strips of land in between the line of half-circles) was developed in Brazil based on "global, indigenous knowledge." 😃
@calvinhalvin607423 күн бұрын
I'm so infatuated with the existence of this project, stuff like this really makes it feel like we can tackle any problem in the world as people
@glife84789 ай бұрын
Some countries think that the more tall buildings means success but here you are the real thing bringing land to life all the best.
@Jcococola8 ай бұрын
Which countries are those? The ones teaching Africans how to preserve their own land 😂
@MikeBrin968 ай бұрын
@@Jcococola yeah some people don't think further than vague abstract statements.
@nednednerb8 ай бұрын
@@Jcococola that wasn't the point..... - I actually watched the video and heard Black Africans talking about their own projects and work in their land. Let us return all the land to indigenous land holders and land protectors. The conventional drought is poisonous and restrictive to more freedom than all alternatives.
@TinyT0n8 ай бұрын
also in u.s (ppl think its best country) they say you need pesticide so your crops can survive and would be healthy. :D
@vervetech93958 ай бұрын
@@JcococolaTeaching? This is the UN, it's not about a specific country and his point was that doing the impossible by bringing land to life is a great feat regardless of who did it. Don't get triggered like a child
@853massey7 ай бұрын
Bringing back life to the land is remarkable, but bringing back hope to the people is indescribable. Absolutely outstanding, thanks for sharing this.
@johanbolier6 ай бұрын
This is good, but the earth is greening because of the high CO2 plants grow less water, while it is raining more because of higher temperatures. Growing plants has never been easier
@sandrajones16096 ай бұрын
True True FABULOUS NEWS ✌️
@gilius5 ай бұрын
Bravo!!! Very well said!!
@milanpavlak867Ай бұрын
LEN ABY IM TO AJ VYDRZALO ROKY NIE LEN JEDEN ROK A DOST
@Armageddon2k9 ай бұрын
this is the best news Ive heard in a long long time. hopefully this will make the region more hospitable for erevyone living there.
@ZennExile9 ай бұрын
it's just a marketing gimmick unless they solve the "sustainability" problem by rehabilitating the Rhizosphere and establishing an ecosystem that can fully digest organic inputs. The vast bulk of living biomass in a terrestrial ecosystem lies not above the soil, but up to around a ~meter below it. This video shows absolutely nothing about the fertilizer source or the plan to replace the nutrients being extracted by agriculture. If they are using agro chemical solutions or digesting a foreign living ecosystem in order to feed this green wall it's just shifting the harm somewhere else. This green wall has to function as a complete ecosystem, or it will fail.
@KAVANKARIAPPA9 ай бұрын
@@ZennExile isn't this a start? How do we go to the sustainability without starting
@ZennExile9 ай бұрын
@@KAVANKARIAPPA if you want to build a skyscraper where do you start? Above the ground or below it? What do you think would happen if you started from the top, or the middle, instead? This same reality applies to sustainable ecosystems. The foundation of them must be established in order for the skyscraper we see above ground to remain standing. The foundation of all terrestrial ecosystems is the digestive gut found in the top ~meter below the surface called the Rhizosphere. That gut has to be continuously digesting as much life as it sustains. That's Life's bargain. Life costs life and the entire tab has to be paid.
@KAVANKARIAPPA9 ай бұрын
@@ZennExileI'm sure they didn't do all this without knowing the basic stuff. How do you think we improved our knowledge from generation that skyscraper needs a strong foundation. Somebody started it and failed in construction. Let them do the trial and error. They might fail but they will learn a new thing or two.
@ZennExile9 ай бұрын
@@KAVANKARIAPPA you being sure is as absolutely meaningless as this entire project will be if they don't get it right the first time. And the most advanced players in the agricultural game have been getting it so wrong, for so long, it's causing a rapid rise in atmospheric carbon and accelerating the planet toward what's shaping up to be a mass extinction event as bad as any ever recorded. How the Rhizosphere works has been largely ignored in favor of replacing it with artificial fertilization, which in turn further poisoned the land. Industrial Agriculture itself is almost entirely functioning as the technological replacement for everything the Rhizosphere is supposed to be doing because the Rhizosphere has not been well understood until very recently, within the last decade. But that's not sustainable, as every environmental expert on the planet fully agrees. The Rhizosphere is the majority bulk of active terrestrial life, and there's a cost to every calorie of life extracted from that system. It's another entire calorie of life. Life costs life. All the life you take has to be replaced. Otherwise that ecosystem is dying. Even if you can make it look very healthy and vibrant on the surface. I miss Robin as much as anyone else, but I sure wish he'd have skipped that Fern Gully movie. It is causing a very lasting blind spot in the general understanding of living ecosystems by putting vastly more emphasis than it should on trees.
@adebabaytsegaw3686Ай бұрын
Really a true work gives mental rest for worker himself and the community he serves for. So please keep it up such constructive work in every agriculture projects that you involve in. What a good chance that participate in such fantastic job!!! ???
@Autonomous_Don5 ай бұрын
I remember hearing they had started planting trees along the border like 10-12 years ago. Glad to see they kept going
@outinthesticks10355 ай бұрын
I have been following it for years . Something that is sustainable without a constant infusion of cash is the only hope for this land and people. I have seen other projects that fail as soon as the money dries up , but this one , where local people who are using it , are able to start and continue on their own has future
@chouinardfrancais3 ай бұрын
i did a school PowerPoint presentation about it lol, happy to see its working :D
@abbas-aliibnmohammadal-nam9293 ай бұрын
@@outinthesticks1035 because then you cut some funding people get to fu cking work!!! It was nice sitting around on yo ass having sh t for granted. They finally learn how to take care of themselves
@Lunapiena903 ай бұрын
So fascinating! I love their work! Gives me so much hope in humanity.💕
@nashvegaspimp2 ай бұрын
The UN ✊🏼🍆💦😓 F the UN
@leedza9 ай бұрын
I would like to acknowledge pioneers like Yacouba Sawadogo. The greening of the Sahel and the techniques used are a huge part of his legacy. For anyone who hasn't seen it the documentary "The man who stopped the dessert" is a fascinating story of Yacouba's work and I learnt loads.
@kittimcconnell26339 ай бұрын
Thank you, I will look for that documentary
@mustaqimalfarabi80829 ай бұрын
Yes it was masterpice that time event scientist doesnt dare to green the desert
@truuee90169 ай бұрын
I was literally about to mention him He started the half moon planting style that saves water.
@brainites9 ай бұрын
Thanks for this information. I knew only about Tony Rinaudo.
@Drskopf9 ай бұрын
Yacouba also called his technique the Zill (can't remember how to spell it)Technique which is an ancient practice, besides the half moon, he also used the trenches with rocks to capture running water in flat places as well as using termites for rain water capture as well . There's another man in Zimbabwe who also developed other rain water techniques, he was fired from a railroad company and was given some depleted devoid of life piece of land which he transformed into vast and lush permaculture place.
@TheodoreManthovani9 ай бұрын
Videos like this keeps my faith in humanity restored. Thank you, may the green wall be a success for future generations.
@ahoj44809 ай бұрын
Actually opposite, the poorest, least developed country can do this, but "modern world" cant do even bare minumum
@slevinchannel75899 ай бұрын
I am author. I also want my protagonist to specifically improve the financial situation of the kingdom he lands in but Farming, Inflation-Reduction and all of the Economcy doesnt seem to have as simple rules as as 'House burns? Use Water!'
@johannesbergcrantz9 ай бұрын
Less catastrophizing, more planting seeds :)
@albertosaturnino52694 ай бұрын
❤/Thank you thank you really! I was studying apiculture in Harare Zimbabwe in 1992, and they wanted to introduce me to conservation. Then I begin to read about permaculture in Mahogany Magazine, so then I found a book of permaculture in a library belonging people to people organization in Chimoio Mozambique. Yet now your teaching are so interesting.
@TheDentrassi8 ай бұрын
As someone with an archaeology background this is something I love to see. Using pre-industrial and indigenous and even ancient. almost forgotten techniques that complement nature to rejuvenate a landscape without hurting it further.
@thaDjMauz7 ай бұрын
There are so many problems with global conceptions of development, with relying on new technologies, with politics and finances. Indeed sometimes the solution is something that has been there for a long time already. And sometimes it just needs some rebranding (think of intercropping and food forests as solutions to the problems of monoculture for instance).
@maxiurueta49177 ай бұрын
❤
@SonicPhonic7 ай бұрын
@@thaDjMauz Nitrogen fertilizers, which flow down the Mississippi and end up in the Gulf of Mexico, have destroyed most of the coral reefs north of Cuba. 50% of Earth's oxygen comes from coral reefs. Many monocropping farms are losing soil and are becoming deserts. The only ones succeeding are the huge, international distributors.
@Charles374007 ай бұрын
I actually want to get into archeology, still just an undergraduate. Any tips? Is it as easy as walking up to a dig site and asking for a job moving dirt and learning the rest over time?
@mikeyfreeman57767 ай бұрын
@@Charles37400they don’t let you in until you find at least 3 dinosaurs
@ane-louisestampe79399 ай бұрын
Watched it with my morning coffee, and got over whelmed with joy and HOPE. In all the sad and bad news, this injection of HOPE for us all, made my day. In Scandinavia we know, that when we all work together, we CAN make miracles. Go Senegal! Keep proving us right. Peace and love from Denmark
@mercesletifer529 ай бұрын
Stop drinking coffee if u respect and love life
@Tesoro19969 ай бұрын
@@mercesletifer52 lol, shut up. What's next? Stop breathing and leave more oxygen for other life forms?
@ane-louisestampe79399 ай бұрын
@@mercesletifer52 I'm Scandinavian, Dear. Someone in my nearest surroundings might die, if I don't get my Nicaraguan, Organic, Fair Trade coffee FIRST thing in the morning. - Or I'd die from withdrawal symptoms before Noon.
@barbs88519 ай бұрын
@@mercesletifer52 How is this even related?
@ane-louisestampe79399 ай бұрын
@@RtaincCo 😱😡😩 Try that today - and you'll see an insurection that makes Jan.6 look like fika 🤣🤣 Peace and love
@fredgooner58 ай бұрын
So good to see what I work on in Kenya being featured in this video. Working on restoring degraded soils and bringing back lost forest cover. It's about building resilience and producing nutrient dense foods.
@FelipeMatthes8 ай бұрын
Amazing work you doing there 🙏
@Jasmine161248 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/bqu1ZJaenrt5qtksi=0pjG_nkkyEMn5ZGu. GREAT TIP DRILL WATER WELL ONLY 200 DOLLARS
@Stay_Away_from_the_Voodoo8 ай бұрын
so cool
@Бушукскийсговор8 ай бұрын
Вы молодцы, продолжайте в том же духе!
@heem66198 ай бұрын
Well done mate, good luck for the future.
@f-86zoomer374 ай бұрын
Truly one of the few great things a UN program is doing, and why is this news not everywhere? We need more things like this to inspire people around the world to make their own lives and land better.
@tarajoyce35986 ай бұрын
This is one of the only encouraging things I ever see. Thank you Africa for this bright spot.
@user-fh2gt2po8r5 ай бұрын
Bro this vid literally warmed my heart so much bc of how much green it was😭
@candaniel5 ай бұрын
You're exposed to the wrong kind of information if this is one of the only encouraging things for you. There are many positive developments around the world, you just have to look for them.
@Mustacheman175 ай бұрын
@@candanieldon’t act like every doc Netflix puts out now isn’t doom p*rn. You have to go out of your way and search to see positive things while they shove negative pieces down your throat daily.
@SpacemarineHelldiver7 ай бұрын
It's like watching documentaries like back in the day, i really love watching these types of videos before work. It wakes me up alongside with my morning coffee. Wish them the best.
@Best101Bits7 ай бұрын
I'm reading this while taking coffee before work....so heartwarming...🥰
@katiekey46436 ай бұрын
Yeah me too
@ninjacreeper5419 ай бұрын
This video drained a solid 10% of my existential dread, thank yall very much for the captivating video
@BrentwoodFamilyinVietnam8 ай бұрын
Yeah, it really does wonders for one's sails. My family and I live in Vietnam and therefore don't have to worry about an insanely massive desert, but my wife has so many aunts, uncles, and cousins involved in farming that it makes me happy that those farmers in the Sahel are doing such great work.
@ninjacreeper5418 ай бұрын
@@BrentwoodFamilyinVietnam farmers in any capacity should be praised for their relentless and back breaking work 🙏 strength be with them for a more beautiful tomorrow!
@BrentwoodFamilyinVietnam8 ай бұрын
@@ninjacreeper541 That's why I'm so happy to work with so many farmers :). Filming them and working with them is really rewarding.
@rvh19998 ай бұрын
Grow up doomer
@drakehansen80998 ай бұрын
There's a lot of terrible things going on today, but there's just as many great things going on. I think that even if the great things are smaller, there are a lot more of them than the terrible things.
@SarinaSazi15 күн бұрын
This is simply amazing. Bravo to every worker and project manager!❤❤❤❤
@Abralibemu9 ай бұрын
I hope that they will carry out similar projects in other at-risk areas to prevent similar degradation, such as southern Spain and many other countries around the Mediterranean. Thank you Andrew for a spectacular report!
@PhilJonesIII9 ай бұрын
Such projects have been on-going for some decades and with no small success. China, India and Russia to name a few. Europe has also been planting trees like no tomorrow.
@jordanbabcock93499 ай бұрын
Only the United States are stupid enough to not be planting. - greetings, from the US.
@JimmyRussle9 ай бұрын
@@PhilJonesIIIIndia has been a stand out with some of these projects. If i recall, there is one in progress that has largely been done by just one man. Goes to show what kind of change is possible.
@DaDunge9 ай бұрын
Spain and the midditerranean can pay for this own greening.
@PhilJonesIII9 ай бұрын
@@JimmyRussle Yes, not a few people like that. It makes me sad that the media seems determined to hand out bad news at every turn while ignoring the significant progress and the armies of people working tirelessly to make the world a better place.
@joshua.h9 ай бұрын
I'm so happy to live in a time where I can find these amazing short documentaries on KZbin that teach me about such important topics. Really well done.
@Haggis-Giggles46929 ай бұрын
We now know fixing climate change due to this is very plausible.
@iusethisnameformygoogleacc10139 ай бұрын
@@Haggis-Giggles4692 Not even close. This would barely put a dent in our emissions, its entire goal is to slow the rate at which this desert is expanding in this region, it's going to have a minimal effect on climate change as a whole. The program has also been stalling and in danger of being cancelled due to lack of funds for at least a year. Apparently none of the countries this work is happening in are spending anything on it, and the program is having trouble attracting international investors because this project involves A Lot of work in extremely unstable states. No one seems to see its goal of 2030 (again, for something that mostly affects this one region) as completely impossible.
@MrViniciusgris8 ай бұрын
That's some amazing job! As Brazilian forester engineer, my eyes well up seeing something like this.Thanks for sharing it.
@Saxxin18 ай бұрын
When Brazil becomes a desert will you still be excited?
@MrViniciusgris8 ай бұрын
@@Saxxin1 ?
@KamuiPan8 ай бұрын
@@Saxxin1And you have ever look up things before acknowledging whatever the TV man tells you? Go to Google Maps and tell me how much the trees are missing. Don't forget most of the wood go illegally to the US and EU, after the extraction is turn into grazing fields. Ignorance can be shameless sometimes! Not even mention UN is using a farming system create in Brasil in the Sahess, the Nº1 in the World in terms of food production. If you own land on the Amazon you're force by the State to preserve 80% of the land, meaning no deforestation without any compensation from the gov. or you, mindless foreigner that believes what the TV man has to say. The reason your TV man tells you lies about the Amazon is because his boss sponsors are interesting in the biodiversity of the forest. I truly feel ashamed for Europeans and Americans talking about things that they are clueless about it.
@pursuepower40118 ай бұрын
@@MrViniciusgrisI think he means, Brazil is doing the opposite, massive deforestation. Or is that not true?
@asaeltorres74878 ай бұрын
@@pursuepower4011 Hello! Brazilian environmental engineer here, this year we had a decrease of 60% compared to last year, it was the lowest in 6 years. In fact, during 2022 Brazil was responsible for around 40% of global deforestation, but we're gradually returning to normal, I hope.
@Pickleton2 ай бұрын
I used to teach English in Hokkaido, Japan. In the Hidaka subprefecture are the towns of Samani and Erimo. In the 1960s, the whole area was a desert due to overlogging. Over the past 50 or so years, there has been a reforestation project that met with very good success. The geopark at Samani is a site often used or brought up during meetings about land reclamation projects in Africa.
@danihansen19 ай бұрын
I'm so happy to see, that the project is still going on. I was in Senegal in August 2013 to participate in the project. Some amazing people in an amazing country working on an amazing project. Greetings from Denmark :)
@celisewillis9 ай бұрын
Oh wow, that sounds so cool! Did you volunteer with an organization? I would love to do this
@GreenIsTheWayForward9 ай бұрын
Yeah can you tell us how? I have been looking to join this project in the past, but the only website I could find was literally saying 'we don't want volunteers at this stage of the project". I'd love to throw a few months of my life into this project, it seems fun and educational and very satisfying.
@gurmohansingh18688 ай бұрын
You must be wanting to revisit that place. It's always a kind of homecoming.
@amitbikramjana95277 ай бұрын
Brilliant is an understatement. Keep up the great work folks!
@johannes_keeper9 ай бұрын
I am happy that my donations go a long way to protect the planet. Kudos to WFP!
@devinrunyan9 ай бұрын
It doesn't protect the planet. This has massive weather and rainfall implications that will cause drastic changes due to water displacement.
@Rabbit-cp4ue9 ай бұрын
@TA-hf6si Of course it does, did you not watch the video and saw the work they're doing?
@ryanoglesbee10759 ай бұрын
This effort will likely diminish the Amazon rainforest, which gets a lot of its nutrients from Sahara dust
@dankyjoker9 ай бұрын
protect it from what... itself??
@Ebani9 ай бұрын
@@ryanoglesbee1075 This makes zero sense, what nutrients are you talking about?
@lydia-bethgundry90923 ай бұрын
Absolutely inspiring! WFP at its best, providing solutions to building self sufficient community. Utterly inspiring. Isn't it amazing how these techniques were traditional techniques that had been forgotten? It's so important to pass things down to the next generation, who knows what the future will hold
@aminnamou13059 ай бұрын
I’m from Mauritania and believe this is not just about the environment this actually is giving people hope. Thanks 🙏
@RareEarthSeries9 ай бұрын
Incredible video, series, channel and dude. This deserves fifty million views.
@amillison9 ай бұрын
Thanks rare earth. I appreciate it 🙏
@RareEarthSeries9 ай бұрын
@@amillison I mean it sincerely. Please never stop making these unbelievably high-quality reminders of our capacity for positive change.
@pharder12349 ай бұрын
yall gotta collab, both great channels
@amillison9 ай бұрын
@@RareEarthSeries There is no stopping, trust me. I'm just getting started. This video working with the WFP represents a new threshold. I am working on future visits to their even larger scale work in other Great Green Wall countries. I love your work also!
@kathyg69769 ай бұрын
get them to grow jerusalem artichoke for food@@amillison
@dhruvvmenon9 ай бұрын
Scalable techniques, community driven, uses natural resources - very very cool! A great pilot for other regions with similar topography too! Very well done, Team WFP!
@cibableaАй бұрын
Astounding, and such a great description of it all, with stellar footage. Well done. I'm sharing this good news with friends.
@chewher41719 ай бұрын
This is why the world needs. Problem solving, life flourishing. Not politics, war and the suffering of all.
@retroman75819 ай бұрын
This is political! Its an environmental project thats aimed at preventing desertification - its eco politics :)
@DayB899 ай бұрын
Well... believe it or not, it goes both ways: people move politics and politics move people. It's the same thing at different organizational levels. The way I see it, it's important that both parts stay active. For example, in this case: individuals have pushed and worked hard in this project, but at some point some countries or organizational structures came together and decided that this project was worth pursuing. You see... a complex world we live in ^^'
@mihapetek34189 ай бұрын
working with nature, not against it and exploiting it.
@mithrandirthegrey76449 ай бұрын
This isn't problem solving. It's an excercise in futility. The Sahara desert follows a natural cycle of expansion and contraction. It has done it countless times over the eons. Every 10k years or so it goes from expansion to contraction as the earth's climate naturally cycles from hot to cold.
@irenamiteva42459 ай бұрын
Are you sure that this is good problem solving example? Do you know how important is the balance in the universe? After desert areas turns in green areas on the Earth, then in what will turn the green areas? Guess...
@rogerlawrence199 ай бұрын
This entire project is mind-blowing. I remember reading about this years ago, and I'm so amazed at the progress. Thank you for educating us all!
@ambienceandmusicstudios9 ай бұрын
We need more hopeful videos like this in our media. Less doom and more about how real change is being made. I think that is the key to getting more young people on board with contributing to positive change.
@CatT1987Ай бұрын
I got tears in my eyes when I watched the video. The reason for that is I was just so overwhelmed that there are people in this profound undertaking, trying so hard to make things better and possibly by doing this may return the Sahara more or less to its original state as it was in the beginning and it could possibly end starvation at least in Africa. I remember saying to God please take note Lord. Not all of us are hell-bent on tearing each other apart and into violence and war. Some of us actually are trying to make things better. This video was so inspiring and I thank you for bringing it to my attention. 😢
@arcadiapermaculture9748 ай бұрын
Literally one of the most important things happening on earth. Thanks for sharing their story.
@tracesprite60788 ай бұрын
It's so inspiring to see how hard those people are working and how productive their work is!
@Jasmine161248 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/bqu1ZJaenrt5qtksi=0pjG_nkkyEMn5ZGu. GREAT TIP DRILL WATER WELL ONLY 200 DOLLARS
@red23729 ай бұрын
The bird on 7:04 is such a peaceful moment and literally a sign of achievement and something to be proud of. It‘s the small things like that, that shows that nature is coming back & is thankful.
@hunter_abc_3235Ай бұрын
I Literally read this comment as I was watching that frame 7:04
@Beridan639 ай бұрын
I am thrilled to see this cooperative effort to restore the viability of that great land. What they accomplished in two years is phenomenal. This is only the beginning. The world's eyes are on Senegal. They are going to get it done. Their country and their people will prosper collectively.
@DetailedFour3 ай бұрын
Amazing, a testament of what can be achieved when we are focused and cohesive as a community
@1Mith858 ай бұрын
Really cool, thought world food programme was just giving away food to help communities survive without much focus to develop them, but this approach that only uses knowledge to rebuild an agriculture self sufficiency using only local workforce and resources is really awesome
@baileescott4019 ай бұрын
I've been telling people about this project for years!!!! With knowledge and teamwork, we can make fields in the desert!!! Generating lush landscape from poor soil isn't as imposible as it seems
@ZennExile9 ай бұрын
and with almost zero knowledge and a half-cocked scheme you picked up from a YT video, you can fake it as well. As long as the initial source of fertilizer lasts, or as long as you keep pumping agro-chemical poison into the ground. The delusional obsession with what you can see is blinding the vast majority to the vastly more important parts of a terrestrial ecosystem. The Rhizosphere is 65% of the sustainability problem, yet is represented by exactly 0% of the literature or media about this project. That's not just suss. It's hekn suss.
@zarroth9 ай бұрын
@@ZennExile Yep. Also no mention of the minimum required average rainfall over the course of multiple years for this to be self-sustaining. You can't just go to a spot in any desert and do this. They are clearly doing it next to an active river area, which changes things. So many people think you can just go out in the middle of nowhere and then magic! Critical thinking is at an all time low in history right now.
@baileescott4019 ай бұрын
@@ZennExile hhaahhaahhhaajhay!!!!???????!!! Do it! Lmao you worn see the profit you suggest xD
@baileescott4019 ай бұрын
@@ZennExile and what's wrong??? Everything you said is addressed with Time. Love ya bro cholld house
@ZennExile9 ай бұрын
@@zarroth the rainfall is a bit less of a problem as water can moved around with primitive irrigation very effectively. However, I can, and regularly do, turn nearly any state of diminished land back into live fertile soil. You could point to any peace of diminished land on the planet and I could bring that plot of land back to life as a living part of whatever thriving ecosystem should be there. That digestive gut at the foundation of the ecosystem just needs to be restored first.
@talaverajr3918 ай бұрын
Imagine if our governments instead of investing in wars, invested in these humanitarian/ecological projects! The world would be a better place.
@edwardgazi70078 ай бұрын
I agree but we all know that politicians only do anything for political gains and for profit
@blackenedfrost75187 ай бұрын
There's more money in creating wars tho . Logically speaking But I hear u , you have a point
@ianrau63737 ай бұрын
I think we all wish governments thought past money, but I see your point.
@biniamGere65027 ай бұрын
We Ethiopians also fade up of war, the noble prise winner has endless war projects for the sake of staying in power.
@oluwatobisanni19857 ай бұрын
The world surely would be a better place for us All to live in. Indigenous people of African origin should also be able to come up with ideas like this to complement each other, and there would be a revolution in the World in how we live and propagate life.🎉
@sukanthyranjitkumar87256 күн бұрын
This is what I would call that we are preserving our earth planet by preserving the eco system!🙏🙏🙏 Thank you so much for all the active minds, and human persistence ❤
@cindyjames36866 ай бұрын
This is a WONDERFUL PROJECT!!!!! This program saves the soul of a people as well as the land!!! GOD BLESS YOU ALL!!!!!!
@niteeshbihade17899 ай бұрын
This is an excellent project. So refreshing to see all the people working together and nature reclaiming its glory!
@William_Borgeson9 ай бұрын
They should be teaching this in grade school, high school, and college. Great insight, and highly sustainable, well done!
@BeautifuLakesStreamsBiologists9 ай бұрын
People teach themselves these ideas when they get out on the ground, especially at an early age. I was fortunate to start at 10 years old.
@Testeuros9 ай бұрын
In fact, I'm actually thinking of implementing that into my future lessons of social studies as one of the plausible solutions to solve lack of food and migration patterns in certain areas. The problem, however, might be a lack of time to truly dive into some of these topics due to fact that innovative methods of teaching are getting more and more enforced on us, especially here in CZE.
@William_Borgeson9 ай бұрын
@@Testeuros That is fantastic to hear, thanks!
@yiction9 ай бұрын
They teach it on youtube brother, that's where real learning happens
@gaislay56159 ай бұрын
Agree
@Christin55542 ай бұрын
That is such a great project and I wish all involved lots and lots of luck. This project is going to save a lot of Africa.
@savage.4.249 ай бұрын
My mother replanted a cracked dry southern yard this way. Half was green half was cracked dust. This was in the 1990s and 3 years later it looked like a golf course. We never bought seed nor fertilizer. Just transplanted in this manner.
@SadBoysCollectiveCirca969 ай бұрын
the earth is in a greening period right now
@ShaunsGhost9 ай бұрын
@@SadBoysCollectiveCirca96global warming is prosperity
@alekseykirillov23598 ай бұрын
did your mom use a water hose to water it?
@clementwymiens79557 ай бұрын
This kind of videos and projects give me hope. The things we can achieve when we get together! ❤🙌
@sunnyinvladivostok9 ай бұрын
It's enormously inspiring to see whole populations immerse themselves in creation and work for a positive, constructive end. Thanks for making this video and hats off & deep admiration for those involved in this project.
@slevinchannel75899 ай бұрын
Author here: The Green-Wall, could it always have been done, no matter the Time, no matter the Era? Does it make sense for my Timetraveling Protagonist to go around and tell people to plant Trees exsessively on the Border to Deserts? ??
@zachrabaznaz76879 ай бұрын
@@slevinchannel7589...yes. Yes! Holy shit, that's an incredibly idea!
@xav53769 ай бұрын
@@slevinchannel7589 Omg thats an amazing idea!
@slevinchannel75899 ай бұрын
@@zachrabaznaz7687 I dont know if you know the Word Isekai but yeah: Such Protagonists and/or Timetravelers never using their Modern knowledge annoyed me for a long time now so i eventually started making a digital paper about what cna be summarized as 'Top Things Ancient-People WISHED they knew' 14 Pages now, including not just the classicsl ike Soap but also Marcipan, Desertification, Coloured Ink, Coloured Glass, Silkworms . All suggestions what more i could research are welcomed
@slevinchannel75899 ай бұрын
@@zachrabaznaz7687 Tbh, i seem to hit my lmit already. I had much fun and learned a whole bunch but stuff like Economics, Forestry and Dams dont seem to have concice 'Ruless´' that i can just write down, no 'Recipes' (like many Alloys are or ho Cola is) either My specific Lens (Timetravel and WHAT TO TELL ancient people if i meet them) is also seen rather as odd and not a tool
@Learnamericanenglishonline4 ай бұрын
This is really great! I love how they have applied their knowledge of agriculture and the personal motivation of the villagers to make this work. There is so much potential here.
@johndroyson79215 ай бұрын
Good for them. I'm glad the people of Senegal could take charge of their future and make these changes for their country. That's something to be proud of. Blessed are those who plant trees under whose shade they may never sit.
@alexanderschulz79246 ай бұрын
Wow. Like that. You can even see the pride of the people for what they archieved. You took dead, barren land and turn it into a green Oasis with your own work. Thats a very positive source of self esteem.
@faby_baby5 ай бұрын
Amen all glory to the Lord Jesus Christ. 🙏 If you didn’t know, Jesus will fulfill you more than anything in this world, I speak from experience (from when i did Romans 10:9-13), he loves you and wants to be in a meaningful (not romantic) relationship with you. :) “that if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved. For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation. For the scripture saith, Whosoever believeth on him shall not be ashamed. For there is no difference between the Jew and the Greek: for the same Lord over all is rich unto all that call upon him. For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.” Romans 10:9-13 KJV “and saying, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe the gospel.” Mark 1:15 KJV If you want proof that Jesus and the Bible are true look a documentary called “Ron Wyatt discoveries 2022” on KZbin and a KZbin channel called Expedition Bible. They both examine archeological sites and discoveries that prove the Bible, and even reference secular sources. (Just don’t convert to 7th day Adventism after watching the documentary) And lastly if you don’t know the gospel and want to be saved search up “abc’s of Salvation Teenmissions” on Google and it should be the first or second result. When you click on it read the whole thing, and do what it says and have faith in Jesus while you are doing it, do not doubt, and if it is hard for you to do what it says, ask Jesus to help you, have faith that he will, and *he will.* God Bless :)
@Tinmann_775 ай бұрын
And within a year of not being maintained it will return to the desert.
@DaveWhitacre19 ай бұрын
I can't remember the last time I saw something so uplifting. Fantastic work by everyone involved--and thank you for the fabulous video!
@mariakatherine46164 ай бұрын
It's amazing work you have done there in Senegal, and I was wondering if you have done projects like this in places like Haiti. There's lots of deforestation there and I imagine there are the same agricultural difficulties there too. Keep up the awesome work you are doing...truly, God's work...thank you for all you do 🥰
@astrihijratulrakhmah28978 ай бұрын
This is really a good innovation, considering that the local people have been working on the land for more than 40 years and they still haven't succeeded. Thank you for reviving their enthusiasm and hope, the good thing is, young people no longer need to migrate to other countries, they can continue managing 3000M KM2 of desert! this is awesome!
@nnoo8 ай бұрын
Yes but the un are natzis.
@lostlove33928 ай бұрын
Depends on skin color.
@alexjbriiones6 ай бұрын
This is truly amazing. Not only are you saving these lands, but also providing jobs, and stopping migration.
@caldaque73549 ай бұрын
Absolutely fantastic. Taking barren land and making a garden. This will help the hole ecosystem as well as providing food and jobs for the locals. These are global projects worth funding.
@roydark9 ай бұрын
The Sahara desert doesn't expand per se, it moves because the earth axis moves over time, this is called the Sahara Cycle/North African Cycle, over time the desert transforms into a rainforest and then to a desert again, then the cycle repeats. Trying to stop this cycle is harmful to the planet, this is not good for the ecosystem.
@andressousa90069 ай бұрын
and ruining the ecosystem on the other side of the atlantic.
@thecursed019 ай бұрын
how? @@andressousa9006
@ballstealer9 ай бұрын
@@andressousa9006 By stopping a desert from expanding further into a continent and a lot of people's suffering by doing so?
@MagikBuilder2 ай бұрын
Amazing!!! That's exactly the new world where we're living in now needs us to do. thank you for your hard work 👏👏👏👏👏
@SometimesMakayla5 ай бұрын
This seems like one of the few things that actually matters in the world, that actually helps
@taylorventures58549 ай бұрын
Wow! This is my first time hearing about this. I have no words to explain how amazing this project is and all the good it encompasses. You my friend have made a video that gave me a sense of greatness and purpose. You deserve tens of millions of views.
@ane-louisestampe79399 ай бұрын
This video was like having an injection of HOPE with my morning coffee
@TravelFitFusion7 ай бұрын
I'm from Asia, Pakistan. I'm very proud of you guys. You guys are working wonders for humanity. I am very grateful
@Jimmy-p9n6 ай бұрын
Its funny I have never thought of India/Pakistan as Asian. Part of the subcontinent. The people are so much more different to Asian peoples in general.
@TravelFitFusion6 ай бұрын
@@Jimmy-p9n Ok. So what category do you put people from Pakistan and India into? I think those who have called the people of Pakistan and India Asian. They are wiser than you. Still, I want to know your position.
@andreiadetavora84716 ай бұрын
@@TravelFitFusion He wasn't trying to be rude, i think. Many people still associate Pakistan with only middle east (they think Africa)... Which is wrong. Its the same with Egypt: some people don't know that it sits on 2 continents ;) (Africa and Asia).
@Jimmy-p9n6 ай бұрын
@@TravelFitFusion No i wasn't being rude. I think they are different. Original. I class Indians/Pakistanis/Bangladeshis as being from the Subcontinent. I think your Origin differs greatly from the rest of Asia. Different ancient migration from Africa. Oral tradition of some peoples in India remind me of the oral tradition of another people that probably migrated further on.
@TravelFitFusion6 ай бұрын
@@Jimmy-p9n I think you're right. I replied a little harder. But I should have understood your point salute. And now I think your view is right.
@jonesman71243 ай бұрын
i think the most important point was said in the end by the local. The young man no longer have to look elsewhere to work and worry how they migrate but can focus on building something in their hometown. This leads to soo many opportunity and also lasting stability.
@pharder12349 ай бұрын
this is very cool but we must give props to the first man that ive heard of who brought back the half moon dimpling method. Mr Yacouba Sawadogo of Burkino Faso. Very important man
@elijahtheliger23599 ай бұрын
I will stop my day for an Andrew Millison Video any day!
@Buddytimon9 ай бұрын
Dude, your production quality is just off the charts. Equally fascinating is how well you get the main point across: concise, giving voice to local stakeholders, giving context as well - I'm amazed.
@amillison9 ай бұрын
Thanks for the good feedback :-)
@thomashauer68049 ай бұрын
UN is highly corrupted
@zebulaun9 ай бұрын
That place will look like a wasteland again in a few years once the UN ceases their handouts, these people are so dumb they can't even tend a garden.
@Gravity42207 ай бұрын
That's awesome. I almost cried, that's touching human effort, we need more of the world thinking like this. BAE supports ❤️
@PorchGardeningWithPassion3 ай бұрын
This seems very well thought out and executed. That is a great thing these days and I appreciate it greatly. Good going strong my friends! 😀
@ethanstewartstevenson73099 ай бұрын
I love finding out about the social impact as well. Now people are staying in their homeland, helping to work with the land and heal it, and taking pride in becoming more integrated with their community and land, rather than running from their problems. Just incredible. 🙏🏻
@LoreCatan9 ай бұрын
"Running from their problems" is rather harsh, considering there's nothing wrong with leaving to have better opportunities. Don't get me wrong, what they're doing in Senegal is incredible, but not everyone that lives there is responsible for healing the land. I hope that if any of those kids want to leave when they're older that they get the chance to, their contributions for the land now is more than enough. It'll always be better for any collective if it's members wholeheartedly chose to be a part of the community, instead of being forced to by "responsibility" or "tradition". The only real obligation you have is to yourself, to have a happy life with little regrets. If making the Earth a better place is what fulfills you, that's great, but if staying in your native country isn't serving you, build your home somewhere else. People are way more likely to take care of the Earth and to be kind to their neighbours when the place they live in doesn't make them miserable.
@0bfuscated7 ай бұрын
Imagine the progress we could make as a civilization without war
@publicdomain33786 ай бұрын
With jesus as king instead of kings we could
@Acuzzio6 ай бұрын
@@publicdomain3378my Jesus is holier than yours, I declare war on your jesus
@publicdomain33786 ай бұрын
@@Acuzzio My jesus is pointier! But i dont see why we need our Mexicans to fight, Jesus.
@michadabek98966 ай бұрын
We won't go anywhere without wars. It may be sad, but fear drives us to action, without it we become lazy and find ourselves in a place like Europe, where life in its Western countries is worse than twenty years ago. The overwhelming majority of technologies are created so that others do not overtake us and crush us, and what is already outdated or unnecessary is used by society.
@SWBGTOC6 ай бұрын
People wage wars for reasons, it's part of the cycle of life
@GingerPeacenik6 күн бұрын
More power to them; making truly meaningful, impactful change in this world. A true legacy!
@N30NR10Tx9 ай бұрын
For decades of my life I'd seen that area always in poverty. Always dusty and barren. This absolutely amazes me. This is so beautiful. I am so glad you shared this with the world. It means a lot to see a once impoverished land being transformed into a beautiful start for a new generation.
@prithabazani9 ай бұрын
wow, this is a real development! not only it will solve food problem of that region, it will create a whole new ecosystem where many other species will sustain. Great great work!
@PeterKaitlyn9 ай бұрын
I saw a video of a man in the western US desert who did the same kind of process... he worked that land so that it slowed the water runoff enough that plants thrived... the plants slowed the water more and he ended up with beautiful useful land... This is more ambitious and will help more people survive and thrive, but the techniques are the same... slow the water and use plant growth... Amazing...
@suspicioustumbleweed47609 ай бұрын
They also bored a well.
@moarsaur8 ай бұрын
@@suspicioustumbleweed4760 They did a study on waving a magic wand to start the process, and found it would be less effective.
@kayb27588 ай бұрын
Do u remember the name of the video you referenced
@cindycain33012 ай бұрын
This is awesome. I'm so glad this is happening! Its snout yime something good happens there. Im very, very happy to see this happening. Im nor feeling joy for the fordt time in a decade. Thank you for showing this. I'd love to see the entire west Sahara returned to a lush green spaces. And as much of it ss possible. Truly, I'm happy for them..
@cornbeef9 ай бұрын
This is such a fantastic video. Shows that humans can do good things when they get a good idea and work at it. I love that it is bringing in work for everyone as well, so they have something to wake up for and hopefully communities will be rebuilt. We need an update on this in 10 and 20 years. I hope it all plans out!
@innovate-at-home8 ай бұрын
Andrew Millison is a rockstar! This project is a fantastic example of how permaculture can address complex challenges like climate change and food insecurity. It makes me want to get involved and be a part of the solution.
@alekseykirillov23598 ай бұрын
Спутниковую карту посмотри, как была пустыня так и осталась. История-то не нова. Взяли грант. Нагнали массовки из местных бомжей. Поразвлеклись сами и развлекли местных. Деньги освоили и разъехались по домам. Увидишь белые пикапы UN - Беги! Нигде еще после них добра не оставалось.
@khgdlqgsds45282 ай бұрын
These people are smart and good in heart ❤
@Ozow12349 ай бұрын
Amazing. I spent a good while researching how to increase food production, clean water resources, and block the desert expansion in Africa. This is amazing work and I am jealous you are able to do something so incredibly helpful.
@slimey098 ай бұрын
Envy might be the word your were looking for :p
@frida_173uhl48 ай бұрын
The Sahel used to be a completely different landscape. In arabic "el sahil" means shore/coast: people crossing the Sahara desert saw the Sahil as a a green shore/coast that would safe them from dehydration when thy finally reach it. One aspect though that's not shown in this video however is the immense impact of pastoralism. People in that stretch of land typically have herds of livestock that continously graze on the same pieces of land, degrading the soil by ripping out plants' roots and compressing the ground with their hooves. Thus massively contributing to desertification. The shown project is definitely very cool and effective put not realistic in areas where pastorialism is the main type of farming and especially where sheperds ignore paths and just let their animals walk wherever. This has lead to brutal conflicts in the past.
@johannizaryn44717 ай бұрын
There has to be a balance between pastoralism and vegetal farming, because it is also beneficial for the soil that animals walk around especially since their feces will provide sustenance for plants. The problem comes from having too many animals on a restricted area, or letting them into areas where plants have not yet taken root enough. For plants to grow you also have to enrich the soil, and using animal manure is essential for that. You can obviously just take manure from an animal farm somewhere and just put it where you want to grow vegetables but it might be complicated to do for very large areas. Also I don't know how it works in very desertic places because I'm not very familiar with the plants there, but where I live, if you don't let animals into fields regularly invasive species of plants will grow and then you can't do anything anymore with the land. Where I live a lot of agricultural land has been abandonned for generations and now it is very complicated to take back, you have to burn the land at least three years in a row to get rid of the invasive plants, and then put animals there for several years in a row to restore the land and then you have to constantly maintain it or it will go bad again. Aniways, execessive pastoralism is bad oviously but a balance between the two is what's best I think.
@Lbb7897 ай бұрын
No, its the impact of grazing with no plan. with rotational grazing, and sustaining the soils, desertification does not have to happen. You can see the manipulation going on here. It has NOTHING to do with 'pastorilization' and everything to do with sustainable ranching
@frida_173uhl47 ай бұрын
@@Lbb789 I was talking about pastoralism, which is not the same as pastorilization! Technically pastoralism is the land use that's most suitable for this stretch of land (alternating humid and arid months and thus "following the rain" is the most effective thing. This is what all big animals in the savanna do naturally anyways). Due to an ever increasing population (countries in the Sahel have TFRs up to 7 or 8!!) the overuse of land for both crops and animals is the result. Ranches don't really exist there. Shepherds move their herds around. Yes, (seemingly) irresponsibly and without plan because there are simply too many herds and the demand for grazing land is much higher than what the Sahel can offer. Growing desertification means that the soil has no chance to relax. An overuse of crop fields without fallow periods results in lower yields. Overall the issue is quite complex, it's called Sahel Syndrome.
@Phoenixx_19 ай бұрын
❤ from India 🇮🇳 Good job WFP & congratulations to senegal
@htetmyakhtun69149 ай бұрын
Xavier😂
@Hawk78869 ай бұрын
@@htetmyakhtun6914nope, pakalu papito
@bearifiablepau20953 ай бұрын
Finally, some good news for a change. Ty! 🙏
@everydayrealist9 ай бұрын
This is one of the most incredible things I have ever seen! Thank you for bringing this to the broader world and I hope this has moved others in the same way it has done to me.
@p.f1327 ай бұрын
The great green wall is probably one of my favourite mega-projects ever. It tackles so many problems, from agricultural to societal, its amazing.