It is our new site. If you want to visit old site please click on this link
Logo
  • What We Do
    • Overview
    • Program Areas
      • Health, Water & Sanitation
        • SwasthyaSangini
        • Gram Clinic
        • Water Purifier
        • Medical Camp
        • Ambulance Service
      • Education & Enrichment
        • Mukti Kishalaya Support School (MKSS)
        • Mukti Support School (MSS)
        • Talented Student Sponsorship (TSS)
        • Mukti Institute of Technology (MIT)
        • Mukti Academy
        • Value Education
      • Agriculture Reform
        • Sustainable Agriculture Movement (SAM)
        • Kitchen Gardening
        • Organic Farming & Training Support
        • Mukti Fresh
      • Livelihood & Enablement
        • Mukti Community Development Fund (MCDF)
        • Skill & Enterprise Development
        • Swavlamban Accelerator in Sundarbans (SWAS)
        • Chick Rearing Programme for Marginalised Women
        • Mukti Employment Exchange (MEE)
        • Mukti Craft
        • Mukti Kitchen
      • Environment & Resilience
        • Sundarbans Green (SUN-G)
        • Cyclone Tolerant Houses
        • Climate Resilience River Embankment
        • Pond Rejuvenation
        • Mukti Green
      • Rights & Special Needs
        • Prerna
        • A village for independent and enterprising women (A VIEW)
        • Voice
        • Amplifying Community Voices
        • Sahosini
      • Awareness & Empowerment
        • Vocational Trainings
        • Observance Days Celebration
        • Awareness drives
        • Cultural Shows
      • Integrated Development
        • Mukti Gram - Purbashridharpur
        • Mukti Gram - Egra
      • Disaster Recovery
        • Cyclone Relief & Response
        • Pandemic Relief
    • Innovation & Sustainability
    • Mukti Community Businesses
      • Mukti Fresh
      • Mukti Green
      • Mukti Kitchen
      • Mukti Crafts
    • Our Activities
    • Impact Stories
      Overview
      Program Areas
      Innovation & Sustainability
      Mukti Community Businesses
      Our Activities
      Impact Stories

      Mukti Believes in Integrated Development of our Society

      MUKTI has taken several initiatives to support the marginal and vulnerable people of India through its several innovative programs and initiatives.

      Discover Initiatives

      Health, Water & Sanitation
      Education & Enrichment
      Agriculture Reform
      Livelihood & Enablement
      Environment & Resilience
      Rights & Special Needs
      Awareness & Empowerment
      Integrated Development
      Disaster Recovery
      SwasthyaSangini Gram Clinic Water Purifier Medical Camp Ambulance Service
      Mukti Kishalaya Support School (MKSS) Mukti Support School (MSS) Talented Student Sponsorship (TSS) Mukti Institute of Technology (MIT) Mukti Academy Value Education
      Sustainable Agriculture Movement (SAM) Kitchen Gardening Organic Farming & Training Support Mukti Fresh
      Mukti Community Development Fund (MCDF) Skill & Enterprise Development Swavlamban Accelerator in Sundarbans (SWAS) Chick Rearing Programme for Marginalised Women Mukti Employment Exchange (MEE) Mukti Craft Mukti Kitchen
      Sundarbans Green (SUN-G) Cyclone Tolerant Houses Climate Resilience River Embankment Pond Rejuvenation Mukti Green
      Prerna A village for independent and enterprising women (A VIEW) Voice Amplifying Community Voices Sahosini
      Vocational Trainings Observance Days Celebration Awareness drives Cultural Shows
      Mukti Gram - Purbashridharpur Mukti Gram - Egra
      Cyclone Relief & Response Pandemic Relief
      Mukti Fresh
      Mukti Green
      Mukti Kitchen
      Mukti Crafts
  • Who We Are
    • Overview
    • Founder Desk
    • About Us
    • Board Of Trustees
    • Our Philosophy
    • In News
      Overview
      Founder Desk
      About Us
      Board Of Trustees
      Our Philosophy
      In News

      Socioeconomic development organization mitigate of social issues

      MUKTI is a volunteer-driven organization enriched by the visions of many industry-leading visionaries including founder president Sankar Halder and many more…

      Discover Us

      Mukti doesn’t make the news, News follows Mukti

      Several innovative solutions and ideas of MUKTI have been featured in various publications over the years.

      Discover Us

  • Be A Partner
    • Overview
    • Current Partners
    • Annual Reports
    • Operating Models
    • Accreditation
    • Award
    • Voice of Partners
      Overview
      Current Partners
      Annual Reports
      Operating Models
      Accreditation
      Award
      Voice of Partners

      We alone cannot do it, Strong partnership needed for those needy

      MUKTI believes that when all social-minded people will come along and help each other to help those needy, real change is bound to take place.

      Discover Partnership

  • Get Involved
  • Contact Us
  • Mukti Wide
    • Mukti USA
    • Mukti Australia
  • Contact Us
  • Mukti Wide
    • Mukti USA
    • Mukti Australia
Donate
Contact Us

Mukti

Let us serve the needy.

The Return Of The Earthworm: A Brief Note On AID’s Work In The Sunderbans

A report by Somnath Mukherji, AID

All the farmers and gardeners who have been part of AID and its partners Mukti & BTS’ agricultural work in the Sunderbans are practicing organic agriculture of both paddy and vegetables on a part of their land while some are doing it fully. A buzz has been created in the area about it. Many of these farmers have been trained by Saathi Revathy and many more have been trained by the trainer-farmers of the area.

Based on my interaction with about 150 farmers in their fields and discussions in smaller groups later on, this is what I have gathered qualitatively.

# Most farmers cultivating paddy have taken a mixed approach and used a little bit of chemicals (much less than usual). These farmers are making a gradual transition. The pressure from other fields using chemicals remains palpable. It was heartening to see that we have developed enough trust with the farmers that no one felt the need to present a rosy picture.

# There were several reasons why farmers have taken up organic farming. The reasons cited most frequently were – 1) Human health (2) Loss of soil fertility due to chemical use (3) Cost is lower (upto Rs 1500 per one-third acre) (4) Small farmers don’t mind the extra labour because it is their own. And some farmers said they would even be satisfied with a slightly lower yield.

# The advantages as seen by the farmers are: healthier plants, healthier soil (earthworms returning), less insect attacks, vegetables bearing fruit over a longer period of time (6 to 7 months for Karela and Chillies)

# Farmers growing vegetables both for sale and as nutritional gardens have adopted the organic techniques in their entirety because it requires lesser amount of organic fertilizers compared to paddy.

# The local infrastructure for organic manure is slowly rebuilding. The numbers of cows in the villages have reduced because hand-held power tillers have replaced traditional ploughs, hence the dearth of cow-dung. Now people are treating cow-dung as a precious material and are also collecting all household waste for making compost.

# The organic techniques are spreading through training as much through informal social network. Farmers are teaching their neighbours and relatives. Basudeb Haldar gives free Amrit Pani to all his students who come for tuition. Some senior farmers sit in their weekly markets and discuss about organic methods and people gather around them.

# Herbal tonic, Amrit Pani, Cow urine besides compost and cowdung seems to be the most popular bio-inputs. Those who are slightly better off have been using coconut tonic and Jeevamritham powder.

# In a very interesting 100% organic plot, there were patches where the paddy plants were significantly healthier. These patches coincided with where the farmer have dumped the compost before spreading it across the field. This clearly exemplified the lack of enough organic manure in the field and primarily in the villages.

# Women farmers participation has been key in sustaining the use of these methods through 4 paddy seasons. They talk about the health benefits of organic farming much more than the men farmers.

#In the remote island of K-plot about 100 farmers, predominantly women, have taken up organic agriculture on parts of their land. They have used only herbal tonic and Amrit Pani as bio-solutions.

# Organic methods seem to work better with indigenous seeds rather than hybrid ones.

# Organic produce is well accepted in the local village markets but tends to get a lower price in wholesale market due to irregular shapes and a lack of shine.

Working with the landless & most marginalized
Although in the agri work that we are doing in the Sunderbans we are working with very marginal farmers whose average land-holding is one-third or two-third acre, we are not able to reach the extremely marginalized people of the village. These are landless families living in the periphery of the villages often on the embankments being the most vulnerable to natural calamities. These people are socially, politically and economically marginalized and fall through the social safety net which is created with exactly such people in mind.

It is very difficult to look at the world through their eyes and hence we remain distant to their world. AID has worked with these communities during the food crisis after Aila where we started 5 participatory community kitchens. AID also supported the rebuilding of 17 homes in K-plot for such families that survive on begging and catching crabs and small fishes in the river. Many other migrate seasonally to Kolkata to provide the cheapest labour.

We have been having discussions with our partners BTS, Mukti and also DRCSC (Service Centre) on how to engage with these communities and reduce the distance to them. While BTS and Mukti are thinking of work like raising awareness about government schemes or desiliting of ponds which will allow landless families to lease land in the winter for cultivating one crop etc. a trip has been decided to a landless community that lives on the silt-build up by a river in the Sunderbans.

Earthworms, farmers best friends, are slowly returning to plots where organic methods are being followed bringing hope, strength and an indication on striving on the right path. But with the landless and the left-out we have we have to journey on a slightly different path.

Project Activities

  • About Mukti (2)
  • Accreditation (31)
  • AGM (63)
  • Agriculture Reforms (16)
  • ahm2017 (4)
  • ahm2017news (2)
  • ahm2017runners (2)
  • ahm2018runners (1)
  • Ambulance Service (2)
  • Amplifying Community Voices (9)
  • Awards (22)
  • Awareness and Empowerment (13)
  • Awareness drives (1)
  • Book-Bank (13)
  • Careers (8)
  • CARR (32)
  • Ccp1011 (4)
  • Chick Rearing Programme for Marginalised Women (5)
  • Climate Resilience River Embankment (1)
  • Coaching Center (102)
  • Community Clinic (2)
  • COVID19 (62)
  • Cyclone Amphan Relief and Rehabilitation (129)
  • Cyclone Bulbul Relief (30)
  • Cyclone Relif (2)
  • Cyclone Yaas Relief and Rehabilitation (68)
  • Editorial (21)
  • Editorial by Abir Biswas (1)
  • Editorial by Ankita Kothiyal (1)
  • Editorial by Kasturi Bakshi (1)
  • Editorial by Prof. Pradeep Ray (1)
  • Editorial by Ranitendranath Tagore (1)
  • Editorial by Sankar Halder (10)
  • Editorial by Satyajit Ray (3)
  • Editorial by Sohini Mehta (1)
  • Editorial by Soumitra Bose (1)
  • Editorial by Subhankar Basu (1)
  • Education and Enrichment (34)
  • Environment and Resilience (9)
  • Essential Items Distribution (19)
  • Fair/Exibition (1)
  • Featured Activities (10)
  • Go Green (81)
  • Gram Clinic (2)
  • Green (20)
  • Health (8)
  • Health Water & Sanitation (17)
  • Hello Beta (1)
  • Impact Stories List (31)
  • Integrated Development (11)
  • Jal hi Kal (2)
  • Kerala Flood Relief (3)
  • Kitchen Gardening (2)
  • Livelihood & Enablement (20)
  • Marathon (13)
  • MCDF (14)
  • Mcdf (112)
  • Mcom (6)
  • Medical Camp (8)
  • MIT (3)
  • MKSS (6)
  • MSS (11)
  • MUKTI Community Shop (1)
  • Mukti Craft (2)
  • Mukti Cultural (1)
  • Mukti Employment (2)
  • Mukti Fresh (2)
  • Mukti Gram - Egra (2)
  • Mukti Gram - Purbashridharpur (8)
  • Mukti Gram, Model Village (136)
  • Mukti Green (6)
  • MUKTI Institute of Technology (MIT) (3)
  • Mukti Kishalaya (2)
  • Mukti Support (1)
  • Mukto Dhara (1)
  • NaRKEL (9)
  • Obituaries (4)
  • Observance Days Celebration (10)
  • Organic Farming (3)
  • Organic Farming & Training Support (8)
  • Pandemic Support (2)
  • Pond Rejuvenation (1)
  • Prerana (4)
  • Projects For Mukti Wide (3)
  • Rights and Special Needs (19)
  • Riste (2)
  • RTI (14)
  • Sahosini (3)
  • SAM (9)
  • Sam (89)
  • SDF (9)
  • Skill & Enterprise Development (2)
  • Skill Enterprise (2)
  • star-of-the-week (9)
  • STEP (1)
  • Success Stories (39)
  • Success Story Coaching Center (1)
  • Success Story MCDF (6)
  • Success Story RTI (1)
  • Success Story SAM (9)
  • Success Story TSS (20)
  • Sundarbans Green (SUN-G) (1)
  • Sunderban development fair project (7)
  • Sustainable Agriculture (2)
  • SWAS (2)
  • SwasthoSongini (4)
  • Swavlamban Accelerator in Sundarbans (SWAS) (2)
  • Talented (2)
  • Tour for Cause (31)
  • TSK25 2017 (7)
  • TSK25 2017 Runners (7)
  • TSS (17)
  • TSS (112)
  • Uncategorized (59)
  • Valued Partners (3)
  • Vclpk (1)
  • Vetp (2)
  • View (2)
  • VOICE (2)
  • workshop (109)

Program Areas

  • Health, Water & Sanitation
  • Education & Enrichment
  • Agricultural Reforms
  • Livelihood & Enablement
  • Environment & Resilience
  • Rights & Special Needs
  • Awareness & Empowerment
  • Integrated Development
  • Disaster Recovery

Innovation & Sustainability

  • Climate Resillent Housing
  • Climate Resillent Agriculture
  • Climate Resillent Livelihood

Mukti Community Bussinesses

  • Mukti Fresh
  • Mukti Green
  • Mukti Kitchen
  • Mukti Crafts

Resources

  • Annual Reports
  • Awards
  • Accreditation
  • Testimonials
  • Mukti in News
  • Mukti Barta Newsletter
  • Photo Gallery
  • Mukti Path Youtube Channel
  • Mukti Youtube Channel
Footer Logo

©2025 Maintained by Mukti

  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer