A World Food Programme (WFP) construction project brings hope to smallholder farmers and boosts small agribusinesses in Lebanon’s Chouf.
Behind a table stacked with crates of fruit and vegetables,
sits 63-year-old farmer Ghazi. He talks about his dream of a bigger table, that
groans under the weight of jars of his homemade jams. He has had the dream of
mass-selling his produce for years, but hadn’t able to access his fields
without a huge trek. With age, that trek has become more troublesome, and
combined with unreliable irrigation, he’s had to put a dampener on his artisanal
ambitions and make do with the few crops he can harvest.
That all is history now after the completion of a WFP’s
construction project. Over months, Lebanese and Syrians have worked together to
construct agricultural roads with supporting walls, irrigation canals and water
reservoirs, all to help boost the local agricultural industry.
Ghazi and 84 Lebanese farmers, are all benefiting from the
project in Haret Jadal village, nestled in Lebanon’s verdant Chouf region.
“We had to carry all of our tools up the hill and all of the
produce down the hill. Can you imagine how long it took us to harvest the
crops?” he said letting out a frustrated laugh.
Only recently finished, the irrigation canals and the
reservoirs have already made a significant difference for farmers. “It wasn’t
just the tools — it was all the water too! What a hassle,” Ghazi recanted.
At some point he designed a network of pipes to push water
up the hill, but “that wasn’t practical at all” he explained.
Ghazi has a small shop downhill where he sells some of his
produce that are stacked on numerous shelves. It looks impressive but he
assured me that now he can better access and irrigate his fields, his dream of
tables in the middle of the shop are not far off. He assured me that they will
be stacked high with jars, bottles and boxes of his pickles, jams, juices and
olives.

“Can you imagine the potential!” he gestured inside the
room.
Thanks to funds from Germany’s Federal Ministry of Economic
Cooperation and Development (BMZ), Ghazi’s dream of a bustling shop is becoming
a reality.
Since 2018, WFP’s livelihood projects have included the
construction of 100 kilometers of agricultural roads and irrigation in Lebanon.
In addition, other livelihood project included the planting of 135,000 native
seedlings, helping to green the country. They are all designed with local
municipalities and aim to make WFP’s ambition of a #ZeroHunger world, a little
easier to reach.
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Written by Edward Johnson
Learn more about
WFP’s work in Lebanon.