JICA program helps Ifugao folks nurture rice terraces
>> Friday, January 31, 2014
By
Daniel Codamon
LAGAWE, Ifugao -- The province is a
beneficiary of the Human Resources Development Program for the Sustainable
Development of the Ifugao Rice Terraces funded by the Japan International
Cooperation Agency (JICA).
Akihiko Noshino of
JICA in a press conference at the provincial capitol here recently, bared this positive development for the Ifugao Rice Terraces which is inscribed in
the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
as a world heritage site and a Globally Important Agricultural Heritage
System (GIAHS) as advocated by the Food and Agriculture Organization.
The program also known
as the “Ifugao Satoyama Satoumi Meister Training Program” will be implemented
by the Kanasawa University (KU) of Japan in collaboration with the University
of the Philippines Open University (UPOU) of Los Banos, Laguna, the Ifugao State University (IFSU and the Ifugao Government (IG).
This is intended to
nurture and develop the young generations of Ifugao in the three pilot
GIAHS areas of the municipalities of
Banaue, Hungduan and Mayoyao.
The
GIAHS promotes public understanding, awareness, national and international recognition
of Agricultural Heritage systems
Under the
project, the KU, UPOU, IFSU and the IG
will try to replicate the model to reactivate and sustain the development of
the rice terraces as a living cultural landscape by providing on-site skills
and training opportunities to the Ifugao youth using curriculum designed and
developed by the UPOU and the IFSU.
It also aims to address the threats and problems that the
rice terraces is currently facing such as landslides and outmigration of the
youth which contribute greatly to the deterioration and destruction of these
UNESCO-inscribed world heritage sites.
Activities involved in
the program are tailored to win back the interest of the young Ifugao
generation to their culture, rice terraces and mainstream as well the adaptive
management framework of GIAHS.
According to the
Deputy President of KU Koji Nakamura,
this training program succeeded in building the capacity of the young
generations of Noto Satoyama Satoumi, a GIAHS site in Japan which has been
challenged by the its decreasing and aging population.
He said that the
capability building is of prime importance as this will empower the
stakeholders of the rice terraces with both technical and leadership capacity
to sustain its landscape.
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