Article 6J74E How rice hidden by a woman fleeing slavery in the 1700s could help her descendants

How rice hidden by a woman fleeing slavery in the 1700s could help her descendants

by
Bram Ebus in Brokopondo
from Environment | The Guardian on (#6J74E)

Suriname's Saamaka Maroons still grow rice from seeds an ancestor escaping from a plantation carried in her hair. Now a gene bank seeks to widen use of the rare species to help fight the climate crisis

When enslaved Africans escaped the Surinamese plantations overseen by Dutch colonists from the 17th to the 19th century, several women ingeniously hid rice grains in their hair to grow when they found refuge deep in the Amazon rainforest. Now, centuries later, a gene bank is working to save Suriname's rare rice species while also preparing communities to be more resilient to the climate crisis.

In Suriname's hinterlands, near the town of Brokopondo, Albertina Adjako, a descendant of those Africans - who became known as Maroons - carefully walks in her flip-flops through her rice seedlings. We are worried because we had a long period of drought," she says, inspecting her plants.

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