God's will or ecological disaster? Mexico takes aim at Mennonite
deforestation
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[July 12, 2022]
By Cassandra Garrison
VALLE NUEVO, Mexico (Reuters) - The largest
tropical forest in North America yields to perfect rows of corn and soy.
Light-haired women with blue eyes in wide-brimmed hats bump down a dirt
road in a horse and buggy, past simple brick homes and a whitewashed
schoolhouse: A Mennonite community in southern Mexico.
Here, in the state of Campeche on the Yucatan Peninsula at the northern
edge of the Maya Forest, the Mennonites say they live to traditional
pacifist values and that expanding farms to provide a simple life for
their families is the will of God.
In the eyes of ecologists and now the Mexican government, which once
welcomed their agricultural prowess, the Mennonites' farms are an
environmental disaster rapidly razing the jungle, one of the continent's
biggest carbon sinks and a home to endangered jaguars.
Smaller only than the Amazon, the Maya Forest is shrinking annually by
an area the size of Dallas, according to Global Forest Watch, a
non-profit organisation that monitors deforestation.
The government of President Andres Manuel Lopez is now pressuring the
Mennonites to shift to more sustainable practices, but despite a deal
between some Mennonite settlements and the government, ongoing land
clearance was visible in two villages visited by Reuters in February and
May.
Farmers such as Isaak Dyck Thiessen, a leader in the Mennonite
settlement of Chavi, are finding it hard to adjust.
"Our people just want to be left in peace," he said, standing on a
shaded doorstep to escape the unforgiving afternoon sun. Beyond his neat
farm rose the green wall of the rainforest.
In search of land and isolation, Mennonites – for whom agricultural toil
is a core tenet of their Christian faith – grew in numbers and expanded
into remote parts of Mexico after first arriving from Canada in the
early 20th Century.
Despite shunning electricity and other modern amenities away from work,
their farming has evolved to include bulldozers and chainsaws as well as
tractors and harvesters.
In Campeche, where Mennonites arrived in the 1980s, around 8,000 sq km
of forest, nearly a fifth of the state's tree cover, has been lost in
the last 20 years, with 2020 the worst on record, according to Global
Forest Watch.
Groups including palm oil farmers and cattle ranchers also engage in
widespread land clearance. Data on how much deforestation is driven by
Mennonite settlers and how much by other groups is not readily
available.
One 2017 study, led by Mexico's Universidad Veracruzana, found that
property owned by Mennonites in Campeche had rates of deforestation four
times higher than non-Mennonite properties.
The clearance contrasts with the traditions of indigenous farmers who
have rotated corn and harvested forest products such as honey and
natural rubber since Maya cities dominated the jungle from the Yucatan
to El Salvador.
Itself under international pressure to pursue a greener agenda, in
August the government persuaded some Campeche Mennonite settlements to
sign an agreement to stop deforesting land.
Not all the communities signed up.
FIRE AND SAWS
On the edge of the remote village of Valle Nuevo, Reuters journalists
witnessed farmers clearing jungle and setting fires to prepare for
planting.
Jacob Harder, Jr., a Mennonite school teacher in Valle Nuevo, said the
agreement had not made an impact on how Valle Nuevo approaches
agriculture.
"We haven't changed anything," Harder said.
Leader Dyck Thiessen and a lawyer representing some communities and
farmers said Mennonites, who take a pacifist approach to conflict, felt
attacked and scapegoated by the government's efforts.
Jose Uriel Reyna Tecua, the lawyer, said they were unfairly blamed while
the government pays less attention to others that deforest.
At one meeting last year, Agustin Avila, a senior official at the
federal environment ministry, warned villagers the military could be
brought to the area to prevent deforestation if the communities did not
change their ways, Reyna Tecua said.
"That was the direct threat," Reyna Tecua said.
In response to a Reuters question about Avila's alleged comments, the
environment ministry denied any mention of using the military, saying
the government operated on the basis of dialogue.
Carlos Tucuch, head of the Campeche office of Mexico's National Forestry
Commission (CONAFOR), told Reuters the government was not singling out
the Mennonites and was also tackling other causes of deforestation.
THE MOVE SOUTH
Mennonites trace their roots to a group of Christian radicals in 16th
century Germany and surrounding areas that emerged in opposition to both
Roman Catholic doctrine and mainstream Protestant faiths during the
Reformation.
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A young man rolls a tractor wheel in the Mennonite community of El
Sabinal, Chihuahua, Mexico, April 22, 2021. REUTERS/Jose Luis
Gonzalez/File Photo
In the 1920s, a group of about 6,000 moved to
northern Mexico and established themselves as important crop
producers.
Still speaking Plautdietsch - a blend of Low German, Prussian
dialects and Dutch - a few thousand moved to the forests of Campeche
in the 1980s. They bought and leased tracts of jungle, some from
local Maya indigenous communities. More arrived in recent years as
climate change worsened drought in the north.
In 1992, legislation made it easier to develop, rent or sell
previously protected forest, increasing deforestation and the number
of farms in the state.
When Mexico opened up the use of genetically modified soy in the
2000s, Mennonites in Campeche embraced the crop and the use of the
glyphosate weedkiller Roundup, designed to work alongside GMO crops,
according to Edward Ellis, a researcher at Universidad Veracruzana.
The higher yields mean more income to support large families - 10
children is not unusual - and live a simple life supported by the
land, said historian Royden Loewen, explaining that settlements
often invest as much as 90% of profits to buy land.
At least five Mennonites who spoke to Reuters said they wanted to
acquire more land for their families.
While most Mexican Mennonites remain in the north, there are now
between 14,000 and 15,000 in Campeche spread over about 20
settlements.
"If God grants you, then you grow," said Dyck Thiessen, who has
attended government meetings but did not sign the agreement.
FOREST TOLL
The Mennonites largely maintain a tense peace with local indigenous
communities who serve as guardians to the surrounding forest but
also rent equipment from their new neighbors for their own land.
"With them, we began to have access to machinery. We see that it
gives us results," said Wilfredo Chicav, 56, a Maya farmer.
Such advances in agricultural efficiency have taken a toll on the
Maya Forest, home to fauna that includes up to 400 species of birds.
Its 100 species of mammal include the jaguar, at risk of extinction
in Mexico if its habitat shrinks, said the forestry commission's
Tucuch.
Between 2001 and 2018, the three states that comprise the forest in
Mexico lost about 15,000 sq km of tree cover, an area that would
cover much of El Salvador.
This is driving a shorter rainy season. Farmers used to schedule
planting for the first of May, now they often wait until July as
less forest implies less rainfall capture, leading to a drop in
moisture uptake in the air and a decrease in rain, Tucuch said
Campeche's Environment Secretary, Sandra Laffon, said the Mennonites
in the state did not always have the right paperwork to turn the
forest into farmland.
Reyna Tecua acknowledged problems with land purchases. Families
sometimes fall victim to deals based on a handshake and verbal word,
and sellers can take advantage by promising land that is not up for
legal sale in the first place, he said.
The agreement signed last year created a permanent working group
between the government and Mennonite communities to try to resolve
permitting, land ownership and administrative and criminal
complaints against them from local people including for illegal
logging.
Laffon said there were signs the agreement is having an impact.
Global Forest Watch data showed a decrease in deforestation in
Campeche in 2021, but said that could be the result of factors
including a lack of remaining land suitable for agriculture and
government incentive programs, which include a nationwide scheme
popular with Maya indigenous farmers that rewards tree planting.
Mennonite leaders are seeking a proposal from the government that
won't cut their production dramatically, Reyna Tecua said. A
government plan to phase out glyphosate by 2024 is the biggest worry
for many, he said.
However, lower production may be a price farmers, including
Mennonites, have to pay to protect the environment, Laffon said.
"We are at the point of having to sacrifice our position" as
Mexico's second largest grain producer "for a healthier Campeche,"
she said.
Lifting his cap to wipe sweat from his brow, Dyck Thiessen, the
Mennonite leader, doubted organic methods proposed by the government
would be successful. Tension with officials has stalled his plans to
acquire more land, he said.
Still, he has faith.
"If the government shuts us down," he says, "God will open for us."
(Reporting by Cassandra Garrison; additional reporting by Adrian
Virgen and Jose Luis Gonzalez; editing by Stephen Eisenhammer and
Frank Jack Daniel)
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