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[insects chirping]
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[Aurelia speaking in Spanish]
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[classical piano music]
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[Julián speaking in Spanish]
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[woman speaking in Spanish]
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- We have guests from Guatemala.
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This is their seed.
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See how it's grown so big in this climate
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that's so different
from where it came from.
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As we look at climate change,
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it's a plant that it's so healthy
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and that can adapt to so many
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different places and conditions.
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[Aurelia speaking in Spanish]
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[upbeat electronic music]
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- [Speaker 1] The way we farm today
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will not sustain human
civilization as we know it.
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- [Speaker 2] There's
not gonna be enough water
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and there's not gonna be enough land.
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- [Speaker 1] We are
never going to replace
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traditional agriculture,
but we sure can innovate.
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- [Speaker 3] We can learn
how to at least pivot
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and to work with this changing world.
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[music continues]
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[insects chirping]
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[gentle acoustic guitar music]
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[rooster crows]
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- You can plant the amaranth,
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harvest the amaranth, cook the amaranth,
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and know nothing about the
history of the amaranth.
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When I got to Rabinal,
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I was introduced to Farmer-to-Farmer,
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which is a methodology for farming.
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So the idea is that one
farmer teaches another farmer,
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and they're farmers from
the similar circumstances
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that speak the same language.
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So it's a different model
than having agronomists
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coming and saying,
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"Oh, you should do this
and that to your field."
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[birds chirping]
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[Julián speaking in Spanish]
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- The amazing thing about amaranth
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is that it's a complete protein.
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It's a great plant for maintaining health.
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It doesn't need a ton of
special attention to it.
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And then it also tells and
holds a story inside of it
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of the disconnection and
the genocide of people.
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[pensive instrumental music]
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[man speaking in Spanish]
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- We started Qachuu Aloom with 12 people.
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They began to see that by using
these sustainable practices,
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by building compost, by using cover crops,
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that they could have healthy gardens.
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[Aurelia speaking in Spanish]
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[gentle piano music]
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[woman speaking in Spanish]
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- There's a way of using language to say
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that this plant is not important.
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And one of the ways that amaranth is known
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in the United States is pigweed.
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[dramatic musical flourish]
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- You may have Palmer pigweed and you say,
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"Oh, there's nothing I can do about this,
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"I can't stop this weed."
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Yes, you can!
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- In these giant GMO corn fields
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that we have across the country,
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here is these wild amaranths
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that come up like they always have,
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accompanying the corn in the fields.
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But it's seen as this massive pest
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in industrial agriculture.
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[tense instrumental music]
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[woman speaking in Spanish]
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- [Sarah] First, I ask permission
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from the great spirit of the sun.
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[speaking in Spanish]
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- [Sarah] We also ask permission
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from the direction of the water.
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[speaking in Spanish]
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- [Sarah] We also ask permission
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from where the wind comes from.
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And if everybody brings
just one seed home today,
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we can multiply this plant
in every one of your gardens.
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- [Woman] Yay!
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[crowd chuckles and applauds]
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[Julián speaking in Spanish]
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- [Sarah] When you see that the birds
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are flying on top of the flowers.
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[speaking in Spanish]
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- [Sarah] That's the sign that amaranth
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is ready to be harvested.
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[Julián speaking in Spanish]
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- We're gonna harvest just
one flower per person.
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[Julián speaking in Spanish]
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- [Sarah] You just do it like this.
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So if you'd like to join
us in harvesting one.
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[gentle instrumental music]
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So you can sit around the cloth.
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Let's clean on top of that.
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- [Child] Can you eat
all the amaranth leaves?
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- You can eat all amaranth
leaves when they're younger,
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but you wouldn't want to eat
these leaves because right now
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the plant is sending all of its energy
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up into its flower to produce seed.
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The best way I can describe
working with amaranth
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is that it feels good, it feels happy.
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There's a lot of hope in this seed
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that can grow in so
many different climates.
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[Julián speaking in Spanish]
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- We might want to think that the solution
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to climate change, it's
gonna be this top-down thing
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where, like, someone comes
up with a great idea.
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But really, we've had kind
of the solution all along.
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The solution is already there.
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It's within nature,
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it's within the seeds,
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and we just need to learn how to listen.
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[gentle piano music]
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