Wednesday
Mar092016

My Peculiar Little Footnote to Apollo 11 By Howard E. Daniel

I wrote and published this item on Facebook on July 21, 2009, when the 40th anniversary of the first landing on the moon was triggering numerous reminiscences. The incident described here, I'm guessing, is a unique, if little-heralded, footnote to this landmark event in the history of our species.


All the attention to the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing on July 20, 1969, reminds me of my own peculiar little footnote to this historic event.

At the time, I was a Peace Corps volunteer living in the north-central Indian village of Rajnagar (rough translation: Kingston) where I was working, together with my colleague Jagdish Prasad Mishra, a "village level worker" (i.e., an agricultural extension agent), to help local farmers increase their wheat yields – a tiny, tiny part of the “green revolution” that eventually transformed India from a grain-importing nation to a grain exporter.

At home in the evenings, I followed the launch and the trip to the moon, listening to Voice of America broadcasts on my battery-powered shortwave radio (I had no electric power, or, for that matter, running water). The landing took place in the middle of the night – 1:47 a.m. on July 21 in India (corresponding to 4:17 p.m. Eastern time in the U.S.) – and I remember getting out of bed a little beforehand, so I could tune in and hear if all went well.

The next morning, when the astronauts actually began walking on the lunar surface, I had an appointment with one of the farmers I was working with, so I met him in his field and for several hours helped him dig and then hand-carry, in baskets, some dirt he was using to extend an elevated irrigation channel. I had mixed emotions – happy to be helping someone who was serious about the program, yet sorry to be missing an incredible moment in history. It was just as well, of course, since shortwave reception during daylight hours was always difficult (the moon walk, which took place in prime viewing time back home, began around 7 or 7:30 a.m. in India), and anyhow I was able to catch a bit of the lunar activity later that day and evening.

The footnote I mentioned at the outset took place perhaps a week or so later, after the astronauts had returned safely to earth. I had taken the bus into Chhatarpur, the “district town” (equivalent to a county seat in the U.S.), about 30 miles away, where I would often go to shop, stop in at the hospital (manned by American medical missionaries), meet my Peace Corps friend and colleague Tom Farrell (whose village was 30 miles away in another direction), and/or take care of some business or other at the district office of the Madhya Pradesh (state) Department of Agriculture, the government agency at whose invitation I was serving.

As I walked down Chhatarpur’s main shopping street that morning, a merchant beckoned me over to his stall. I didn’t know him personally, but since I’d been in the district almost a year at that point and had often walked down that street, he certainly would have known that this Hindi-speaking foreigner was an American. As I walked up to him, he smiled and congratulated me, as a representative of the United States, on the success of “Apollo Gyara” – Hindi for Apollo Eleven. And then he said, “It really is wonderful you were able to send men to the moon, of course, but it really is too bad you had to spend $24 billion to do it. Back in Vedic times (i.e., thousands of years ago, when the events recounted in the Hindu scriptures are said to have taken place), our sadhus (holy men) used to travel to the moon all the time. It didn’t cost them any money at all, and it didn’t take them four days to get there either.” He told me all this in great seriousness. I thanked him – and I’ve never forgotten the wonderful “postscript” he gave me. So today, 40 years later, I share it with you.

Wednesday
Mar092016

A Different Way to Achieve Immortality by Howard E. Daniel

A great story of how history, world geopolitics and culture unexpectedly came together in an Indian wheat field, by Howard Daniel, India RPCV 1968-1970

 

Sunday
Oct252015

Sharing Stories: Larry Rublee, India 55

I was in India 55 (village level food production) 1968-70, stationed in Tikamgarh District, MP. Randy Baxter, Jack Breen, and Rod Elkins were all in Tikamgarh District, though we were all about an hour’s bus ride apart from each other. I keep up with Randy and Jack. We’ve lost contact with Rod.

Munu Lal Tiwari (co-worker), Larry Rublee

India 55 was trained in Hemet, CA to introduce to local farmers to high-yielding varieties of Mexican wheat, developed by the Ford Foundation for arid climates. This was in support of India’s “green revolution”. Working with my agriculture extension co-worker (Munu Lal Tiwari) and the District Agriculture Department (my supervisor was Jai Dev Singh, Deputy Director of Agriculture), I realized that the farmers in my area were already using many of the practices we were there to promote. Farmers were planting high-yielding seed, requiring six times the amount of water over the older “dashi” seed. They were used to using bullock-driven buckets on a wheel to irrigate their fields. The new seeds required diesel pumps which were emptying the open wells in less than an hour and then recuperating over several days. Therefore, I decided to explore and implement a scheme to increase the water recuperation rate of the open wells. I spent my second year researching and writing proposals to US AID, Oxfam and other funding sources to buy the pneumatic drilling equipment for the project. We eventually got a demonstration set of equipment funded and after I left India, the District Agriculture Department implemented the scheme on a wider basis.

See more photos by clicking here.

Larry Rublee

October 23, 2015

Wednesday
Nov192014

January 2012 Trip to Friends of India Charities, By George Nepert

 

The Jan 2012 trip members: Jack Slattery, Cynthia Rogers, George & Brenda Nepert, their daughter Dale and Matt Sexton. Primary reason was to make FOI charity site visits. 

See the slides and information about the trip by clicking here.

Wednesday
Nov192014

The More Things Change, by Ray Myers

 

Ray Myers presents a story of how things do and don't change over time. Ray is a member of the Office of Educational Technology in the U.S. Department of Education. He was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Hubli in the state of Karnataka in the late 1960s.  In 2008, he had the chance to return to India, and he shares that story with us here.

His return was made possible in part by the efforts of the Deshpande Foundation, which is known for its work in innovation, entrepreneurship and international development.  Please take the time to learn more about their efforts at www.deshpandefoundation.org.