From EuroGBC.com
T hirty  devotees from ISKCON farms all over Europe attended the fourth  annual  ISKCON European Farm Conference from May 10th through 12th this  year,  hoping to gain inspiration as well as practical advice for their   various rural projects.
hirty  devotees from ISKCON farms all over Europe attended the fourth  annual  ISKCON European Farm Conference from May 10th through 12th this  year,  hoping to gain inspiration as well as practical advice for their   various rural projects.
 Devotees hailed from farms in England, Sweden, Czech, Slovakia, New   Mayapur in France, and Hungary. Some wanted to establish ox programs,   some were developing businesses based on selling vegetables and other   natural products, and some simply wanted to learn more about the   principles of agriculture and sustainable living.
 While previous farm conferences were held in Prabhupadadesa,   Northeast Italy, and New Vraja Dhama, Hungary, this year’s was hosted by   Bhaktivedanta Manor, England.
 “The Manor has probably the second most active farm in ISKCON, after   New Vraja Dhama,” says conference organizer Shyamasundara Dasa, who  also  serves as ISKCON’s European Minister for Cow Protection and   Agriculture, and has overseen cow protection at the Manor since 1992.
 “We have fifty-six cows, milk thirteen of them a day by hand, and   produce about 42,000 litres of milk a year,” he continues. “We also have   a very active ox-working program, with ten working oxen that logged in   about 3,000 ‘ox hours’ last year—as a comparison, New Vraja Dhama,  which  has a similar-sized herd, logged in 4,200 ox hours, while the  next  largest farm in ISKCON Europe, New Mayapur, logged in about 480 ox   hours.”
  Eight of Bhaktivedanta Manor’s 100 acres of farming land—mainly   grazing pastures—are ploughed by oxen, and yield enough vegetables for   the Deity’s kitchen. While the farm has a long way to go to provide all   the vegetables needed by the temple—which feeds 2,000 people each   week—it’s still an impressive effort. And there are future plans to   harness the strength of the ox in another way, with an ox-powered mill   expected to start providing energy to the community within the next few   months.
 It was in the setting of this inspired agricultural community that   devotees from all over Europe attempted to learn new skills and get   encouragement to boost their own efforts.
 “On each of the three days of the conference, we’d start at 10am, and   have four or five different presentations before lunch,” says   Shyamasundara. “Some related to different projects going on around   Europe, but many were concerned with the Manor, since there’s a lot   going on here.”
 Japa Yajna Dasa gave a presentation about the Manor’s care farm   program, established with the Lotus Trust, a parallel charity to ISKCON.   Created in connection with government care organizations, it arranges   for people with special needs to get exercise, fresh air, good company   and fulfilling work by coming to the Manor and working on its farm.
 Japa Yajna also spoke about a recently established program wherein   people serving a non-custodial sentence can do the community service   required of them at the Manor’s farm and Goshala. He also explained how   other farms around Europe could set up similar programs if they wished.
  “Another program that can be set up to draw volunteer workers to our   farms is WWOOF—or Worldwide Opportunities on Organic Farms,” says   Shyamasundara. “Prabhupada-Prana, the temple president of Karuna Bhavan   in Scotland, which has had quite a lot of success with the program,  gave  a presentation on it.”
 WWOOF doesn’t provide financial compensation for work, but instead   gives volunteers—often traveling students—food and accommodation in   return for learning and an experience of the organic, sustainable   lifestyle. As well as explaining how devotees could set this program up   at their own farms, Prabhupada-
Prana gave another presentation on natural energy technologies being   used at Karuna Bhavan, such as wind turbines and biomass burners.
 Meanwhile on the subject of cow protection, Sita Rama Dasa, one of   the senior managers at Bhaktivedanta Manor, described the Ahimsa Milk   Initiative, another project executed along with the Lotus Trust charity.
 “It’s a very bold initiative, considered controversial by some,”   Shayamasundara says. “He has created a partnership with a conventional   farmer who has agreed to enter a certain number of his cows into a   protected system, so that they’ll be taken care of by the Ahimsa project   once they’re finished milking. In the meantime, their milk will be  sold  as Ahimsa milk. Sita-Rama has also created partnerships with a   production company and a delivery company, so that the cruelty-free milk   can be delivered weekly by subscription to devotees and cow-lovers   around North London. It’s a program that takes some compromises, but   saves a lot of cows.”
 Presentations were also given on a community-centered lifestyle and   the use of oxen by devotees from New Mayapur and Hungary. Dhanesvara   Dasa, a popular speaker on the Varnashrama lifestyle and author of   Spritiual Economics, gave a thought-provoking talk about Vedic culture   and the importance of living on the land.
 Afternoons during the conference were devoted to practical learning on the Manor’s farm, an extremely important element.
 “On the first day, I gave a tour of the Goshala, explaining in great   detail how we run the farm and take care of the cows and calves,” says   Shyamasundara. “I explained how the cows are milked, and how the milk  is  tested and properly sterilized according to local health  regulations. I  also described how the calves are cared for duing the  different cycles  of their lives. For the first two weeks, the calf  stays with its mother  and drinks her milk, and we take the surplus.  After that, the cow and  calf are put in separate pens, but the calf  still has access to its  mother at milking times until it’s about six  months old.”
 
Shyamasundara also showed the conference attendees the cow ‘sick   bay,’ equipped with a crane for lifting old cows or oxen that needed   medical attention. He demonstrated an Amish-invented contraption that   enabled five oxen to pull one load by harnessing them all to one unit.   And he explained how the roof of the Goshala building collected rain   water which was then used to wash the cows down and to provide them with   drinking water.
 The next afternoon, workshops were given on how to run a dairy, how to make a yoke, and how to drive oxen.
 “A lot of the participants had never driven oxen before, so they were   given an apportunity to actually drive the ox carts and use the plows,   and to see how simple it is,” Shyamasundara says. “We also showed them   the Manor’s technique of harnessing the bulls by the nose, and  explained  the benefits of it.”
 The day concluded with a tour of the polytunnels where vegetables   were grown, wherein Krishna Chaitanya Dasa showed attendees the various   crops, the tools, and the facilities used for special needs groups in   the “care farm” project.
 “On the final afternoon, Uddhava and Janakula gave us a tour of both   the formal flower gardens and those in which we grow flowers for the   Deities, and explained how we grow them,” says Shyamasundara. “We then   concluded the conference, with everyone expressing their appreciation   for it, and the enthusiasm it gave them. They were all chomping at the   bit to get back on their farms!”
 Shyamasundara explains that the annual Farm Conference is very   practical—it gives devotees a chance to see what people on other farms   are doing, and the knowledge to implement new initiatives on their own   farms. But it’s also a very important event for rejuvenating devotee   farmers, for leaving them feeling that their project is important and an   essential part of the ISKCON mission. For, unfortunately, it seems  that  they don’t get that inspiration much elsewhere.
 “Recently, when I did a tour of all the European farms, it became   clear that temples are not supporting agriculture or cow protection—and   ISKCON leaders are not talking about their importance anymore,”   Shyamasundara says.
 He explains that this is because of an unrealistic expectation of   farms, which also stunts the growth of farm projects in ISKCON.
 “Leaders are not getting behind farms because they’re trapped in the   idea of farmers living in mud huts and not earning anything from their   work,” he says.
 “Even though you can’t have farming in today’s times unless people   can make a living from it. And temples are not buying the food that   ISKCON farms produce, because it’s double or triple the price they’d pay   in supermarkets, and comes with some dirt and insects on it, some   natural elements. The same goes for milk from protected cows—it has a   naturally higher cost.
 “So farms can be very successful, and do wonderful preaching as they   are in Hungary—but only if ISKCON leaders accept the naturally higher   prices of protected-cow milk and homegrown food, and tell the temples to   buy it. It would also help if they spoke more about farms during their   regular preaching tours, which would support and energize the  farmers.”
 Until then, the ISKCON European Farm Conference will continue in its   job of inspiring and providing practical advice for farmers.
 Next year, the Conference will be held in New Vraja Mandala, Spain.   Shyamasundara hopes that gradually it will catch on beyond Europe as   well.
 “North America and India should have their own, too,” he says. “This   principle of farmers coming together and getting practical experience   and enthusiasm for their service is very important.”