An ostrich farm near the West Bank city of Bethlehem on February 3, 2015. Abu Tir's ostrich farm is one of a growing number of ventures in Palestinian agriculture that seek to fill gaps in the market, both for business purposes and to cut reliance on Israel for food. AFP Photo
An ostrich farm near the West Bank city of Bethlehem on February 3, 2015. Abu Tir's ostrich farm is one of a growing number of ventures in Palestinian agriculture that seek to fill gaps in the market,Show more

Can Palestinian ostrich farming help beat Israeli occupation?



DAR SALAH, Palestinian Territories // The small farm in the southern West Bank seems unremarkable, but for one thing. Instead of the sheep traditional to the area, its livestock are ostriches.

Farmer Abdelrahman Abu Tir, 50, whose name coincidentally translates as “father of the bird”, has for the last three years been farming ostriches for meat in a project unique in the Palestinian Territories.

In another corner of the West Bank in Jericho, a separate group of agricultural entrepreneurs have begun the first Palestinian mushroom farm since Israel occupied the territories in 1967.

The two projects are among a growing number of ventures in Palestinian agriculture that seek to fill gaps in the market, both for business purposes and to cut reliance on the Jewish state for food.

Picking at tufts of coarse grass, Abu Tir’s giant birds — normally spotted on the plains of Africa — look out of place in the village of Dar Salah, where he keeps 200 of them on around two hectares of land.

He said the idea for the farm came to him when Israel banned ostrich farming several years ago because it considers the animals a “protected wild species”.

“I began buying the ostriches from Israeli farms when I saw that those farms were being closed” Abu Tir said.

Since then he has been selling meat, feathers and eggs to Palestinian and Israeli buyers, but also to customers in the Gulf and Jordan.

Given ostrich meat is not a common delicacy among Israelis or Palestinians, for now Abu Tir sells only on demand, but he is optimistic the business can grow.

“It will take a while for the idea of eating ostrich to gain traction in the local market. For Palestinians it’s a strange meat and it’s also fairly expensive,” he said.

“Even turkey took a while to catch on. Palestinians prefer to eat fattier meat such as lamb.”

Abu Tir has an arsenal of arguments to promote his product.

“Ostrich meat is better for your health, and the way they are farmed is much less damaging to the environment than with sheep or cattle,” he said.

Confident his business will grow, Abu Tir is negotiating with the Palestinian agriculture ministry to expand the farm.

“I’d like to have maybe 1,000 or 2,000 ostriches within the next two years, and eventually 10,000.”

Palestinian agriculture has been suffering, with its share of GDP dropping from 77 per cent 20 years ago to just five per cent today, largely because of Israel’s control of areas of the West Bank through settlements and accompanying restrictions on access for Palestinian farmers.

It is unclear to what extent ostrich farming can help a revival, but another venture in Jericho in the Jordan Valley is making inroads.

A group of young Palestinians are growing and selling the “first 100 per cent Palestinian mushroom”, with packets appearing in supermarkets in the Palestinian administrative centre Ramallah.

Mushrooms have long been a part of local cuisine, but under the occupation Palestinians have come to rely on produce from Israeli farms, often located on settlements.

Four young Palestinian high-tech workers — Mahmud Kahil, Samir Khreisheh, Tayeb Aql and Wadie Nassar — quit their jobs so they could pursue the “Amoro” project, named after the type of mushroom they grow.

Based since October at a farm in Jericho, they now produce some four or five tonnes of mushrooms every month, which sell at an average of $2 for 250 grams, against $2.50 for Israeli mushrooms.

They said their project is undercutting Israeli producers and helps give consumers more of a chance to boycott Israeli products.

“Ramallah itself consumes 2.5 to 3 tonnes of mushrooms each month,” Kahil said.

“The goal is to sell 15 tonnes per month” eventually expanding sales to the Gaza Strip and neighbouring countries, he said.

* Agence France-Presse

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On Instagram: @WithHopeUAE

Although social media can be harmful to our mental health, paradoxically, one of the antidotes comes with the many social-media accounts devoted to normalising mental-health struggles. With Hope UAE is one of them.
The group, which has about 3,600 followers, was started three years ago by five Emirati women to address the stigma surrounding the subject. Via Instagram, the group recently began featuring personal accounts by Emiratis. The posts are written under the hashtag #mymindmatters, along with a black-and-white photo of the subject holding the group’s signature red balloon.
“Depression is ugly,” says one of the users, Amani. “It paints everything around me and everything in me.”
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In addition to With Hope UAE’s frank social-media presence, the group holds talks and workshops in Dubai. “Change takes time,” Reem Al Ali, vice chairman and a founding member of With Hope UAE, told The National earlier this year. “It won’t happen overnight, and it will take persistent and passionate people to bring about this change.”