Maria Aguiar's blog
Rep. Kucinich Urges Diplomatic Push to End Gaza Siege
By Maria Aguiar
December 4th, 2008
We salute Representative Dennis Kucinich for his compassionate and courageous letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice asking her to use her influence to press the Israeli government to honor international law and end the blockade against Gaza. (Click the link below to read his letter.)
Opponents challenge U.S./Mexico border wall 19 years after Berlin Wall falls
By Maria Aguiar
November 19th, 2008
For several years Grassroots International has had a collegial relationship with Carlos Marentes of the Sin Fronteras Border Agricultural Workers Project in El Paso, Texas. Carlos is also a leader of the Via Campesina - North American Region and chair of the Via Campesina's international commission on Migrations and Rural Workers. The Via Campesina understands that most migration is a consequence of the corporate-led global trade model that has exacerbated rural impoverishment in many already poor countries.
Will Jatropha Invade Mozambique: Via Campesina Confronts The Global Agrofuel Industrial Complex
By Maria Aguiar
November 12th, 2008

Recently I returned from the Via Campeisna's Vth International Conference in Mozambique, followed by brief visit with social justice organizations in South Africa. Also in Mozambique, as delegate to the Via Campesina Conference, was Grassroots International colleague John Peck of the Family Farm Defenders and the National Family Farm Coalition. John wrote the article below just days after hearing the President of Mozambique, Armando Emilio Guebuza, address the Via Campesina Assembly. In his address, Guebuza unfortunately noted that his government would be supporting the expansion of jatropha plantations for agrofuels production.
Food Riots, Food Rights, a Fast, and a Corporate Agribusiness Campaign: A Global People's State of Emergency Declared!
By Maria Aguiar
May 23rd, 2008
Food Riots and a Fast
I have had the privilege of accompanying some of the largest and most dynamic social movements in Latin America over the course of my work at Grassroots International. In early 2001, we struggled with how to share the news of the agrarian reform and land rights struggles of our partners in Brazil and other Latin American and Caribbean countries in ways that would resonate with folks here in the United States. What we came up with back then was to connect land rights with food rights.
More recently the right to food has been the daily bread of the news media as the sharp increase in food prices have resulted in food riots in Africa, Asia and Latin America. In the US, the working poor are suffering hunger in silent resignation.
The Best-Paved Road in Haiti
By Maria Aguiar
April 1st, 2008
The road to Jacmel is paved with good intentions - in fact, it is the best-paved road in all of Haiti. I was told that the road was built by France as a friendship gift to Haiti, but Haitians don't see it as enough repayment for all that France has taken from Haiti since colonial times. Centuries ago, when France herded African slaves to Haiti to work in the sugar cane plantations, they filled the slave ships returning to France with Haiti's precious tropical timber. Thus began Haiti's deforestation, from which it has never recovered.
Blue Helmets in Haiti: Reminders of Unmet Needs
By Maria Aguiar
March 26th, 2008
Hello from Port au Prince! I've just returned to Haiti for the first time since May 2004 and wanted to share my impressions with you.
Is Corn Leading Us Towards Social Change or Ecological Disaster?
By Maria Aguiar
March 11th, 2008
This recent article by our friend and colleague George Naylor -- an Iowa corn farmer and the outgoing president of the National Family Farm Coalition (NFFC) -- speaks to all the reasons why we need to fight for Food Sovereignty and against huge agribusinesses here in the United States today!
Take a look and let us know what you think.
Rural Haiti Has Rights Too!
By Maria Aguiar
November 14th, 2007
This week we received a letter from Chavannes Jean Baptiste, Executive Secretary of the Peasant Movement of Papaye, one of Grassroots International's partners in Haiti. His letter highlights the root causes of the ongoing neglect of rural communities in Haiti and the devastation in the countryside due to recent floods. Please read his words below:
Women of Via Campesina Brazil in Honor of International Women's Day Occupy a Cargill-owned Sugar Mill in Sao Paulo
By Maria Aguiar
March 8th, 2007
Grassroots International has received this report from our partners in Brazil. Part of a week-long series of actions honoring International Women's Day and protesting the upcoming visit of President Bush, the women of Via Campesina Brazil and the MST have occupied a sugar mill in the state of Sao Paulo that was recently purchased by Cargill - one of the five largest agricultural transational corporations in the world.
Full Tanks at the Cost of Empty Stomachs:The Expansion of the Sugarcane Industry in Latin America
By Maria Aguiar
March 7th, 2007
During the last week of February 2007, Grassroots International's partner Rede Social or Social Justice Network of Brazil hosted a Latin American conference on the expansion of the intensive cultivation of sugar cane for biofuel throughout Latin America. Rede hosted delegates from various countries where sugar cane monocultivation is expanding as demand for bio fuels grows. Read the final declaration from the Latin American groups represented:


