Yacouba Sawadogo, African Farmer Who Held Back the Desert, Dies at 77 - The New York Times
Yacouba Sawadogo, African Farmer Who Held Back the Desert, Dies at 77 - The New York Times

Yacouba Sawadogo, African Farmer Who Held Back the Desert, Dies at 77

He took barren and dry lands and turned them into incredible forests. People thought he was insane as they fled dying villiages. They burned his forests. He replanted his forests and tripled his crop yields, becoming a hero to farmers all over.
Man optimized the tradition to better serve everyone's needs. It may sound obvious for us, but fundamental changes like that require flexibility and courage many lack. No wonder he cited that no one talked to him and called him a madman for working on something equivalent to what Trek's or Warhammer's warp tech could be to us.
I feel like that is not obvious. He used nature as his tools in new ways. Actually improving soil quality is not easy. (Dumping a bunch of nitrogen fertilizer on it doesn't count, i'm sorry to say.)
I'm not an agriculture laborer, so I'm ignorant in how it works. Are his ways revolutionary not only to his nation, but to the world too? From the article I thought it was more about him being a tough bastard who ignored the dogma, did the things he discovered as working (that we already know), to the result achieved by his relentless work in these conditions everyone gave up in.