Malawians dare to hope in face of David-Goliath climate struggle

There is a saying in Malawi that if children eat from the fig tree, their parents are the ones who will get sick.

It echoes Malawi’s own fight against climate change – it has not brought about the problem but is suffering the consequences.

A small nation not much bigger than Ireland but with four times its population, Malawi has experienced devastating floods, cyclones and droughts that lead to spells of hunger.

Two deadly cyclones – Freddy in 2023 and Idai in 2019 – devastated Malawi communities while five of the country’s worst floods have been in the past 10 years.

Children in the regions around Lake Chilwa in the Machinga district of Malawi (Brian Lawless/PA)

The Malawian government is grappling with multi-billion US dollars worth of damage caused by relentless disasters that it cannot afford to pay.

It has estimated the cost of repairs caused by Cyclone Freddy alone at 680 million US dollars (£539 million).

These extreme weather events keep coming despite the average Malawi citizen emitting just 0.1 tonnes of carbon a year, compared to 6.8 tonnes of carbon per Irish citizen and 4.6 per person in the UK as of 2020.

Yet, in a very human response that may sound familiar to Irish people, a mixture of community and faith keeps Malawians going.

Women wash clothes in a river in the Machinga region of Malawi (Brian Lawless/PA)

Along every stretch of russet dirt track and pot-holed major road, people are busy: women walk together balancing blue buckets of grain on their heads, boys herd cattle, teenagers sell piled fruits on plates.

An elderly man chews on sugarcane as he transports a stack more on a bicycle he wheels alongside him.

When asked if people retire in Malawi, the reply was: “If you stop working, you stop eating.”

Farmer Simeon Kauinga, 40, with some of his maize crop in the Balaka district of Malawi (Brian Lawless/PA)

He said his family regularly went hungry as crops failed in his area.

After taking part in a farmer training project, he has diversified his crops, uses organic fertiliser from old crops and has changed his technique to help preserve moisture in his fields.

“As much as we are now still being affected by the dry spells, the survival rate of our crops have improved,” he said, speaking through an interpreter.

“My hopes in the future of my children are reaffirmed because I believe through these methods of farming I will be able to sustain my fields.”

Women sing and dance in the village of Manduwasa in the Machinga region of Malawi (Brian Lawless/PA)

They sing about the presence of visitors giving them power and that when other villages heard about their arrival they got malaria they were so sick with jealousy.

They sing because a visit from foreigners from an island called Ireland who have an interest in their plight is a sign of hope.

“We see hope, even when others don’t see hope,” Phillip Nyasulu, Trocaire Malawi’s climate justice and disaster risk management officer, told PA.

Phillip Nyasulu, Trocaire Malawi’s climate justice and disaster risk management officer (Brian Lawless/PA)

“This is why everyone is happy, because we have hope.

“Personally, I would be surprised if I was going to some of the developed countries and they were in the situation that we are … trying to have a meeting with them while they’re facing the impact.

“I don’t think they would be dancing. I don’t think they would be smiling. Maybe we don’t share the same belief that a problem shared is half resolved.”

It brings to mind the Irish language saying ‘ar scath a cheile a mhaireann na daoine’ – people survive by living under each other’s shelter.

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