Scientist Daniel Hillel developed irrigation
system which revolutionized agricultural practices in more than 30 countries
Associated Press
An Israeli scientist
who has reached across political and ethnic boundaries to help dozens of
countries in the Middle East, Africa, Asia, and South America improve agriculture
with new irrigation methods will receive the World Food Prize, the prize's
foundation announced Tuesday.
Daniel Hillel, who is credited with
developing drip irrigation methods that conserve water while allowing food to
be grown in some of the world's driest climates, was named the winner of this
year's $250,000 prize during a ceremony in Washington. He will officially
receive the prize Oct. 18 during the annual World Food Prize Symposium in Iowa.
The system Hillel developed, called
micro-irrigation, carries water through narrow plastic pipes to plants, where
it drips or trickles onto the roots. It has revolutionized agricultural
practices in more than 30 countries over the past 50 to 60 years, helping
thousands of farmers, said World Food Prize Foundation President Kenneth Quinn.
The World Food Prize, which honors efforts to
fight global hunger, was created by Norman Borlaug, the winner of the 1970
Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to increase food production in developing
nations with the use of hybrid crops. He died in 2009.
Quinn noted that several of the letters
supporting Hillel's nomination came from individuals and institutions in Egypt,
Jordan and the United Arab Emirates.
"He's able to reach across the
intercultural gap with this agricultural achievement in order to address that
problem that they have in common about how to lift people out of poverty and
reduce hunger by working together," Quinn said. "In an area of the
world and in lands where the divides (whether they be ethnic, political,
religious, or diplomatic) seem so great, here is a man who by devoting his life
to this peaceful development has sought to bridge those gaps."
Hillel told The Associated Press in a phone
interview from Israel that managing natural resources, respecting ecosystems,
and living in an environmentally sustainable manner transcends boundaries.
"I'm a great believer in international
cooperation, and I've devoted much of my career to it," he said. "I
believe in peace. I'm a passionate believer in peace rather than rivalry,
enmity and destruction."
Hillel, 81, was born in Los Angeles, but
after his father died, he moved at age 1 in 1931 with his family to Palestine,
which became the state of Israel in 1948.
At age 9, he was sent to live in a rural,
communal settlement known as a kibbutz, where he learned farming practices and
gained a respect for the land. After earning undergraduate and graduate degrees
in the United States, he returned to Israel in 1951 and joined the Ministry of
Agriculture, where he helped create the first map of the country's soil and
water resources.
Within a year, he joined a group of settlers
who were dedicated to creating a viable agricultural community in the Negev
Desert highlands in southern Israel, where water was scarce. Working with those
farmers allowed him to develop and refine his ideas on micro-irrigation, he
said.
For thousands of years in the Middle East,
irrigation involved diverting large quantities of water from rivers, trapping
it in basins and using it to soak farmland. The soil would then gradually dry
out. It was an inefficient method of growing crops, Hillel said.
The availability of inexpensive, small
plastic pipes after World War II created the possibility of moving water to
crops in a more continuous fashion. The pipes could be perforated to allow
water to drip from small holes down to the roots of plants, Hillel said. In
time, fertilizer was added to the water.
"With a little bit of water, you'd get a
much better crop," Hillel said. "This was a great innovation. I was
in on the ground floor of this. I can't say that I was the inventor of it, but
I was very active on the early stages of it and developing the philosophy of
it."
David Ben-Gurion, the founder and first prime
minister of Israel, visited the farm and was so impressed he asked Hillel to
take his ideas to Asia, Africa and South America. Hillel said he's visited as
many as 40 different countries during his career.
"We need to learn how to manage land so
that it will not degrade and do it efficiently. At the same time, we must
maintain natural ecosystems without encroaching upon them without excessive
deforestation and destruction of biodiversity," he said. "All of that
is a great concern to me, and I'm devoting my career to it."
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