The Green Sentinels of Senegal: How the Women of Popenguine Reclaimed the Coast
The Green Sentinels of Senegal: How the Women of Popenguine Reclaimed the Coast In the late 1980s, the coastal village of Popenguine, nestled along Senegal’s Petite Côte, faced an environmental death sentence. Deforestation had stripped the hills bare, the soil was turning to dust, and the local wildlife had vanished. While many saw a lost cause, a group of 119 local women saw an opportunity for a revolution. Today, that small spark has grown into the Coalition of Popenguine Women for the Protection of Nature (RFPPN) , a collective of over 1,500 women who have transformed a barren landscape into a thriving, green sanctuary. This is not just a story of farming; it is a masterclass in community-led ecological restoration and economic defiance. Healing the Earth: Ancient Wisdom Meets Modern Ecology The success of the Popenguine project lies in the women’s refusal to use expensive, destructive chemical fertilizers. Instead, they have revived and refined agro-ecological techni...