Mansukhbhai Patel, a farmer with a 10th-grade education, has revolutionized the cotton industry in the western Indian state of
Mr. Patel, a self-taught electrician and mechanic, began work on his machine in 1991, and sold some machines to local ginners in 1993. But the machines failed when a wire mesh plate broke. Mr. Patel refunded the money and continued to work on his invention.
Then in 1995, college student Hirendra Rawal put him in touch with Anil Gupta, who teaches at the Indian Institute of Management in Ahmedabad and whose Honey Bee Network seeks out tinkerers, mechanics, and self-taught scientists in villages across
Mr. Rawal was one of many scouts – academics, scientists, graduate students, farmers, and artisans who make a yearly journey of discovery called a shodhyatra to seek out traditional knowledge and share the inventions of others. Such scouts also discovered Amrutbhai Agrawat and his tilting bullock-cart, which spreads manure more efficiently on small fields; Mansukhbhai Jagani's modified motorcycle, which can till, weed, and sow; Kalpesh Gujjar's energy-saving seed-oil extractor; and Arvindbhai Patel's non-electric water chiller. All wanted to make their work easier.
"The student scouts are given a clear mandate," says Mr. Gupta. "Go from village to village and look for the oddballs, the crazy ones, the ones who do something different and don't follow set patterns, the ones with curiosity, who have come up with homegrown solutions for various problems.”
The inspiration for the Honey Bee Network came from Mr. Gupta’s realization, while working with farmers in
The Network led to the creation of the Society for Research and Initiatives for Sustainable Technologies and Institutions (Sristi) in 1993, and the Grassroots Innovation Augmentation Network (GIAN) in 1997, to take innovations forward. The State of
GIAN gave Mr. Patel $5,100 to start producing the cotton stripper commercially, and the first sales were made in 2000. In 2003, GIAN helped Mr. Patel obtain a
The ginners are equally pleased. Says Prabhubhai Thakkar, who owns six machines: "I used to produce only 400 to 500 bales of cotton, but now I produce 30,000 bales a year."
Five years ago, Mr. Gupta convinced the Indian government to set up the National Innovations Foundation, with an endowment of $4.6-million which supports and finances grassroots innovations. The foundation has so far documented 51,000 mechanical, technical, and herbal inventions and practices in more than 300 Indian districts.
This story was considerably abridged and adapted from a much longer story by Shailaja Neelakantan, entitled “Scouting for Homegrown Ingenuity: A unique academic network nurtures innovation among India’s poor”, which was published 30 Sept. 2005 in the Chronicle of Higher Education. Ms. Neelakantan is the South Asian correspondent for the Chronicle.
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