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SOYA--THE QUIET CONQUEST (Reprinted
from "Wise Traditions" Winter 2001 courtesy of www.westonaprice.org).
Today everyone, whether he wishes
it or not, whether living in an advanced or backward country,
is confronted by the soybean, although not visibly (apart from
the modish foods like tofu, soya milk, meat and sausage substitutes
and sauces). We may know that oil-cake from soya is needed for
intensive animal breeding, or that soya-lecithin has found wide
use. But to realize to what a degree the world economy - the
welfare of industrial nations as well as the survival of less
well-to-do countries - has become dependent on this plant, we
have to look at this more closely.
The soybean belongs to the family
of the legumes, together with peas, beans, clover, peanuts.
This family has an ability highly valued by the farmer, of binding
the nitrogen in the atmosphere in their root nodules (with the
help of bacteria). In China the soybean was planted for centuries
in the year preceding the crop-rotation proper. While nitrogen
is a support to the plants that follow, the plant itself serves
as animal fodder or green manure and its seeds as food for humans.
In the west the nitrogen function was largely taken over by
the clovers, etc. These plants foster milk-production but can
occasionally cost the life of a cow from bloat.
That legumes can fix nitrogen
in the soil, while other plants are dependent on it, places
them in a category by themselves, opposed to the rest of the
plant world. Their mode of growth differs markedly from other
plants. The latter hold up their blossoms and seeds to the sun
and cosmos the best they can. Growth then stops and the plant
dies after seeding. The legumes, however, blossoming and fruiting
in the leaf region, go on producing leaf and blossom alternatively
without a pause. Their blossoms form a kind of helmet containing
hollow spaces - a gesture of withholding, reminiscent of the
way animal organs form. Their germination is also characteristic.
Instead of the soya sending a vertical shoot to seek the free
air, a bean neck emerges, both ends of which stay in the soil
- both the root and cotyledon poles. The plant seems reluctant
to leave the earth. Many features in its growth remind us of
descriptions of the "animal-plants" on the "Old
Moon," of which Rudolf Steiner speaks in the Outline of
Occult Science.
The short period of time within
which germination of the soybean must take place (within four
months) is in striking contrast to the cereal plants. They concentrate
their fruiting on elevated stems, leaving their leaves behind
them to shrivel and die. The soybean's realm is the watery sphere
of the undines, while the grains ripen among the fiery salamanders.
With regard to the usual threefold nature of plants - earth-emprisoned
roots, rhythmically growing and breathing leaves, an independent
realm of color and scent in the blossom - the legumes seem only
two-fold due to an undifferentiated region of leaf and blossom.
Rudolf Steiner points out in the Agricultural Course how the
legumes embody a gesture of "taking" (characteristic
of the animal) while all other plants are "giving."
The plant world builds itself
in the main by virtue of the element carbon, while animal life
bases on the element calcium. This is the carrier of the life
of desire; from this derive inwardness and autonomy. Desires
belong to the soul and require stimulus from outside. The calcium
in the mineral world has need of nitrogen to maintain its vitality
and rouse its "appetites." Thus the legumes are by
their nature the allies of calcium and under its domination.
The family of legumes includes many
quite dangerous poisonous plants, others not undangerous. Even the
edible pulses must be prepared and eaten with care. More refined
cultures have made less and less use of these foods. In any case,
they are consumed mainly in the wintertime, when humans are more
independent of the cosmos and more concerned with themselves. What
dangers follow, if this most typical representative of the legume
family, the soybean, becomes the worldwide basis for food production?
It is enlightening to thumb through
a brochure that recommends the planting of soybeans -at present
highly subsidized by the European Union-and read the directions
given to farmers. They must first ensure the presence of soil bacteria,
if these originally Chinese plants are to reproduce their valuable
root nodules in western soils. The soy plant can't tolerate weeds
as neighbors. These must be removed at least three times a year
with suitable weed-killers (when plowing, in early spring and immediately
after planting). Under "competition" it sickens. This
anti-social bent is reflected on the economic level, as we shall
see. To avoid the danger of mould in damp weather, the harvest should
by-pass the farmer's barn and go directly to the processing plant.
There it can be dried and stored under optimum conditions.
The high protein content of this
plant is its chief attraction as a food. Protein is the "animal"
substance produced around the seed, where astral forces have been
most active. Much intelligence has been required to make this plant
consumable. First an industrial oil is pressed out, from which margarine
is made. It wasn't easy to find a use for the residual "oil-cake,"
for although animals eat it with relish, it has a growth-inhibiting
effect. Only when the substances responsible for this had been isolated
and removed could it become the basis for the mass-breeding of animals.
Pigs, chickens and cattle could be "produced" quicker
with this than with traditional forms of fodder.
The plant's relation to water is
the key. Water, allied to moon forces and calcium, fosters growth,
while form, structure, and specific qualities stem from warmth and
sunlight. Volume can be gained, but at the expense of a "watering
down" of quality. It is interesting that in its natural form
soya contains a counteracting and now "unwelcome" growth-inhibiting
factor. Removing it from the fodder permits growth-forces to work
unchecked; this is demonstrated by the cartilage-like bones of the
young animals.
On the other hand, the prosperity
of the industrialized world - that spends only a fraction of its
income for foodstuffs - is dependent on such processes. The mass
breeding of animals nourished on soya oil-cake, in combination with
crops produced intensively using artificial fertilizers, has held
food prices unnaturally low, at the same time encouraging development
of giant food industries. Thus our consumer society, with its squandering
of resources and its ever-increasing sense of dissatisfaction, owes
its existence in growing measure to the previously unimagined properties
of the soybean.
It is able to serve our sense of
well-being in many other ways. It is the chief and cheapest source
of lecithin, which ensures the smoothness of chocolate and hinders
the crystallization of sugars. Fatty substances are made "light."
For example, with lecithin, margarine can be made to contain 20
percent water. Soy-meal mixed with wheat flour prevents shrinkage
in baking. Increased water content makes baked goods cheaper and
crispier when stored. Added to meat products, it prevents shrinkage
during cooking. Soya has won uses in medicine, cosmetics, paints
and milk products, due to its ability to take up substances and
hold them fast, to "subserve" instead of asserting its
own personality. Its talent consists in creating illusions, useful
for making ice creams, sauces, fast-foods, cat foods and dog foods.
It can imitate the taste, appearance and texture of almost any food
we might find on our plates.
The talent of this plant, aided by
modern industry, in supplanting all other foodstuffs is not to be
ignored. The only question is, to what degree has it become a hindrance
to the emergence and development of human soul forces? What is its
influence going to be in future on the evolution of the earth?
Here we are to encounter the same
dynamic everywhere, as if this plant had opportunistic genius in
expanding-even becoming a factor in wars. It has been able to muster
a large share of the world's intelligence and capacity, in finding
and taking advantage of all its possibilities. Behind its unassuming
task of providing cheap but rich feed for animals and in certain
regions for whole human populations, it has managed to squeeze in
"by the back door." But once it emerges from the shadows,
its behavior becomes pugnacious. We note the phrases: "capturing
the market," "offensives," "strategic alliances,"
"political pressure," "battles," etc. The chart
below showing the trade in soya for the year 1980 is strongly reminiscent
of a plan for strategic encirclement.
The potato and the later tomato,
both from the deadly nightshade family, made their world conquest
in quite a different way. Their spread was due to their practicality
in providing foods with little trouble and space involved. Their
expansion was peaceful, if irresistible, and the outcome has been
a total change in eating habits, (similar to that worked by the
soybean) including a profound influence on human nature. Rudolf
Steiner showed their contribution to the spread of materialis without
this effect coming to our notice. We can ask whether, in a certain
sense, these plants have not paved the way for the soybean.
The economic leadership of America,
established to a supreme degree in the course of this century, is
based not solely on external power, but also on the fact that all
nations on earth have come to depend on America in a variety of
ways. Where this becomes a dependency for foodstuffs-and in this
America seeks with every possible means to make such dependency
absolute-the soybean comes into a position of influencing people's
physical constitution, the basis of individual being. What other
plant apart from the soybean could have allowed a world dominion
to arise, drawing its power from the denial to populations, through
diet, of the physical basis for clear thinking and independent,
conscious action?
The pressure exerted today by America
in world politics was preceded by a patient, purposeful partnership
of interest over decades. When it became clear that unsuspected
possibilities lay in soya used as green fodder and as nitrogen enricher
of the soil, the ASA (American Soybean Association) was founded.
This unites industrialists, soybean producers and scientists. Each
year the extent of soybean planting is set by common consent in
light of demand and the extent of government subsidies. In this
way prices could be held at a constant low level, permitting the
oil mills to carry on a price-war that gradually drove all competing
products from the field. The scientists' task was to convert the
oil-cake to a product that would satisfy the demands of animal breeders,
and to explore all possible further uses of this plant. Thus in
America both a highly mechanized intensive mode of farming and the
mass breeding of animals could be worked out and perfected.
Many factors have played into the
hands of the soybean. In the beginning (the 1920s) when there was
an overproduction of wheat, corn, and cotton in America, the government
gave financial support for planting soybeans on fields otherwise
unneeded. The slow rise in the American standard of living, with
its preference for white meat and vegetable fats, increased the
demand both for margarine and for oil-cake for large scale breeding.
By its cheapness, margarine could take its place beside butter in
the ordinary American diet. The serious competition from cotton-seed
oil-cake was removed as by magic when the government reduced cotton
planting while continuing soybean support. During the Second World
War soy oil could substitute for oils that could no longer be imported.
Even the socialist revolution in China gave a boost to the American
soybean. Confiscation and reapportionment of land removed the possibility
of planned production, and soon China was importing soybeans from
America.
Thus America became the only country
exporting soybeans. True, in the 1970s the U.S. saw Brazil and later
Argentina become real competitors, but economically this worked
out in a positive way. In the meantime, every country in the world
was opened up to the soybean. The support offered countries in the
throes of emergencies became a means of disposing of US overproduction.
Political ties to such countries strengthened as the flow of goods-but
particularly of soy oil-changed the dietary habits of populations.
This ensured a steady market and economic dependence.
As regards the soybean, the world
falls into two parts-one continent producing the plant and offering
it everywhere in forms adapted to economic circumstances, and all
other continents, which have become totally dependent on the first
for this base support for their living standards. In 1973 the world
suddenly woke up to this sour pill. A drought year in Africa destroyed
the peanut harvest; simultaneously came an unpredicted demand from
Russia. Since the area reserved for soybean production proved much
too small, the US was driven to choose either to prohibit all exports
or experience a shortage at home. The embargo on soya that ensued
raised a panic in the importing countries. Provisions for mass animal
breeders were imperiled, with all foreseeable economic consequences.
Fortunately, the crisis proved not so severe as anticipated. The
export bans were relaxed, while Brazil emerged as a new supplier.
Yet an enormous rise in price had resulted, which dropped after
the crisis, yet still remained 1½ to 2 times higher.
For 20 years now, European countries
have tried to escape from this dependency. They plant soya themselves
where climate permits (Italy producing 90 percent of European production),
or breed new varieties which thrive in less favorable climatic conditions.
Use of indigenous plants or those imported from former colonies
to produce oil-cake is encouraged, but the result is far from conclusive.
Despite use of oil-cake from rapeseed, sunflower, cotton and peanuts,
the demand for soya oil-cake has not declined in the European Union,
now representing around 70 percent of total needs. Efforts at independence
prove futile as the demand rises.
And America is convinced it must
consolidate this situation so that it can never change, whatever
the circumstances. Surveying the plight of various countries due
to the soybean, we might be tempted to agree with America that everything
should remain as it is. There seems indeed no rational way to change
matters. Only too easily can we visualize what immense suffering
would follow any sudden collapse of the present system.
Japan offers a typical case of how
the prosperity of industrialized countries can depend totally on
the soybean. Japan accepted American arguments that all its efforts
should go into the industrial side, into construction of oil mills.
They import the beans, grown but sparsely at home, from America.
Thus with mass animal breeding techniques they ensure cheap meat
prices for their population. Countries like Tunisia, major producers
of olive oil that has up to now been supplied cheaply for local
use, are now importing American soy oil, mixing it with olive oil
for local consumption, and thus have more pure oil for export to
richer countries. Everywhere we see the temptation to gain prosperity
by means of the soybean, meanwhile dismantling the possibility of
achieving self-sufficiency.
Brazil is a case in point. Its politics
of economic expansion via the soybean has robbed the internal market
of access to local production. Government subsidies favor the big
landowners; the expensive mechanization needed for farming has driven
the small farmers, who formerly supplied the cities with food, into
the city slums. The result: in order to feed the population, the
profit from export of soya has to be invested in imports of wheat,
beans, etc., chiefly from America. In 1973 Brazil decided to set
up oil mills in order to export finished products. These installations
have proven far too large for what is grown at home, thus part of
what is to be processed must be imported. But Brazil is not only
an exporter; half of soy-bean production is consumed locally. The
oil-cake goes to the country's poultry farms (frozen chicken for
central Asia). So decisions are being made at the government level
as to what parts should be retained for internal use. Miscalculation
results in uprisings in the population or else in major losses.
In Brazil the soybean has been a large factor in enhancing differences
in income, and this naturally increases social tensions.
Everywhere in the world one senses
the weakness of the present system, which should now be providing
"daily bread" for everyone. It is not only oceans that
separate producers from consumers or the animal from the source
of its fodder, but also the factories with their complex manipulations
that bring the food and feed into a state fit to consume. A variety
of political measures, only marginally attuned to economic considerations,
are further disturbances. The slightest push can endanger an entire
nutritional system, though we may still hope that the close economic
ties will prove capable of calming international conflicts.
It seems a further effort of America
to undermine the self-sufficiency of every country, and thus to
have them all in its power. The European Union has set out on the
path suggested to it without reservation, a path of no return.
What is left for us to do? Too many
interests, to say nothing of the whole outer framework of our civilization,
oppose a political shift. Little can be expected from this side
with the best of will. It is only local, individual initiatives
that can bring about a new beginning independent of government.
And only a spiritual-scientific basis gives agriculture the powers
of resistance it needs in the long run to oppose the general tendency
that is standardizing every sphere, subjecting them to purely economic
points of view. But it is just as certain that every consumer who
has learned to value the foods provided by such an agriculture must
take a firm stand for its survival.
When we reflect on all this, we can
sense why Rudolf Steiner returned to Dornach in June 1924 so deeply
pleased with the Koberwitz agricultural conference. He was able
to give us this cycle of lectures nine months before his death,
lectures that lead much closer an understanding of what goes on
in nature and that give us the hints that have led the biodynamic
movement. Every single person who is able to acknowledge Rudolf
Steiner must take this impulse to heart, for through it we are given
the possibility to establish the basis for a truly human future.
The author, born in Stuttgart,
is a leader of the biodynamic movement in Chatou, Paris, and translator
of Rudolf Steiner's Agricultural Course into French. She has taught
in the biodynamic farming school in L'Ormoy, France. This article-its
first part highly condensed here- first appeared in the French periodical
L'esprit du Temps. A German translation was published in Das Goetheanum
for March 6, and March13, 1994.
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