Skip to content
Anthoni Selvi (on the right) (Copyright: Joyful Biodynamic Farm)
Anthoni Selvi (on the right) (Copyright: Joyful Biodynamic Farm)

Press release -

“Rediscover what life truly is” >>> Sustainable growing methods such as biodynamics are successful around the world

Goetheanum, Dornach, Switzerland, 20 December 2024

The smallholder farmers of indigenous cultures seek to live in harmony with the earth. Biodynamic farming is for them a way of bringing together tradition and innovation to achieve a unity of earth, humans and cosmos.

Tamil tribal communities had lived in harmony with nature since 3000 BCE. This balance was shattered in the 1960s by the Green Revolution – the invasive use of fertilizers and pesticides – which engulfed smallholder farmers into economic and ecological crises despite the promise of increased yields.

Discovering biodynamic approaches was a turning point for many such farmers, for instance Anthoni Selvi, who learned about biodynamic farming in 2012 and now manages Joyful Dynamic Farm in Tamil Nadu, India. In an interview in ‘Living Farms’, the magazine of the Goetheanum’s Section for Agriculture, she says, “This period transformed my life. I not only learned new agricultural techniques but also embraced a new way of thinking. I became more connected to the earth, my work and the cosmic rhythms, which enriched my life tremendously.” Feya Marince, co-founder of the Indigenous Biodynamic Association of Africa, confirms this, “We’ve come to realize that we cannot continue with the industrial, conventional agriculture imposed on us by colonialism.” She is convinced that indigenous cultures “help us rediscover what life truly is.”

As the biodynamic movement celebrates its 100th anniversary, the main question is how this holistic approach can be fostered so that the connection between the earth, human beings and the cosmos can be further developed. The Section for Agriculture at the Goetheanum therefore chose to entitle its annual conference in 2025 ‘The Earth as a Living Being‘. Practitioners and researchers will speak about what characterizes the earth as a living being, how farmers, traders and consumers can live in harmony with the earth, and how, rather than exploit its resources, they can contribute to its healthy development.

(1968 characters, 307 words/Anna Storchenegger; English by Margot M. Saar)

Living Farms magazine (German and English) Anniversary edition celebrating 100 years of biodynamic farming, 2/2024; comes out in June and December, available in print and online Web

Agriculture Conference ‘The Earth as a Living Being‘ 5 to 8 February 2025, Goetheanum, Dornach, Switzerland, with livestreams on goetheanum.tv Web

Contact person Anna Storchenegger

Topics

Categories


The Goetheanum is the headquarters for the School of Spiritual Science and the General Anthroposophical Society. The School of Spiritual Science with its eleven sections is active worldwide in research, development, teaching, and the practical implementation of its research findings and is supported by the Anthroposophical Society.

Contacts

Sebastian Jüngel

Sebastian Jüngel

Press contact Communications Coordinator +41 61 706 44 63

Related content

Conference for teachers of biodynamic farming in Zimbabwe (Kufunda Village), 2022 (Photo: Maaianne Knuth)

Emancipation through agriculture > The Goetheanum’s Section for Agriculture reflects on a hundred years of biodynamics

The biodynamic brand ‘Demeter’ is known around the world, the foundations of biodynamic agriculture less so. In the year leading up to the centenary, the Section for Agriculture at the Goetheanum explores this approach as the continuation of a human cultural impulse and invites the eco-activist Vandana Shiva to speak at the Goetheanum about the relationship between human beings and the earth.