
Tunisian 'revolution oasis' palm grove thrives on self-rule
SINCE the inhabitants of Jemna in southern Tunisia wrested control of their 100-year-old palm grove from the state during the 2011 Revolution, residents say their lives have radically improved.
The desert town – where the palms produce some of the North African country's finest dates – ejected businessmen tied to the old regime when the uprising toppled longtime ruler Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.
Jemna, population around 8,000, has since become a unique grassroots experiment in Tunisian agricultural self-management – a non-profit project run by a local community to reinvest all benefits locally.
Residents founded the Association to Protect the Jemna Oasis (ASOJ) which runs the grove where 57-year-old Abdelbasset Abed works full-time, along with some 50 other people.
During harvest season, the 12,000 date palms provide work for 160 people – 10 times more than before. Two-thirds of these are seasonal workers.
"The situation is a lot better than before," said Abed as he cleared away dry branches at the foot of a towering date palm.
"I have a stable job."
The results are visible beyond the grove itself, with production generating nearly 14 million dinars (roughly US$4.5 million) over the past 15 years.
A covered market, a sports field, computer labs in schools, scholarships and funds for other groups... the association has created more opportunities in a highly indebted Tunisia where little to no government funding reaches NGOs.
"They even help students with financial aid," Abed said of the ASOJ.
UTAIM, another local association that works with children who have disabilities, has had a constant source of income after ASOJ donated 50 palm trees to it.
"They gave us a stable source of revenue," UTAIM director Halima Ben Othman told AFP.
The local cemetery has also been revamped using income generated by the town's surrounding palm trees.
It now has a separation wall and a seating area for people visiting the graves of those buried there.
"Even the dead benefit," smiled Tahar Ettahri, the head of ASOJ.
Such gains did not come easily, however, and now locals are saying they have to fight to preserve their economic self-rule.
Two days before Ben Ali fled the country in early 2011, locals occupied the palm grove that had been leased cheaply to two well-connected businessmen.
"The young people of Jemna decided to reclaim their ancestors' land," which Ettahri said had a history of being plundered since French colonial rule.
When the regional governor sent armoured vehicles and deployed security forces in an attempt to reclaim the grove, residents staged a three-month peaceful sit-in.
Meanwhile, they had to keep producing the dates.
So local trade unionists, activists, and ordinary citizens formed a coalition, and a community fundraiser gathered some 34,000 dinars (about US$10,000) from more than 800 contributors to fund the project at its onset.
"We came together with the goal of improving the well-being of our community," Ettahri said.
"We came from different ideological backgrounds, but our shared interest in Jemna united us. Maybe that's why we succeeded."
In his book "Jemna, the Revolution Oasis", sociologist Mohamed Kerrou called it a unique legacy of the ideals that sparked the Arab Spring.
Ettahri said this stemmed from a sharp sense of social justice and a propensity for the common good.
The town has a public space – the "Jemna Agora" – where people are handed a microphone and speak freely to discuss a problem or to propose projects for locals to put to a vote.
Despite being a success, with revenues of 1.8 million dinars (about US$592,000) by the fourth year of self-management, Jemna has had to battle post-revolution governments in order to preserve its model.
Now, 15 years later, Ettahri said residents were still waiting to "settle the issue legally with the state."
The former unionist and teacher said this was not a fight against the authorities – the residents asked to lease the grove, and were ready to pay 15 years in back rent.
To comply with a decree from President Kais Saied establishing "citizen's enterprises", which cited Jemna as an example, the ASOJ has formed a "community company."
It has 334 members – far more than the required 50-member minimum – and all of them insist on voluntary status, another unique aspect among such enterprises, Ettahri said.
"It's a lot of members, but the idea is to sociologically represent everyone," Ettahri said.
The group now aims to launch a plant to sort and package dates locally, providing year-round employment for 100 women.
Ettahri, 72, is a grandfather of seven and has taken a step back from day-to-day date production. He still heads the ASOJ, but more as a lookout to warn of potential problems ahead.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
3 days ago
- The Star
Want your kids to be street smart? Let them experience the world on their own
When kids have access to real life, they will learn about consequences and become better, stronger, more savvy individuals. Photo: Freepik How can my teenager be so academically smart but have no common sense? She's a really good kid, but she doesn't really seem to understand how the world works. I want her to get a grasp on these things before she learns to drive, gets a job or leaves for college and will be on her own. How can I get her to apply her 'book smarts' to the real world? That isn't how it works and you need to make a paradigm U-turn, or things are going to get really frustrating for you, and your daughter's life is going to be way worse for way longer than it needs to be. More to the point, most likely, your daughter is probably academically smart for many reasons, including parental involvement and high expectations, better than average intelligence, hard work and good teaching in her school and in her home. Not having any common sense is a totally different thing. It really has very little to do with academic learning, as your daughter has demonstrated. I think that when parents refer to 'common sense,' what they are really referring to is an ability to attend to everyday life in a responsible and productive way. This is essentially what you meant by referencing getting a job, driving, etc. Here's the answer to your question. Most likely, your kid doesn't know how the real world works because you haven't let her find out how the real world works. While academics can be learned in a classroom, the real world needs to be learned in the real world ... mostly without your involvement. Yes, parents and caregivers of 2025 ... kids need to learn about the real world ... by experiencing the real world ...without you. If you find yourself telling your kid how the real world really is, you're probably not allowing your kid to have enough access to the real world. You learn about stuff in books from books, and you learn about life from life. Kids need access to books to learn from books, and they need access to life to learn from life. So, give your kid some access! Here's how I might give your teen access if I were you: Kid Whisperer: Drat. We're out of milk. We need milk. Please go to the corner store to get milk. Kid (long pause): Are you talking to me? Kid Whisperer: Yup. Kid: But it's three blocks away. Kid Whisperer: I don't know what to tell you. I know you can do it. One gallon of milk please. Here's US$20 (RM85.45). Please give me the change if there is any. Kid (holding the cash with a confused look on her face): What's this now? Kid Whisperer: We used to call it money in the old days. It's like Venmo IRL. Thanks for taking care of that. It's a big help. So let kids live their lives. The best (and most exciting and fun) way to learn about life is to figure it out. Your kids will fail and learn, fail and learn. It will be painful at times, but the best way to learn is through struggle. When kids fail, be sad, supportive and encouraging, but don't bail them out. Solving their problem for them demonstrates a lower regard for their abilities than if you're sad and you let them know that you think they can do it next time. Asking how they might do things differently works way better than giving them unsolicited advice on what they should have done! Your kid will not end up being a 70-year-old who never figured out how to successfully drive a car, go to college or get a job. However, the sooner she has access to real life – and that's making her own choices and taking the consequences, good and bad, that will follow – the sooner she will be able to learn from those consequences and become a better, stronger, more savvy, more sophisticated and more prepared person. The sooner she is allowed to learn those lessons, the higher of a percentage of her life she will be able to live using 'common sense.' After all, you want her to have the life you want for her as soon as possible! – Tribune News Service Behavioural consultant Scott Ervin is a parent and former teacher and principal. He is the author of The Classroom Behavior Manual: How To Build Relationships, Share Control, And Teach Positive Behaviors .


Free Malaysia Today
6 days ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Japan-US-Philippines coast guards simulate crisis amid China threat
Yesterday's drills began with a simulation of a person falling overboard. (AFP pic) ON BOARD THE ASANAGI : Helicopters buzzed in the shadow of a smouldering volcano and boats rescued dummies from the sea this week in a show of maritime unity by Japan, the US and the Philippines. The joint coast guard exercises held off Japan's southwest shore follow a warning from the three countries about Chinese activity in disputed regional waters. Tensions between China and other claimants to parts of the East and South China Seas have pushed Japan to deepen ties with the Philippines and the US. This week marked the second time the countries' coast guards have held training drills together, and the first in Japan. They took place over five days off the coast of Kagoshima, where Sakurajima volcano dominates the skyline, quietly puffing out smoke and ash. Dozens of personnel took part, with yesterday's final exercises featuring one vessel from each of the three countries' coast guards. They included the BRP Teresa Magbanua, which was provided to the Philippines by Japan through a loan agreement. The 2,265-tonne vessel, named after a schoolteacher and revolutionary, usually monitors Chinese boats in the South China Sea. China and the Philippines have engaged in months of confrontations in the contested waters, which Beijing claims almost entirely, despite an international ruling that the assertion has no legal basis. Chinese and Japanese patrol vessels in the East China Sea also routinely face off around disputed islands. Yesterday, Manila accused China of using a water cannon on two of its fisheries department boats as they attempted to resupply Philippine fishermen near the disputed Scarborough Shoal. Man overboard! The US coast guard was represented in the exercises by the Cutter Stratton, which can carry up to 170 personnel, and Japan by the 6,000-ton Asanagi. Yesterday's drills began with a simulation of a person falling overboard. Once the dummy, wearing a bright red lifejacket, was in the water, a US drone was launched from the Stratton, circling high above as it scanned the area. A small Philippine rescue boat then emerged from the Teresa Magbanua, zipping across the water before coast guard personnel fished the dummy out of the water. Other rescue scenarios enacted included a Japanese helicopter racing from shore to pull a human subject from the sea. The helicopter's rotor blades whipped up the calm blue waters, where the occasional small hammerhead shark could be seen idly swimming alongside the Asanagi. The exercises concluded with a simulated collision and fire, with all three coast guards blasting the stricken vessel with their water cannons. Trust-building Japan coast guard official Naofumi Tsumura said the joint exercises had 'built mutual understanding and trust'. 'More than anything, we have strengthened coordination and cooperation between us,' he said. In 2024, the three countries issued a joint statement that included strong language aimed at Beijing. 'We express our serious concerns about the People's Republic of China's (PRC) dangerous and aggressive behaviour in the South China Sea,' it said, describing 'dangerous and coercive use of coast guard and maritime militia vessels'. They also expressed 'strong opposition to any attempts by the PRC to unilaterally change the status quo by force or coercion in the East China Sea'. This week's joint exercises were the first since the statement was released. Tsumura said there were small details that could have worked better and vowed to improve in future collaborations. He said the three countries' coast guards had 'come to understand each other better, or as the Japanese often say, to know each other by face'. 'I believe we are now able to conduct maritime rescue operations more effectively,' he said.


The Star
21-06-2025
- The Star
‘Money in 30 minutes': why it gets ugly for Hongkongers turning to loan sharks
When his grandmother died, Hongkonger Fai Chan inherited her flat, a 377 sq ft unit in eastern Kowloon valued at HK$3 million (US$382,000) in 2023. Before it could be his, however, the fire protection engineer had to pay a HK$1.2 million premium to the Housing Authority, a sum he did not have.