American Experience (1988) s32e05 Episode Script
The Man Who Tried to Feed the World
1
♪
♪
NARRATOR:
It was in the spring of 1966,
in northeastern India,
that Norman Borlaug
came face-to-face with the enemy
he had been fighting
all his life.
(children crying)
(flies buzzing)
Borlaug was a driven man,
a scientist obsessed by hunger.
And he was tormented
by the thought that all of this
could have been prevented, if
only people had listened sooner.
For years,
Borlaug had traveled the globe,
preaching a radically
new approach to agriculture,
one that he had helped develop
over the course of 20 years.
Unprecedented population growth
was straining
the food supply of countries
around the world,
raising the specter
of widespread famine
and social chaos.
LYNDON JOHNSON:
Next to the pursuit of peace,
the greatest challenge
to the human family
is the race between food supply
and population increase.
That race tonight is being lost.
♪
WALTER CRONKITE:
Dr. Norman Borlaug,
an Iowa-born crop expert,
was awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize yesterday
for his work toward easing
the world's hunger problem.
(applause)
NARRATOR:
Within just five years.
Borlaug would be hailed
around the world
for saving countless lives
through what was called
"The Green Revolution."
But Borlaug's stunning successes
had also unleashed
vast, turbulent forces.
CHARLES MANN:
The number of people
who are hungry
declined dramatically.
But there was enormous
social upheaval.
There is huge
environmental damage.
RAJ PATEL:
Norman Borlaug was responsible
for the spread of large-scale
industrial agricultural
production around the world.
I certainly don't think
that it's any credit
to the Nobel Prize
that Norman Borlaug got it.
♪
NARRATOR:
Half a century later,
Borlaug's revolution
continues to shape our world.
TORE OLSSON:
It's really impossible
to understand
the massive growth
of the human population,
to understand the urbanization
of our species,
to understand our tremendous
increasing ecological impact
on the world,
unless we understand
Norman Borlaug
and the Green Revolution.
♪
♪
♪
MANN:
Borlaug grew up
on a very small farm
in northeastern Iowa.
And it's isolated in a way
that is very hard
for a 21st-century person
to imagine.
♪
NOEL VIETMEYER:
On very quiet winter nights,
Norm and his sisters
would go out;
they could hear
the train whistle,
which was 14, 15 miles away.
♪
It was the only connection they
had to the rest of humanity.
♪
NARRATOR:
Norman Borlaug was born in 1914
into a clan
of immigrant farmers.
His great-grandparents
had fled Norway in 1847,
driven by the same potato blight
that ravaged Ireland.
As children, Norm and his two
younger sisters rose before dawn
and worked on the family's
100-acre farm
until after sunset, in a manner
that would have been familiar
to the ancient Romans.
♪
MANN:
Every year he harvested himself
a quarter of a million
ears of corn.
He worked very, very hard,
but he hated it.
VIETMEYER:
Norm had no prospects whatever.
He had to stay on the farm
and work.
And then when his father died,
he would take over.
(crowd murmuring)
NARRATOR:
In the late 1920s, when Norm
was finishing grade school,
he saw signs
of a technological revolution
that was transforming
rural life.
VIETMEYER:
Henry Ford produced
a little tractor,
and that tractor did for farmers
what his Model T did
for the general public.
(engine chugging)
MANN:
The Fordson, it's called.
Typically, in those days,
about 40% of a farm
was devoted to growing the food
for the oxen and horses.
When you had a tractor,
that land became available
to grow food,
and the farm's effective size
doubled.
Their income doubled.
To have corn harvested
in a couple of days in a tractor
was an incredibly liberating
experience for him.
Anybody would draw a lesson
from that.
He certainly did,
that this kind of technology
equaled freedom from toil.
(tractor rumbling)
NARRATOR:
"The fabled future had arrived,"
Borlaug recalled,
"and was even more fabulous
than anything we'd dared
wish for."
VIETMEYER:
That's how he got some education
beyond eighth grade.
Because of the tractor
and these modern things.
He had confidence in technology
for the rest of his days.
(wind howling)
NARRATOR:
Within a few years,
Borlaug's bright hopes
had been swallowed up
by the Great Depression.
♪
In Iowa, the rain stopped,
clouds of locusts
blotted out the sun,
dust storms buried farms
and towns alike.
♪
Borlaug's high school graduation
was an eerie affair;
no one mentioned the future.
In the fall of 1933,
with just $61 in his pocket,
he left the farm
for Minneapolis.
♪
MANN:
He hoped to get
an athletic scholarship
at the University of Minnesota.
He didn't think
he was very smart.
He didn't think he was well
educated or anything like that.
He hoped that this was his way
into a better life.
NARRATOR:
Not only was there
no sports scholarship,
it took an entire term
and three separate applications
before the University
of Minnesota opened its doors.
He chose to study forestry,
then something of a campus cult,
representing both a rebellion
against capitalism
and an escape from its collapse.
Food and shelter
were a constant struggle,
but there were consolations:
Borlaug was moonlighting
as a waiter
when he met Margaret Gibson.
JEANIE BORLAUG:
My mother was waiting tables
to pay for her education.
I think she thought he was
very serious.
And my mother
was not real serious,
but she had a great personality.
NARRATOR:
In the fall of 1937,
with graduation
around the corner
and a job waiting
at the Forestry Service,
Norm married Margaret in a quiet
ceremony at her brother's home.
But their tidy future vanished
just three months later,
when Norm's forestry job
fell victim to budget cuts.
Suddenly at loose ends,
he went back to school
for graduate studies
in plant pathology.
But the most indelible lesson
of his college years
took place in the streets
of Minneapolis.
VIETMEYER:
He walked around a corner
and there was a milk plant.
♪
Norm could see
behind a big fence
a bunch of corporate goons
with batons.
(engine rumbling)
♪
NARRATOR:
Across the Midwest,
desperate farmers were trying
to shore up commodity prices
by cutting off
the supply of food
to the cities.
"We'll eat our wheat and ham
and eggs," they chanted,
"and let them eat their gold."
(horn honking, people shouting)
MANN:
Dairy farmers were going
to dump the milk
because they couldn't sell it
for enough to make a living.
Hungry people descended on these
trucks and demanded the milk.
And all of a sudden,
they, they charged.
And Norm was trapped
by the crowd,
and these batons were coming
right towards him,
swinging and hitting people
over the head.
NARRATOR:
"Bodies and blood
were scattered and spattered
all over the street,"
Borlaug wrote.
"I took off running, trembling,
frightened.
"I'd seen how fast
violence springs to life
"when hunger, misery,
and desperation
infect the public mind."
It was terrifying to him,
and he saw how hunger
can just turn, as he sort of
put it, men into beasts.
♪
NARRATOR:
Scenes like the one
in Minneapolis
were all too common
in the 1930s.
Hunger and deprivation were
fueling political instability
around the world,
dragging humanity into a
brutish struggle for resources.
(crowd clamoring)
OLSSON:
The Second World War in many
ways is a struggle about food.
Hitler and the Nazis looked
eastward at Poland and Russia
as sort of settling ground
for prosperous Aryan farmers
who would then produce
for the larger German nation.
Japan, as well,
saw China as a potential
feeding ground
for the Japanese nation.
♪
But these big dreams are
dependent upon the subjugation,
if not murder,
of millions of people.
(ship guns firing)
NARRATOR:
By 1940, Japan had invaded
Manchuria,
and Germany occupied
much of Europe.
As the Roosevelt administration
braced
for what was quickly becoming
a second world war,
it looked nervously
to its southern border.
The Mexican government
was working to liberate
the country's citizens
from grinding poverty,
but prosperity and stability
remained elusive.
NICK CULLATHER:
Mexico was coming out of years
of revolution, civil war.
Rural Mexicans had
at best a kind of a loose and
sometimes hostile relationship
with the central government.
♪
It began to look as if social
unrest south of the border
would be a vulnerability
for the United States.
NARRATOR:
The Roosevelt administration
and the Mexican government
both wanted peace
in the countryside.
The Rockefeller Foundation,
a wealthy philanthropy
with White House connections,
offered to help.
OLSSON:
The Rockefeller Foundation
had been involved in teaching
poor black and white cotton
farmers in the U.S. South.
And this gave them
a sort of proven formula
for how they could attack
questions of poverty
and "backwardness,"
as they saw it.
(cows mooing)
NARRATOR:
By 1942, the Rockefeller
Foundation
and the Mexican government
had negotiated
a carefully targeted plan.
OLSSON:
They wanted to raise the
economic standard of living
among the impoverished farmers
who tended to live
in the densely settled plateau
around Mexico City.
CULLATHER:
The United States is anxious
to stabilize Mexico,
and the Mexican government
was eager for this.
This was a kind of
counterinsurgency effort,
to improve the livelihoods
of people in the villages
and also to connect
those villages more closely
to the national government.
♪
(engine rumbling)
NARRATOR:
On the 7th of December, 1941,
Norman and Margaret Borlaug were
driving east from Minneapolis
to Wilmington, Delaware,
where Norman was due to start
his first job
at DuPont Chemical.
So it wasn't
until the following day
that they heard
about Pearl Harbor.
MANN:
Borlaug graduated from Minnesota
into the Second World War.
And he wanted to do something
that mattered.
He wanted to make
a contribution.
NARRATOR:
For two-and-a-half years,
Borlaug put his PhD
in plant pathology to use,
waging a quiet war
on the microbes
that were ravaging soldiers
and materials in the jungles
of the South Pacific.
But he'd never meant to spend
his life in a laboratory,
so when the Rockefeller
Foundation
contacted him
about an exotic job in Mexico,
Borlaug took the plunge.
On the 11th of September, 1944,
he loaded up the family's
old Pontiac and headed south,
leaving behind
a very pregnant Margaret
and their young daughter Jeanie.
♪
Borlaug had only a vague sense
of what lay ahead
when he joined three other
American scientists
at a research station
near Chapingo,
25 miles east of Mexico City.
Still, he was surprised
to be given a side project.
While everyone else worked
on the staples of the
Mexican diet corn and beans
Borlaug was to focus on wheat.
As the junior member
of the team, he had no choice
but to take on a fiendishly
difficult challenge.
(insects buzzing,
birds chirping)
MANN:
He was to look at a kind of
fungus called stem rust.
Stem rust is one of the oldest
enemies of the human race.
The Romans had
a god of stem rust
that they would sacrifice to
to propitiate it,
to try to keep it away.
NARRATOR:
Stem rust had driven
Borlaug's family
out of the wheat business
back in 1878.
Now, it was killing half
of Mexico's small wheat crop
year after year.
VIETMEYER:
Stem rust migrates.
These are trillions
and trillions of spores
sailing on the wind.
And when they find wheat plants
of the right maturity,
it just destroys them.
♪
CULLATHER:
His background
was actually in forestry,
so he didn't have
a lot of training
in the breeding of wheat.
NARRATOR:
Borlaug was already reeling
when a telegram arrived
at the end of November 1944
Margaret had given birth
to a boy with spina bifida.
For three agonizing days,
Norm waited for a flight
back to Wilmington.
He found Margaret
at the hospital
with an awful predicament.
Scotty was in an isolation ward;
they couldn't touch
or comfort him.
His affliction was essentially
a death sentence.
Norm announced
that he was taking
his old job back at DuPont
so they could all be together.
"My husband has a future,"
Margaret insisted.
"My baby has none.
You go back;
I'll come when I can."
A few weeks later,
Margaret and Jeanie
followed Norm to Mexico City.
♪
(vehicle rattling)
Back in Mexico, tormented by
guilt and unsure how to proceed,
Borlaug drove around
in the station's green pickup,
gathering thousands of different
varieties of local wheat.
He was joined by Pepe Rodriguez
and Jose Guevara,
young Mexican agronomists
hired out of college
by the Rockefeller Foundation.
In that spring of 1945,
the three young men
planted out 110,000
of the seeds
Borlaug had collected.
♪
VIETMEYER:
Borlaug's just hoping like hell
that some of the wheats
can withstand
the trillions of spores
that are going to be landing.
♪
NARRATOR:
All summer they trudged
through the rows,
weeding out every seedling that
showed the telltale pustules.
Of the 110,000 plants,
just four were still alive
at harvest time.
♪
Already, Borlaug was haunted
by the malnutrition
he'd seen in Mexico,
and now the cause
seemed abundantly clear.
"Can you imagine trying to feed
a family?" he wrote Margaret.
"We've got to do something."
He had found his life's work.
♪
MANN:
When he settled on the goal
of trying to feed more people,
he snapped into focus.
And he worked phenomenally hard.
♪
That perseverance, his intense,
laser-like focus,
is the thing that I think most
distinguished him in his life.
It was like a spotlight.
A spotlight casts certain things
in very bright light,
but also casts
very deep shadows.
NARRATOR:
Driven by a new sense
of mission,
Borlaug devised a plan to
speed up the breeding process.
After the fall harvest
at Chapingo,
he would head north
with his most promising seeds
and plant them in Sonora,
where wheat is grown
during the winter.
When spring came, he would
harvest that generation,
rush back to Chapingo
with the new winners,
and start the process
over again.
By growing two generations
every year,
Borlaug could solve
Mexico's wheat problem,
and ease malnutrition
in half the time.
"Shuttle breeding,"
he called it.
♪
MANN:
What Borlaug didn't know
was that all the textbooks
Literally the textbooks
said you can't do this.
♪
VIETMEYER:
Wheat breeders believed
that you had to breed wheat
for the place
where it was going to be grown,
and nowhere else.
NARRATOR:
Borlaug's boss, George Harrar,
hated the idea.
Not only did shuttle breeding
ignore conventional wisdom,
but Harrar worried
that Borlaug's wheat
would end up benefiting the
well-heeled farmers of Sonora,
rather than the campesinos
of central Mexico.
OLSSON:
Farmers in Sonora
were not peasant farmers.
They tended to be larger
in terms of their land holdings.
They tended to be
commercially oriented,
growing wheat for export.
NARRATOR:
Harrar told Borlaug to drop it
several times,
but the younger man
wouldn't let up.
Borlaug finally got grudging
permission to go to Sonora,
but there was to be no budget,
no support, no machinery,
accommodations, or vehicle.
No matter: At the beginning
of November 1945,
Norman Borlaug packed up
the seeds from the four plants
that survived
the summer epidemic
and headed north.
♪
VIETMEYER:
He went up to Sonora
and he squatted
in a derelict old research
station that had been abandoned,
that had no running water.
The windows had been broken out
and there were rats everywhere.
(birds twittering)
MANN:
He didn't have a tractor.
He didn't have a horse.
So he was actually
taking a harness, you know,
that normally was attached
to a draft animal
you know, a horse or an oxen
or whatever
Strapping it
around his chest and arms,
and plowing himself.
(birds twittering)
NARRATOR:
There was, in fact, a method
to Borlaug's madness.
By cross-breeding
his four survivors
with other successful varieties,
he hoped to produce
the perfect wheat.
♪
The critical moment arrived
when the wheat began to flower.
VIETMEYER:
Wheat is self-pollinating,
so to make a cross-pollination,
you have to cut
the female floret
when it's just
at the right point
and remove all of its pollen
so that it can't pollinate
itself;
you got to get every last one.
Then you have to cover it
with a paper
to stop any foreign pollen
blowing in on the wind.
Four days later, when the male
is producing pollen,
then you bring that one over
and pour its pollen down
so you've got
a cross-pollinated plant.
It's very, very complicated,
and Norm had to teach himself.
MANN:
This is something that plant
breeders have been doing
for a very, very long time.
What they haven't done is to do
it on a massive scale.
It's such a phenomenal amount
of work,
nobody in their right mind
would think of doing it.
(insects chirping)
NARRATOR:
At night,
as Borlaug lay on the floor
with rats scampering
over his bedroll,
the ghosts crowded in.
"I was certain," he wrote, "that
I had made a dreadful mistake."
♪
Over the next years,
Borlaug's doubts slowly gave way
to the realization
that he was on to something big.
By 1948,
he had wheat
that resisted stem rust,
grew anywhere, in any season,
and delivered huge quantities
of high-quality grain.
(horn honking)
♪
But that remarkable achievement
came with one big catch.
In order to deliver
those yields,
his wheat needed unprecedented
levels of chemical fertilizer
and lots of water.
VIETMEYER:
Fertilizer was the key
to getting the absolute
greatest productivity
out of, out of these plants
ten times what the average
wheat farmer was getting.
NARRATOR:
Borlaug wanted to fight hunger
by producing lots of food.
But his wheat relied
on a costly recipe;
only farmers who could afford
that fertilizer
and had access
to irrigation water
stood to benefit.
Poorer farmers the ones
the Rockefeller Foundation
had come to help
would be largely left behind.
OLSSON:
Borlaug is coming to challenge
in many ways
the established direction
of the program,
which was trying to help
small-scale, poor farmers
in central Mexico.
And George Harrar,
who is Borlaug's boss,
basically tells him,
"You've got to stop this.
"It is a fundamental distraction
from what we're trying to
accomplish with this program."
And Borlaug throws down the
towel and says, "I'm quitting."
♪
JOHN PERKINS:
Borlaug had very definite
thoughts
about the way that agriculture
should develop.
You make it possible
for very few people
to raise vast amounts of food.
And the surplus labor
which is what most people
in rural areas became
they were going to be
city people.
♪
(birds twittering)
NARRATOR:
Borlaug marched
out of Harrar's office
and began making plans
to leave the country,
but the next day, he was
unexpectedly summoned back.
"Forget what I said," Harrar
told an astonished Borlaug.
"Go on working in Sonora."
Borlaug couldn't know it,
but a political earthquake
on the other side of the globe
was upending
the Rockefeller program.
♪
(crowd clamoring)
CULLATHER:
Chinese Communist troops
march south
singing about rice and beans.
Americans interpreted
the Chinese Civil War
as a conflict
that was based on resources,
and particularly on food.
(soldiers singing in Chinese)
NARRATOR:
By that summer of 1948,
Mao Zedong's Communists
were sweeping across China.
In Washington,
alarm bells were ringing.
OLSSON:
There's a growing sense
that the Cold War
was spiraling
out of Americans' control.
The fear especially that what
was going to tilt the Cold War
in the Soviets' favor
was discontented peasants
around the world.
♪
NARRATOR:
This new threat gave American
policymakers an urgent priority.
OLSSON:
There was a rather simple idea
that "no one becomes a Communist
on a full belly,"
that we can tilt the scales
in favor of the free capitalist
democratic world
if we can just produce
enough food.
♪
NARRATOR:
Borlaug's miracle wheat
might not help peasant farmers
in Mexico,
but it could win
hearts and minds
in the struggle against
Josef Stalin and Mao Zedong.
OLSSON:
The Rockefeller Foundation
bosses in New York,
working quite collaboratively
with the State Department,
come to realize that Borlaug
is actually doing something
that might be valuable
for the global Cold War:
a universal program
to feed a hungry world.
♪
NARRATOR:
The Rockefeller Foundation began
recasting the Mexico program.
Not only was Borlaug given
a free hand in Sonora,
but his agenda began to eclipse
the original mission.
Over the next few years,
a large staff
of Mexican and American
scientists and administrators
was assigned
to Borlaug's wheat project,
and a bright new facility built.
He would soon need all of those
resources and more.
♪
The problem appeared
in the early 1950s,
as Borlaug was achieving
unprecedented yields.
VIETMEYER:
He was getting plants
with so much grain up there
that the five-foot-long stem
just couldn't hold it up.
Towards the end of the season,
winds would blow
whole fields over.
He had to find some way
to strengthen the stems.
And the only way
he could see to do that
was to shrink the plant.
♪
NARRATOR:
Borlaug began crossing
his top lines
with what was called
a "dwarf" wheat,
descended from varieties
developed in Japan
a century before.
♪
This time there were
no shortcuts, no lucky breaks,
just thousands and thousands
of crosses,
and years of frustration.
♪
Finally, in 1962, after seven
years and 8,156 crosses,
the dwarf wheat program
came through.
MANN:
He has developed what you can
think of as the complete wheat.
Wheat that'll yield like crazy
with fertilizer and water,
that's shorter, so all the extra
growth will go into grain,
that will grow anywhere,
and is as resistant to stem rust
as you can possibly be.
VIETMEYER:
It was this amazing development.
And Norm patented nothing
Nothing.
NARRATOR:
Borlaug's new wheat transformed
the program's potential.
CULLATHER:
The Rockefeller Foundation
began to see places in the world
where the techniques
Borlaug developed in Mexico
might be practically used.
They started out
in a particular place,
with a particular set
of political goals.
But increasingly, they began
to see it as a program
for the salvation of the world.
♪
NARRATOR:
In January of 1963,
just a few months
after Borlaug's masterstroke,
an invitation from
an Indian agricultural scientist
landed on his desk.
Within weeks, Borlaug
was on his way to New Delhi.
One of the most far-reaching
enterprises
of the 20th century
had begun.
(horns honking)
(people talking in background,
horns honking)
HOWARD K. SMITH:
India's problem
is easily stated.
India is one-third the size
of the United States,
but it has a population
greater than that
of all North America
and South America together:
some 400 million people.
In the next 25 years,
if nothing happens,
that huge population will double
to 800 million.
If India has trouble feeding
400 million now,
how can she feed
twice that number
within a generation?
REPORTER:
The man whose ambition
is to turn India
into a food-exporting country
is Dr. Swaminathan.
CULLATHER:
Swaminathan had begun to do
his own research on wheat.
He came across
some research materials
about the dwarf wheat varieties,
and he conceives of the idea
of inviting Norman Borlaug.
♪
NARRATOR:
Over the course
of a three-week road trip
through India's wheat country,
the bull-headed American
and the cultured Brahmin
discovered a bond
of common purpose.
We had the same ideas,
we had the same goals in life.
And I liked his approach.
GEORGE VARUGHESE:
Dr. Swaminathan is
an excellent politician.
He is so quiet, slow operator.
Dr. Borlaug is not that way.
He will start very polite,
but, if at one stage he finds
things are not going very well,
you cannot hold him back.
CULLATHER:
Borlaug is playing
a very different role
than the role he played
in Mexico.
In Mexico, Borlaug is working
largely as a scientist.
When he gets to India,
he's working with Swaminathan,
reaching out as a salesman
to a skeptical population
and government.
NARRATOR:
The political challenge
was enormous.
The wholesale adoption
of high-yield wheat
entailed massive investments.
Fertilizer would have
to be imported
until a domestic industry
could meet the demand,
and irrigation built up
across thousands
of square miles.
The government would also
have to guarantee
a minimum price to farmers,
so they could afford
the new practices.
PRAKASH KUMAR:
There were all kinds
of suspicions.
Is this opening the floodgate
to American corporations
to sell their seeds, chemicals,
and other things?
And there was this huge question
whether this model of farming
is applicable to India.
NARRATOR:
After returning to Mexico,
Borlaug loaded 750 pounds
of seed
into the cargo hold
of a Pan Am jet
and sent it to Swaminathan
for field trials.
(birds chirping)
By harvest time,
he was in India again,
in time to savor the result:
Where the plants had been
fed and watered as directed,
they had delivered
almost incredible yields.
But Borlaug was outraged
to discover
that scientists at several sites
had used traditional methods.
With no fertilizer, chemicals,
or extra water,
the plants fared poorly.
This, they insisted, was how
wheat was grown in South Asia.
(birds twittering)
KUMAR:
Most of Indian farming
was for subsistence.
Gandhian ideology talks
in terms of restraint in use.
It talks in terms of less greed,
less acquisition.
It was the brute capitalism
of Norman Borlaug's model
which was irreconcilable
with Gandhian thought.
NARRATOR:
As far as Borlaug was concerned,
India was in danger
of widespread famine,
and it was almost criminal
to object to a solution.
"This was utter folly,"
he noted, "and we ignored it."
But folly or not,
Borlaug and Swaminathan couldn't
bring the authorities around;
it was going to take more
than a few field tests
to shake up
the world's largest democracy.
(people talking in background,
horn honking)
♪
KUMAR:
There was a real fear
in the American State Department
that hunger would lead
to a Communist takeover.
So they came up with this
new kind of a solution:
using food as a tool
of foreign policy.
♪
NARRATOR:
In the mid-1950s,
the United States began sending
its surplus grain
to countries like India
under a program
called "Food For Peace."
♪
It was a powerful strategy,
but unsustainable.
♪
In 1965, India consumed
one-fifth
of America's wheat crop;
by 1970, it was projected
to need one-half.
♪
SMITH:
Two-thirds of the world
goes to bed hungry every night.
Most children eat
less than two meals a day.
The population problem has
clearly graduated to the point
where it has to be faced
and discussed openly
and in deadly seriousness.
♪
CULLATHER:
The idea that population growth
had gone out of control
became a major
political concern.
(horn honks)
The United Nations
began holding sessions
on the question of population.
The U.S. Congress
began wondering
whether the food supply
would keep up
with global population growth.
NARRATOR:
If present trends continued,
mankind would run out
of arable land
and the food supply
would fall short.
Famine and social chaos
seemed inevitable.
PERKINS:
Most of the good acres
are already in cultivation.
So you have to get more food
from every acre you harvest.
NARRATOR:
American policymakers
began pushing strategies
to grow larger yields
in an effort to contain
the looming crisis.
For many people,
India was the bellwether.
"The future of mankind
is now being ground out there,"
a witness told Congress.
"If no solution is found,
all the world will live
as India does now."
In 1966,
that was a terrifying prospect.
(horn honking)
♪
REPORTER:
Even in good years,
millions of Indians
suffer from malnutrition.
This year, 70 million lives
may be in peril
in the worst drought
in India's history
as an independent nation.
REPORTER:
One-third of Bihar
has been declared
as famine area.
Water is a major problem.
The prime minister,
Mrs. Indira Gandhi.
GANDHI:
All of us must come together
to alleviate the agony
of millions
of our stricken people.
♪
KUMAR:
I was born in 1966
in the state of Bihar,
when my state was passing
through this famine.
That famine was real
and it led to death.
♪
NARRATOR:
"During those terrible days,"
Borlaug wrote,
"I saw miserable homeless kids
pleading for scraps of bread.
"Each morning, trucks circled
the streets, picking up corpses.
That's when my patience
ran out."
♪
Borlaug's frustration
boiled over
in a meeting with one of
their leading Indian opponents.
VARUGHESE:
Ashok Mehta, the head
of the Planning Commission,
determines the priorities,
where to allocate the money,
how the policies are set.
He was the person
who was holding back.
MANN:
Borlaug barges into
the guy's office and explodes.
NARRATOR:
"Unless the policy is changed
soon," Borlaug shouted,
"farmers will riot, and social
and political disorder
"will spread
across the countryside,
and you personally
will be to blame!"
MANN:
He's red-faced,
he's slamming the table,
yelling and screaming at a
high Indian government official
who's never met him before.
NARRATOR:
Borlaug's tirade
went hand-in-hand
with a harsh
new American policy.
By the summer of 1966,
the United States' wheat surplus
was dwindling.
President Lyndon Johnson,
anxious to force the pace
of agricultural reform in India,
shut down the food pipeline
at the height of the drought.
"He was toying with
people's lives," Borlaug wrote.
"But," he added,
"what he was attempting
was just what was needed."
Few Indians saw it that way.
PATEL:
That moment of understanding
that the food supply of your
country was hostage
to whether you did
what the United States
wanted you to or not
was a moment
of indelible national shame.
♪
NARRATOR:
Indians resolved to throw off
this new colonialism.
There were to be
no more grain imports,
the government declared,
even if it meant
that Indians would starve.
(crowd chanting)
NARRATOR:
In these new circumstances,
Borlaug's program took on
a different aspect.
It offered a path
to Indian self-sufficiency
and independence,
a goal that now outweighed
worries of ecology
and social equity.
Not long after Borlaug's
showdown with Mehta,
India announced
a fundamental change
in its agricultural policy.
Fertilizer imports
and factories, irrigation,
price supports
Everything was in place now.
For years, Borlaug had promised
that he could save India.
Now it was time to prove it.
♪
(rainfall pattering)
CULLATHER:
Fertilizer had been distributed
around the country.
The test plots
had been stretched out
to almost a million acres.
And the rains cooperated.
(thunder rumbling)
♪
NARRATOR:
By the time
Borlaug and Swaminathan
headed into the countryside
in the spring of 1968,
the atmosphere was electric.
CULLATHER:
Reports began to arrive
in New Delhi of grain silos
that were being overwhelmed.
Railroad depots were stacking
grain on the tracks
because there was no place else
to put it.
VIETMEYER:
They closed the schools
and filled the school rooms
with the sacks of grain.
There was food everywhere.
There was grain everywhere.
NARRATOR:
"Punjabi towns were buried
in wheat," Borlaug wrote.
"There weren't bags
to hold the grain,
"carts to haul away the bags,
"bullocks to pull the carts,
or trucks and trains
to haul it all away."
When it was all done
and counted,
the 1968 harvest was almost
one-and-a-half times larger
than the previous record.
♪
It marked the beginning
of a movement that would change
the face of the world.
Soon afterward,
an American diplomat
gave that movement a name
And an ideology.
CULLATHER:
The term "Green Revolution" was
meant to contrast this program,
which was now seen
as a tremendous global success,
with the Red Revolution,
which was at that time
sweeping the world,
and particularly in Asia.
KUMAR:
At the end of the day,
Green Revolution
was ideological in nature.
Norman Borlaug represented
American faith
in agricultural capitalism.
(birds twittering)
NARRATOR:
By 1970, the impact
of Borlaug's work
was being felt around the world.
Variants of his wheat produced
record-breaking harvests
in Turkey, Tunisia, Morocco,
Afghanistan, Pakistan,
and elsewhere.
With the help of the State
Department and the World Bank,
Green Revolution techniques
were spreading around the world.
Borlaug's research
had inspired programs
that developed high-yield rice,
maize, and other crops.
Those higher yields
had largely banished
the specter of global famine.
♪
After years
of apocalyptic forecasts,
it seemed almost miraculous,
and Borlaug had been
at the center of it.
Still, he had no idea
what to expect
when strangers started
showing up at work one morning.
♪
MR. WHITE:
Doctor, a few hours ago,
you were informed that you'd won
the Nobel Peace Prize.
Why do you think you won it?
Well, Mr. White, I suppose
it has something to do
with the Green Revolution.
♪
CRONKITE:
The 1970 Nobel Peace Prize
was awarded today
to Dr. Norman Ernest Borlaug.
(applause)
REPORTER:
His efforts are credited
with saving millions of persons
from malnutrition
and starvation.
(people talking in background,
camera shutter clicks)
NARRATOR:
Overnight, Borlaug's life
became a whirlwind.
Everywhere, he was revered
for having saved the world
from disaster.
But Borlaug remained
deeply apprehensive,
sure that he had only delayed
mankind's reckoning.
We are making progress
at the best, present time.
We can't relax,
we must continue.
The Green Revolution
has bought 20 to 25 years.
The world can support
so many individuals
at a certain population level.
But I think that we might
be able to cope
and buy 20 or 30 years of time.
CULLATHER:
He believed that
he had bought time for the world
to deal
with the population problem
and to bring it under control.
♪
NARRATOR:
Borlaug had warned
that the Green Revolution
was just a delaying action,
a fix that bought
20 or 30 years.
But by the turn of the century,
those decades had passed,
the population
was still growing,
and the Green Revolution
was deeply entrenched
around the world.
PERKINS:
The revolution happened
and the revolution became
the standard operating
procedure.
And it really doesn't matter
which country you're in.
It would be very hard
to feed the human population
at seven billion
and still growing
without the
Green Revolution technology.
NARRATOR:
Borlaug was still lionized,
but the legacy
of the Green Revolution
was becoming ever more troubled.
MANN:
What the Green Revolution did
was increase
the global food supply,
by a lot.
But that was accomplished
at tremendous social cost
and an environmental cost.
(engine rumbling, horn honking)
KUMAR:
There is no doubt
that the Green Revolution
resolved the question
of food scarcity in India.
But in parts of India,
the impact can be seen
in the degradation of soil,
in the reduction of water table,
a broken agrarian community,
a broken society.
♪
PERKINS:
After the Green Revolution,
most people ended up
living in cities.
People were not needed
in the rural areas.
There was nothing
for them to do.
♪
OLSSON:
Not only does much of Mexico
come to be soaked
in toxic chemicals
We see this massive outmigration
of Mexican farmers
out of the countryside
and into cities.
Millions of Mexicans
who've chosen to emigrate
to the United States
in the last 30, 40 years or so
are the former campesino farmers
from central Mexico.
(horns honking)
(people talking in background,
children shouting)
NARRATOR:
Most disturbing of all,
no matter how much food
the Green Revolution created,
hunger remained.
NORMAN BORLAUG:
It's particularly frustrating
to me
is that there are still
700 million people
who are short of food.
We have at least two different
aspects of this food problem.
One is to produce enough,
and the second
is the problem of poverty
and lack of purchasing power
for a large part
of the world's population.
OLSSON:
The problem is not
a lack of food.
It is about the inequality
in class
and poverty.
♪
NARRATOR:
Norman Borlaug died
in the fall of 2009.
To the end, he remained
outspoken, stubborn, selfless,
and obsessed
by his war on hunger.
♪
Over the course of his life,
he rarely reflected
on his place in history.
(bird calling)
But once, not long after
he won the Nobel Prize,
Borlaug visited his
ancestral homestead in Norway
Where he wandered alone,
contemplating his role
in what he called
"the great sweep
of human events."
"Lurking in the edges of
my consciousness," he recalled,
"I could see the point at which
an over-burgeoning humanity
becomes too much
for Mother Earth to bear."
♪
In fact, Borlaug allowed the
Earth to bear far more people
than had been thought possible.
But there would be
no final victory
in his war on hunger;
it endures as a consequence
not of want,
but of human nature.
♪
♪
♪
♪
♪
NARRATOR:
It was in the spring of 1966,
in northeastern India,
that Norman Borlaug
came face-to-face with the enemy
he had been fighting
all his life.
(children crying)
(flies buzzing)
Borlaug was a driven man,
a scientist obsessed by hunger.
And he was tormented
by the thought that all of this
could have been prevented, if
only people had listened sooner.
For years,
Borlaug had traveled the globe,
preaching a radically
new approach to agriculture,
one that he had helped develop
over the course of 20 years.
Unprecedented population growth
was straining
the food supply of countries
around the world,
raising the specter
of widespread famine
and social chaos.
LYNDON JOHNSON:
Next to the pursuit of peace,
the greatest challenge
to the human family
is the race between food supply
and population increase.
That race tonight is being lost.
♪
WALTER CRONKITE:
Dr. Norman Borlaug,
an Iowa-born crop expert,
was awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize yesterday
for his work toward easing
the world's hunger problem.
(applause)
NARRATOR:
Within just five years.
Borlaug would be hailed
around the world
for saving countless lives
through what was called
"The Green Revolution."
But Borlaug's stunning successes
had also unleashed
vast, turbulent forces.
CHARLES MANN:
The number of people
who are hungry
declined dramatically.
But there was enormous
social upheaval.
There is huge
environmental damage.
RAJ PATEL:
Norman Borlaug was responsible
for the spread of large-scale
industrial agricultural
production around the world.
I certainly don't think
that it's any credit
to the Nobel Prize
that Norman Borlaug got it.
♪
NARRATOR:
Half a century later,
Borlaug's revolution
continues to shape our world.
TORE OLSSON:
It's really impossible
to understand
the massive growth
of the human population,
to understand the urbanization
of our species,
to understand our tremendous
increasing ecological impact
on the world,
unless we understand
Norman Borlaug
and the Green Revolution.
♪
♪
♪
MANN:
Borlaug grew up
on a very small farm
in northeastern Iowa.
And it's isolated in a way
that is very hard
for a 21st-century person
to imagine.
♪
NOEL VIETMEYER:
On very quiet winter nights,
Norm and his sisters
would go out;
they could hear
the train whistle,
which was 14, 15 miles away.
♪
It was the only connection they
had to the rest of humanity.
♪
NARRATOR:
Norman Borlaug was born in 1914
into a clan
of immigrant farmers.
His great-grandparents
had fled Norway in 1847,
driven by the same potato blight
that ravaged Ireland.
As children, Norm and his two
younger sisters rose before dawn
and worked on the family's
100-acre farm
until after sunset, in a manner
that would have been familiar
to the ancient Romans.
♪
MANN:
Every year he harvested himself
a quarter of a million
ears of corn.
He worked very, very hard,
but he hated it.
VIETMEYER:
Norm had no prospects whatever.
He had to stay on the farm
and work.
And then when his father died,
he would take over.
(crowd murmuring)
NARRATOR:
In the late 1920s, when Norm
was finishing grade school,
he saw signs
of a technological revolution
that was transforming
rural life.
VIETMEYER:
Henry Ford produced
a little tractor,
and that tractor did for farmers
what his Model T did
for the general public.
(engine chugging)
MANN:
The Fordson, it's called.
Typically, in those days,
about 40% of a farm
was devoted to growing the food
for the oxen and horses.
When you had a tractor,
that land became available
to grow food,
and the farm's effective size
doubled.
Their income doubled.
To have corn harvested
in a couple of days in a tractor
was an incredibly liberating
experience for him.
Anybody would draw a lesson
from that.
He certainly did,
that this kind of technology
equaled freedom from toil.
(tractor rumbling)
NARRATOR:
"The fabled future had arrived,"
Borlaug recalled,
"and was even more fabulous
than anything we'd dared
wish for."
VIETMEYER:
That's how he got some education
beyond eighth grade.
Because of the tractor
and these modern things.
He had confidence in technology
for the rest of his days.
(wind howling)
NARRATOR:
Within a few years,
Borlaug's bright hopes
had been swallowed up
by the Great Depression.
♪
In Iowa, the rain stopped,
clouds of locusts
blotted out the sun,
dust storms buried farms
and towns alike.
♪
Borlaug's high school graduation
was an eerie affair;
no one mentioned the future.
In the fall of 1933,
with just $61 in his pocket,
he left the farm
for Minneapolis.
♪
MANN:
He hoped to get
an athletic scholarship
at the University of Minnesota.
He didn't think
he was very smart.
He didn't think he was well
educated or anything like that.
He hoped that this was his way
into a better life.
NARRATOR:
Not only was there
no sports scholarship,
it took an entire term
and three separate applications
before the University
of Minnesota opened its doors.
He chose to study forestry,
then something of a campus cult,
representing both a rebellion
against capitalism
and an escape from its collapse.
Food and shelter
were a constant struggle,
but there were consolations:
Borlaug was moonlighting
as a waiter
when he met Margaret Gibson.
JEANIE BORLAUG:
My mother was waiting tables
to pay for her education.
I think she thought he was
very serious.
And my mother
was not real serious,
but she had a great personality.
NARRATOR:
In the fall of 1937,
with graduation
around the corner
and a job waiting
at the Forestry Service,
Norm married Margaret in a quiet
ceremony at her brother's home.
But their tidy future vanished
just three months later,
when Norm's forestry job
fell victim to budget cuts.
Suddenly at loose ends,
he went back to school
for graduate studies
in plant pathology.
But the most indelible lesson
of his college years
took place in the streets
of Minneapolis.
VIETMEYER:
He walked around a corner
and there was a milk plant.
♪
Norm could see
behind a big fence
a bunch of corporate goons
with batons.
(engine rumbling)
♪
NARRATOR:
Across the Midwest,
desperate farmers were trying
to shore up commodity prices
by cutting off
the supply of food
to the cities.
"We'll eat our wheat and ham
and eggs," they chanted,
"and let them eat their gold."
(horn honking, people shouting)
MANN:
Dairy farmers were going
to dump the milk
because they couldn't sell it
for enough to make a living.
Hungry people descended on these
trucks and demanded the milk.
And all of a sudden,
they, they charged.
And Norm was trapped
by the crowd,
and these batons were coming
right towards him,
swinging and hitting people
over the head.
NARRATOR:
"Bodies and blood
were scattered and spattered
all over the street,"
Borlaug wrote.
"I took off running, trembling,
frightened.
"I'd seen how fast
violence springs to life
"when hunger, misery,
and desperation
infect the public mind."
It was terrifying to him,
and he saw how hunger
can just turn, as he sort of
put it, men into beasts.
♪
NARRATOR:
Scenes like the one
in Minneapolis
were all too common
in the 1930s.
Hunger and deprivation were
fueling political instability
around the world,
dragging humanity into a
brutish struggle for resources.
(crowd clamoring)
OLSSON:
The Second World War in many
ways is a struggle about food.
Hitler and the Nazis looked
eastward at Poland and Russia
as sort of settling ground
for prosperous Aryan farmers
who would then produce
for the larger German nation.
Japan, as well,
saw China as a potential
feeding ground
for the Japanese nation.
♪
But these big dreams are
dependent upon the subjugation,
if not murder,
of millions of people.
(ship guns firing)
NARRATOR:
By 1940, Japan had invaded
Manchuria,
and Germany occupied
much of Europe.
As the Roosevelt administration
braced
for what was quickly becoming
a second world war,
it looked nervously
to its southern border.
The Mexican government
was working to liberate
the country's citizens
from grinding poverty,
but prosperity and stability
remained elusive.
NICK CULLATHER:
Mexico was coming out of years
of revolution, civil war.
Rural Mexicans had
at best a kind of a loose and
sometimes hostile relationship
with the central government.
♪
It began to look as if social
unrest south of the border
would be a vulnerability
for the United States.
NARRATOR:
The Roosevelt administration
and the Mexican government
both wanted peace
in the countryside.
The Rockefeller Foundation,
a wealthy philanthropy
with White House connections,
offered to help.
OLSSON:
The Rockefeller Foundation
had been involved in teaching
poor black and white cotton
farmers in the U.S. South.
And this gave them
a sort of proven formula
for how they could attack
questions of poverty
and "backwardness,"
as they saw it.
(cows mooing)
NARRATOR:
By 1942, the Rockefeller
Foundation
and the Mexican government
had negotiated
a carefully targeted plan.
OLSSON:
They wanted to raise the
economic standard of living
among the impoverished farmers
who tended to live
in the densely settled plateau
around Mexico City.
CULLATHER:
The United States is anxious
to stabilize Mexico,
and the Mexican government
was eager for this.
This was a kind of
counterinsurgency effort,
to improve the livelihoods
of people in the villages
and also to connect
those villages more closely
to the national government.
♪
(engine rumbling)
NARRATOR:
On the 7th of December, 1941,
Norman and Margaret Borlaug were
driving east from Minneapolis
to Wilmington, Delaware,
where Norman was due to start
his first job
at DuPont Chemical.
So it wasn't
until the following day
that they heard
about Pearl Harbor.
MANN:
Borlaug graduated from Minnesota
into the Second World War.
And he wanted to do something
that mattered.
He wanted to make
a contribution.
NARRATOR:
For two-and-a-half years,
Borlaug put his PhD
in plant pathology to use,
waging a quiet war
on the microbes
that were ravaging soldiers
and materials in the jungles
of the South Pacific.
But he'd never meant to spend
his life in a laboratory,
so when the Rockefeller
Foundation
contacted him
about an exotic job in Mexico,
Borlaug took the plunge.
On the 11th of September, 1944,
he loaded up the family's
old Pontiac and headed south,
leaving behind
a very pregnant Margaret
and their young daughter Jeanie.
♪
Borlaug had only a vague sense
of what lay ahead
when he joined three other
American scientists
at a research station
near Chapingo,
25 miles east of Mexico City.
Still, he was surprised
to be given a side project.
While everyone else worked
on the staples of the
Mexican diet corn and beans
Borlaug was to focus on wheat.
As the junior member
of the team, he had no choice
but to take on a fiendishly
difficult challenge.
(insects buzzing,
birds chirping)
MANN:
He was to look at a kind of
fungus called stem rust.
Stem rust is one of the oldest
enemies of the human race.
The Romans had
a god of stem rust
that they would sacrifice to
to propitiate it,
to try to keep it away.
NARRATOR:
Stem rust had driven
Borlaug's family
out of the wheat business
back in 1878.
Now, it was killing half
of Mexico's small wheat crop
year after year.
VIETMEYER:
Stem rust migrates.
These are trillions
and trillions of spores
sailing on the wind.
And when they find wheat plants
of the right maturity,
it just destroys them.
♪
CULLATHER:
His background
was actually in forestry,
so he didn't have
a lot of training
in the breeding of wheat.
NARRATOR:
Borlaug was already reeling
when a telegram arrived
at the end of November 1944
Margaret had given birth
to a boy with spina bifida.
For three agonizing days,
Norm waited for a flight
back to Wilmington.
He found Margaret
at the hospital
with an awful predicament.
Scotty was in an isolation ward;
they couldn't touch
or comfort him.
His affliction was essentially
a death sentence.
Norm announced
that he was taking
his old job back at DuPont
so they could all be together.
"My husband has a future,"
Margaret insisted.
"My baby has none.
You go back;
I'll come when I can."
A few weeks later,
Margaret and Jeanie
followed Norm to Mexico City.
♪
(vehicle rattling)
Back in Mexico, tormented by
guilt and unsure how to proceed,
Borlaug drove around
in the station's green pickup,
gathering thousands of different
varieties of local wheat.
He was joined by Pepe Rodriguez
and Jose Guevara,
young Mexican agronomists
hired out of college
by the Rockefeller Foundation.
In that spring of 1945,
the three young men
planted out 110,000
of the seeds
Borlaug had collected.
♪
VIETMEYER:
Borlaug's just hoping like hell
that some of the wheats
can withstand
the trillions of spores
that are going to be landing.
♪
NARRATOR:
All summer they trudged
through the rows,
weeding out every seedling that
showed the telltale pustules.
Of the 110,000 plants,
just four were still alive
at harvest time.
♪
Already, Borlaug was haunted
by the malnutrition
he'd seen in Mexico,
and now the cause
seemed abundantly clear.
"Can you imagine trying to feed
a family?" he wrote Margaret.
"We've got to do something."
He had found his life's work.
♪
MANN:
When he settled on the goal
of trying to feed more people,
he snapped into focus.
And he worked phenomenally hard.
♪
That perseverance, his intense,
laser-like focus,
is the thing that I think most
distinguished him in his life.
It was like a spotlight.
A spotlight casts certain things
in very bright light,
but also casts
very deep shadows.
NARRATOR:
Driven by a new sense
of mission,
Borlaug devised a plan to
speed up the breeding process.
After the fall harvest
at Chapingo,
he would head north
with his most promising seeds
and plant them in Sonora,
where wheat is grown
during the winter.
When spring came, he would
harvest that generation,
rush back to Chapingo
with the new winners,
and start the process
over again.
By growing two generations
every year,
Borlaug could solve
Mexico's wheat problem,
and ease malnutrition
in half the time.
"Shuttle breeding,"
he called it.
♪
MANN:
What Borlaug didn't know
was that all the textbooks
Literally the textbooks
said you can't do this.
♪
VIETMEYER:
Wheat breeders believed
that you had to breed wheat
for the place
where it was going to be grown,
and nowhere else.
NARRATOR:
Borlaug's boss, George Harrar,
hated the idea.
Not only did shuttle breeding
ignore conventional wisdom,
but Harrar worried
that Borlaug's wheat
would end up benefiting the
well-heeled farmers of Sonora,
rather than the campesinos
of central Mexico.
OLSSON:
Farmers in Sonora
were not peasant farmers.
They tended to be larger
in terms of their land holdings.
They tended to be
commercially oriented,
growing wheat for export.
NARRATOR:
Harrar told Borlaug to drop it
several times,
but the younger man
wouldn't let up.
Borlaug finally got grudging
permission to go to Sonora,
but there was to be no budget,
no support, no machinery,
accommodations, or vehicle.
No matter: At the beginning
of November 1945,
Norman Borlaug packed up
the seeds from the four plants
that survived
the summer epidemic
and headed north.
♪
VIETMEYER:
He went up to Sonora
and he squatted
in a derelict old research
station that had been abandoned,
that had no running water.
The windows had been broken out
and there were rats everywhere.
(birds twittering)
MANN:
He didn't have a tractor.
He didn't have a horse.
So he was actually
taking a harness, you know,
that normally was attached
to a draft animal
you know, a horse or an oxen
or whatever
Strapping it
around his chest and arms,
and plowing himself.
(birds twittering)
NARRATOR:
There was, in fact, a method
to Borlaug's madness.
By cross-breeding
his four survivors
with other successful varieties,
he hoped to produce
the perfect wheat.
♪
The critical moment arrived
when the wheat began to flower.
VIETMEYER:
Wheat is self-pollinating,
so to make a cross-pollination,
you have to cut
the female floret
when it's just
at the right point
and remove all of its pollen
so that it can't pollinate
itself;
you got to get every last one.
Then you have to cover it
with a paper
to stop any foreign pollen
blowing in on the wind.
Four days later, when the male
is producing pollen,
then you bring that one over
and pour its pollen down
so you've got
a cross-pollinated plant.
It's very, very complicated,
and Norm had to teach himself.
MANN:
This is something that plant
breeders have been doing
for a very, very long time.
What they haven't done is to do
it on a massive scale.
It's such a phenomenal amount
of work,
nobody in their right mind
would think of doing it.
(insects chirping)
NARRATOR:
At night,
as Borlaug lay on the floor
with rats scampering
over his bedroll,
the ghosts crowded in.
"I was certain," he wrote, "that
I had made a dreadful mistake."
♪
Over the next years,
Borlaug's doubts slowly gave way
to the realization
that he was on to something big.
By 1948,
he had wheat
that resisted stem rust,
grew anywhere, in any season,
and delivered huge quantities
of high-quality grain.
(horn honking)
♪
But that remarkable achievement
came with one big catch.
In order to deliver
those yields,
his wheat needed unprecedented
levels of chemical fertilizer
and lots of water.
VIETMEYER:
Fertilizer was the key
to getting the absolute
greatest productivity
out of, out of these plants
ten times what the average
wheat farmer was getting.
NARRATOR:
Borlaug wanted to fight hunger
by producing lots of food.
But his wheat relied
on a costly recipe;
only farmers who could afford
that fertilizer
and had access
to irrigation water
stood to benefit.
Poorer farmers the ones
the Rockefeller Foundation
had come to help
would be largely left behind.
OLSSON:
Borlaug is coming to challenge
in many ways
the established direction
of the program,
which was trying to help
small-scale, poor farmers
in central Mexico.
And George Harrar,
who is Borlaug's boss,
basically tells him,
"You've got to stop this.
"It is a fundamental distraction
from what we're trying to
accomplish with this program."
And Borlaug throws down the
towel and says, "I'm quitting."
♪
JOHN PERKINS:
Borlaug had very definite
thoughts
about the way that agriculture
should develop.
You make it possible
for very few people
to raise vast amounts of food.
And the surplus labor
which is what most people
in rural areas became
they were going to be
city people.
♪
(birds twittering)
NARRATOR:
Borlaug marched
out of Harrar's office
and began making plans
to leave the country,
but the next day, he was
unexpectedly summoned back.
"Forget what I said," Harrar
told an astonished Borlaug.
"Go on working in Sonora."
Borlaug couldn't know it,
but a political earthquake
on the other side of the globe
was upending
the Rockefeller program.
♪
(crowd clamoring)
CULLATHER:
Chinese Communist troops
march south
singing about rice and beans.
Americans interpreted
the Chinese Civil War
as a conflict
that was based on resources,
and particularly on food.
(soldiers singing in Chinese)
NARRATOR:
By that summer of 1948,
Mao Zedong's Communists
were sweeping across China.
In Washington,
alarm bells were ringing.
OLSSON:
There's a growing sense
that the Cold War
was spiraling
out of Americans' control.
The fear especially that what
was going to tilt the Cold War
in the Soviets' favor
was discontented peasants
around the world.
♪
NARRATOR:
This new threat gave American
policymakers an urgent priority.
OLSSON:
There was a rather simple idea
that "no one becomes a Communist
on a full belly,"
that we can tilt the scales
in favor of the free capitalist
democratic world
if we can just produce
enough food.
♪
NARRATOR:
Borlaug's miracle wheat
might not help peasant farmers
in Mexico,
but it could win
hearts and minds
in the struggle against
Josef Stalin and Mao Zedong.
OLSSON:
The Rockefeller Foundation
bosses in New York,
working quite collaboratively
with the State Department,
come to realize that Borlaug
is actually doing something
that might be valuable
for the global Cold War:
a universal program
to feed a hungry world.
♪
NARRATOR:
The Rockefeller Foundation began
recasting the Mexico program.
Not only was Borlaug given
a free hand in Sonora,
but his agenda began to eclipse
the original mission.
Over the next few years,
a large staff
of Mexican and American
scientists and administrators
was assigned
to Borlaug's wheat project,
and a bright new facility built.
He would soon need all of those
resources and more.
♪
The problem appeared
in the early 1950s,
as Borlaug was achieving
unprecedented yields.
VIETMEYER:
He was getting plants
with so much grain up there
that the five-foot-long stem
just couldn't hold it up.
Towards the end of the season,
winds would blow
whole fields over.
He had to find some way
to strengthen the stems.
And the only way
he could see to do that
was to shrink the plant.
♪
NARRATOR:
Borlaug began crossing
his top lines
with what was called
a "dwarf" wheat,
descended from varieties
developed in Japan
a century before.
♪
This time there were
no shortcuts, no lucky breaks,
just thousands and thousands
of crosses,
and years of frustration.
♪
Finally, in 1962, after seven
years and 8,156 crosses,
the dwarf wheat program
came through.
MANN:
He has developed what you can
think of as the complete wheat.
Wheat that'll yield like crazy
with fertilizer and water,
that's shorter, so all the extra
growth will go into grain,
that will grow anywhere,
and is as resistant to stem rust
as you can possibly be.
VIETMEYER:
It was this amazing development.
And Norm patented nothing
Nothing.
NARRATOR:
Borlaug's new wheat transformed
the program's potential.
CULLATHER:
The Rockefeller Foundation
began to see places in the world
where the techniques
Borlaug developed in Mexico
might be practically used.
They started out
in a particular place,
with a particular set
of political goals.
But increasingly, they began
to see it as a program
for the salvation of the world.
♪
NARRATOR:
In January of 1963,
just a few months
after Borlaug's masterstroke,
an invitation from
an Indian agricultural scientist
landed on his desk.
Within weeks, Borlaug
was on his way to New Delhi.
One of the most far-reaching
enterprises
of the 20th century
had begun.
(horns honking)
(people talking in background,
horns honking)
HOWARD K. SMITH:
India's problem
is easily stated.
India is one-third the size
of the United States,
but it has a population
greater than that
of all North America
and South America together:
some 400 million people.
In the next 25 years,
if nothing happens,
that huge population will double
to 800 million.
If India has trouble feeding
400 million now,
how can she feed
twice that number
within a generation?
REPORTER:
The man whose ambition
is to turn India
into a food-exporting country
is Dr. Swaminathan.
CULLATHER:
Swaminathan had begun to do
his own research on wheat.
He came across
some research materials
about the dwarf wheat varieties,
and he conceives of the idea
of inviting Norman Borlaug.
♪
NARRATOR:
Over the course
of a three-week road trip
through India's wheat country,
the bull-headed American
and the cultured Brahmin
discovered a bond
of common purpose.
We had the same ideas,
we had the same goals in life.
And I liked his approach.
GEORGE VARUGHESE:
Dr. Swaminathan is
an excellent politician.
He is so quiet, slow operator.
Dr. Borlaug is not that way.
He will start very polite,
but, if at one stage he finds
things are not going very well,
you cannot hold him back.
CULLATHER:
Borlaug is playing
a very different role
than the role he played
in Mexico.
In Mexico, Borlaug is working
largely as a scientist.
When he gets to India,
he's working with Swaminathan,
reaching out as a salesman
to a skeptical population
and government.
NARRATOR:
The political challenge
was enormous.
The wholesale adoption
of high-yield wheat
entailed massive investments.
Fertilizer would have
to be imported
until a domestic industry
could meet the demand,
and irrigation built up
across thousands
of square miles.
The government would also
have to guarantee
a minimum price to farmers,
so they could afford
the new practices.
PRAKASH KUMAR:
There were all kinds
of suspicions.
Is this opening the floodgate
to American corporations
to sell their seeds, chemicals,
and other things?
And there was this huge question
whether this model of farming
is applicable to India.
NARRATOR:
After returning to Mexico,
Borlaug loaded 750 pounds
of seed
into the cargo hold
of a Pan Am jet
and sent it to Swaminathan
for field trials.
(birds chirping)
By harvest time,
he was in India again,
in time to savor the result:
Where the plants had been
fed and watered as directed,
they had delivered
almost incredible yields.
But Borlaug was outraged
to discover
that scientists at several sites
had used traditional methods.
With no fertilizer, chemicals,
or extra water,
the plants fared poorly.
This, they insisted, was how
wheat was grown in South Asia.
(birds twittering)
KUMAR:
Most of Indian farming
was for subsistence.
Gandhian ideology talks
in terms of restraint in use.
It talks in terms of less greed,
less acquisition.
It was the brute capitalism
of Norman Borlaug's model
which was irreconcilable
with Gandhian thought.
NARRATOR:
As far as Borlaug was concerned,
India was in danger
of widespread famine,
and it was almost criminal
to object to a solution.
"This was utter folly,"
he noted, "and we ignored it."
But folly or not,
Borlaug and Swaminathan couldn't
bring the authorities around;
it was going to take more
than a few field tests
to shake up
the world's largest democracy.
(people talking in background,
horn honking)
♪
KUMAR:
There was a real fear
in the American State Department
that hunger would lead
to a Communist takeover.
So they came up with this
new kind of a solution:
using food as a tool
of foreign policy.
♪
NARRATOR:
In the mid-1950s,
the United States began sending
its surplus grain
to countries like India
under a program
called "Food For Peace."
♪
It was a powerful strategy,
but unsustainable.
♪
In 1965, India consumed
one-fifth
of America's wheat crop;
by 1970, it was projected
to need one-half.
♪
SMITH:
Two-thirds of the world
goes to bed hungry every night.
Most children eat
less than two meals a day.
The population problem has
clearly graduated to the point
where it has to be faced
and discussed openly
and in deadly seriousness.
♪
CULLATHER:
The idea that population growth
had gone out of control
became a major
political concern.
(horn honks)
The United Nations
began holding sessions
on the question of population.
The U.S. Congress
began wondering
whether the food supply
would keep up
with global population growth.
NARRATOR:
If present trends continued,
mankind would run out
of arable land
and the food supply
would fall short.
Famine and social chaos
seemed inevitable.
PERKINS:
Most of the good acres
are already in cultivation.
So you have to get more food
from every acre you harvest.
NARRATOR:
American policymakers
began pushing strategies
to grow larger yields
in an effort to contain
the looming crisis.
For many people,
India was the bellwether.
"The future of mankind
is now being ground out there,"
a witness told Congress.
"If no solution is found,
all the world will live
as India does now."
In 1966,
that was a terrifying prospect.
(horn honking)
♪
REPORTER:
Even in good years,
millions of Indians
suffer from malnutrition.
This year, 70 million lives
may be in peril
in the worst drought
in India's history
as an independent nation.
REPORTER:
One-third of Bihar
has been declared
as famine area.
Water is a major problem.
The prime minister,
Mrs. Indira Gandhi.
GANDHI:
All of us must come together
to alleviate the agony
of millions
of our stricken people.
♪
KUMAR:
I was born in 1966
in the state of Bihar,
when my state was passing
through this famine.
That famine was real
and it led to death.
♪
NARRATOR:
"During those terrible days,"
Borlaug wrote,
"I saw miserable homeless kids
pleading for scraps of bread.
"Each morning, trucks circled
the streets, picking up corpses.
That's when my patience
ran out."
♪
Borlaug's frustration
boiled over
in a meeting with one of
their leading Indian opponents.
VARUGHESE:
Ashok Mehta, the head
of the Planning Commission,
determines the priorities,
where to allocate the money,
how the policies are set.
He was the person
who was holding back.
MANN:
Borlaug barges into
the guy's office and explodes.
NARRATOR:
"Unless the policy is changed
soon," Borlaug shouted,
"farmers will riot, and social
and political disorder
"will spread
across the countryside,
and you personally
will be to blame!"
MANN:
He's red-faced,
he's slamming the table,
yelling and screaming at a
high Indian government official
who's never met him before.
NARRATOR:
Borlaug's tirade
went hand-in-hand
with a harsh
new American policy.
By the summer of 1966,
the United States' wheat surplus
was dwindling.
President Lyndon Johnson,
anxious to force the pace
of agricultural reform in India,
shut down the food pipeline
at the height of the drought.
"He was toying with
people's lives," Borlaug wrote.
"But," he added,
"what he was attempting
was just what was needed."
Few Indians saw it that way.
PATEL:
That moment of understanding
that the food supply of your
country was hostage
to whether you did
what the United States
wanted you to or not
was a moment
of indelible national shame.
♪
NARRATOR:
Indians resolved to throw off
this new colonialism.
There were to be
no more grain imports,
the government declared,
even if it meant
that Indians would starve.
(crowd chanting)
NARRATOR:
In these new circumstances,
Borlaug's program took on
a different aspect.
It offered a path
to Indian self-sufficiency
and independence,
a goal that now outweighed
worries of ecology
and social equity.
Not long after Borlaug's
showdown with Mehta,
India announced
a fundamental change
in its agricultural policy.
Fertilizer imports
and factories, irrigation,
price supports
Everything was in place now.
For years, Borlaug had promised
that he could save India.
Now it was time to prove it.
♪
(rainfall pattering)
CULLATHER:
Fertilizer had been distributed
around the country.
The test plots
had been stretched out
to almost a million acres.
And the rains cooperated.
(thunder rumbling)
♪
NARRATOR:
By the time
Borlaug and Swaminathan
headed into the countryside
in the spring of 1968,
the atmosphere was electric.
CULLATHER:
Reports began to arrive
in New Delhi of grain silos
that were being overwhelmed.
Railroad depots were stacking
grain on the tracks
because there was no place else
to put it.
VIETMEYER:
They closed the schools
and filled the school rooms
with the sacks of grain.
There was food everywhere.
There was grain everywhere.
NARRATOR:
"Punjabi towns were buried
in wheat," Borlaug wrote.
"There weren't bags
to hold the grain,
"carts to haul away the bags,
"bullocks to pull the carts,
or trucks and trains
to haul it all away."
When it was all done
and counted,
the 1968 harvest was almost
one-and-a-half times larger
than the previous record.
♪
It marked the beginning
of a movement that would change
the face of the world.
Soon afterward,
an American diplomat
gave that movement a name
And an ideology.
CULLATHER:
The term "Green Revolution" was
meant to contrast this program,
which was now seen
as a tremendous global success,
with the Red Revolution,
which was at that time
sweeping the world,
and particularly in Asia.
KUMAR:
At the end of the day,
Green Revolution
was ideological in nature.
Norman Borlaug represented
American faith
in agricultural capitalism.
(birds twittering)
NARRATOR:
By 1970, the impact
of Borlaug's work
was being felt around the world.
Variants of his wheat produced
record-breaking harvests
in Turkey, Tunisia, Morocco,
Afghanistan, Pakistan,
and elsewhere.
With the help of the State
Department and the World Bank,
Green Revolution techniques
were spreading around the world.
Borlaug's research
had inspired programs
that developed high-yield rice,
maize, and other crops.
Those higher yields
had largely banished
the specter of global famine.
♪
After years
of apocalyptic forecasts,
it seemed almost miraculous,
and Borlaug had been
at the center of it.
Still, he had no idea
what to expect
when strangers started
showing up at work one morning.
♪
MR. WHITE:
Doctor, a few hours ago,
you were informed that you'd won
the Nobel Peace Prize.
Why do you think you won it?
Well, Mr. White, I suppose
it has something to do
with the Green Revolution.
♪
CRONKITE:
The 1970 Nobel Peace Prize
was awarded today
to Dr. Norman Ernest Borlaug.
(applause)
REPORTER:
His efforts are credited
with saving millions of persons
from malnutrition
and starvation.
(people talking in background,
camera shutter clicks)
NARRATOR:
Overnight, Borlaug's life
became a whirlwind.
Everywhere, he was revered
for having saved the world
from disaster.
But Borlaug remained
deeply apprehensive,
sure that he had only delayed
mankind's reckoning.
We are making progress
at the best, present time.
We can't relax,
we must continue.
The Green Revolution
has bought 20 to 25 years.
The world can support
so many individuals
at a certain population level.
But I think that we might
be able to cope
and buy 20 or 30 years of time.
CULLATHER:
He believed that
he had bought time for the world
to deal
with the population problem
and to bring it under control.
♪
NARRATOR:
Borlaug had warned
that the Green Revolution
was just a delaying action,
a fix that bought
20 or 30 years.
But by the turn of the century,
those decades had passed,
the population
was still growing,
and the Green Revolution
was deeply entrenched
around the world.
PERKINS:
The revolution happened
and the revolution became
the standard operating
procedure.
And it really doesn't matter
which country you're in.
It would be very hard
to feed the human population
at seven billion
and still growing
without the
Green Revolution technology.
NARRATOR:
Borlaug was still lionized,
but the legacy
of the Green Revolution
was becoming ever more troubled.
MANN:
What the Green Revolution did
was increase
the global food supply,
by a lot.
But that was accomplished
at tremendous social cost
and an environmental cost.
(engine rumbling, horn honking)
KUMAR:
There is no doubt
that the Green Revolution
resolved the question
of food scarcity in India.
But in parts of India,
the impact can be seen
in the degradation of soil,
in the reduction of water table,
a broken agrarian community,
a broken society.
♪
PERKINS:
After the Green Revolution,
most people ended up
living in cities.
People were not needed
in the rural areas.
There was nothing
for them to do.
♪
OLSSON:
Not only does much of Mexico
come to be soaked
in toxic chemicals
We see this massive outmigration
of Mexican farmers
out of the countryside
and into cities.
Millions of Mexicans
who've chosen to emigrate
to the United States
in the last 30, 40 years or so
are the former campesino farmers
from central Mexico.
(horns honking)
(people talking in background,
children shouting)
NARRATOR:
Most disturbing of all,
no matter how much food
the Green Revolution created,
hunger remained.
NORMAN BORLAUG:
It's particularly frustrating
to me
is that there are still
700 million people
who are short of food.
We have at least two different
aspects of this food problem.
One is to produce enough,
and the second
is the problem of poverty
and lack of purchasing power
for a large part
of the world's population.
OLSSON:
The problem is not
a lack of food.
It is about the inequality
in class
and poverty.
♪
NARRATOR:
Norman Borlaug died
in the fall of 2009.
To the end, he remained
outspoken, stubborn, selfless,
and obsessed
by his war on hunger.
♪
Over the course of his life,
he rarely reflected
on his place in history.
(bird calling)
But once, not long after
he won the Nobel Prize,
Borlaug visited his
ancestral homestead in Norway
Where he wandered alone,
contemplating his role
in what he called
"the great sweep
of human events."
"Lurking in the edges of
my consciousness," he recalled,
"I could see the point at which
an over-burgeoning humanity
becomes too much
for Mother Earth to bear."
♪
In fact, Borlaug allowed the
Earth to bear far more people
than had been thought possible.
But there would be
no final victory
in his war on hunger;
it endures as a consequence
not of want,
but of human nature.
♪
♪
♪