This story by Dr. Paul Brand has appeared in many publications since the early eighties. It was the one that first touched my heart and set me on the path as an advocate of creation care—as it has numerous others. You can read it in its entirety in RBC’s Discovery Series booklet “God’s Good Earth.” And you can watch his story on RBC’s Day of Discovery webpage. You may recall that Dr. Brand and Philip Yancey collaborated on the book Fearfully and Wonderfully Made. If you’ve never read the story, you are in for a treat. If you have, it is still a joy to read again.
See you outdoors!
Dean
A Handful of Mud
I grew up in the mountains of South India. My parents were missionaries to the tribal people of the hills, and our lives were about as simple as they could be-and as happy.
There were no roads. (We never saw a wheeled vehicle except on our annual visit to the plains.) There were no stores, no electricity, no plumbing. My sister and I ran barefoot, and we made our own games from the trees, sticks, and stones around us. Our playmates were the Indian boys and girls, and our lives were much the same as theirs.
Rice was an important food for all of us. And since there was no level ground for wet cultivation, it was grown all along the streams that ran down the land’s gentle slopes. These slopes had been patiently terraced hundreds of years before; and now every one was perfectly level, and bordered at its lower margin by an earthen dam covered by grass. Each narrow dam served as a footpath across the line of terraces, with a level field of mud and water six inches below its upper edge and another level terrace two feet below. There were no steep or high drop-offs, so there was little danger of collapse.
Those rice paddies were a rich soup of life. When there was plenty of water there would be a lot of frogs and little fish. Egrets would stalk through the paddy fields on their long legs and enjoy the feast. Kingfishers would swoop down with a flash of color and carry off a fish from under the beak of a heron.
And it was here I learned my first lesson on conservation.
I was playing in the mud of a rice field with a half-dozen other little boys. We were racing to see who would be the first to catch three frogs. It was a wonderful way to get dirty from head to foot in the shortest possible time. Suddenly, we were all scrambling to get out of the paddy. One of the boys had spotted an old man walking across the path toward us. We all knew him as “Tata,” or “Grandpa.” He was the keeper of the dams. He walked slowly, and was stooped over a bit as though he were always looking at the ground. Old age is very much respected in India, and we boys shuffled our feet and waited in silence for what we knew would be a rebuke.
He came over to us and asked us what we were doing. “Catching frogs,” we answered. He stared down at the churned-up mud and flattened young rice plants in the corner where we had been playing. I was expecting him to talk about the rice seedlings we had just spoiled. Instead, the elder stooped down and scooped up a handful of mud. “What is this?” he asked. The biggest boy took the responsibility of answering for us all.
“It’s mud, Tata,” he replied.
“Whose mud is it?” the old man asked.
“It’s your mud, Tata, this is your field.”
Then the old man turned and looked at the nearest of the little channels across the dam. “What do you see there, in that channel?”
“That is water, running over into the lower field.”
For the first time Tata looked angry. “Come with me and I will show you water.” A few steps along the dam he pointed to the next channel, where clear water was running, “That is what water looks like,” he said. Then we came back to our nearest channel, and he said again “Is that water?”
We hung our heads. “No, Tata, that is mud.” The older boy had heard all this before and did not want to prolong the question-and-answer session, so he hurried on. “And the mud from your field is being carried away to the field below, and it will never come back, because mud always runs downhill, never up again. We are sorry, Tata, and we will never do this again.”
Tata was not ready to stop his lesson as quickly as that, however. He went on to tell us that just one handful of mud would grow enough rice for one meal for one person, and it would do it twice every year for years and years into the future. “That mud flowing over the dam has given my family food since before I was born, and before my grandfather was born. It would have given my grandchildren and their grandchildren food forever. Now it will never feed us again. When you see mud in the channels of water, you know that life is flowing away from the mountains.”
The old man walked slowly back across the path, pausing a moment to adjust with his foot the grass clod in our muddy channel so that no more water flowed through it. We were silent and uncomfortable as we went off to find some other place to play. I had experienced a dose of traditional Indian folk education that would remain with me as long as I lived. Soil is life, and every generation is responsible for all generations to come.
The hand of man
I have been back to my childhood home several times. There have been changes. A road now links the hill people with the plains folk, but traditional ways still go on. The terraced paddy fields still hold back the mud. Rice still grows. And the old man the boys call “Tata” is now one of the boys I used to play with 65 years ago. I am sure he lays down the law when he catches someone churning up the mud, and I hope the system holds for years to come. I have seen what happens when it doesn’t.
The Nilgiri hills, or Blue Mountains, were a favorite resort in the hot season for missionaries from the plains. They were steep and thickly forested, with few areas level enough for cultivation, even with terraces. The forestry service allowed no clearing of the trees except where tea, coffee, or fruit trees were to be planted. These bushes and trees, in turn, held the soil-and all was well.
Thirty years after my encounter with “Tata” I was back in India, a doctor and a missionary myself, with a wife and growing family. We began going to the Nilgiris for every summer holiday, and our children reveled in the cool air and lush forests. But something was different, or soon became so.
A new breed of landowners had begun to take possession of the land. These new “farmers”-former political prisoners who, following India’s independence, were given tracts of land-had not farmed before. They had never been exposed to a Tata teaching them the value of mud. They wanted to make money, and make it fast. They knew the climate was ideal for potatoes, and that there was a market for such a crop. Forests were thus cleared on sloping land, and potatoes planted. Two and even three crops could be harvested per year, and money flowed freely into their purse.
But harvesting potatoes involves turning over the soil, and monsoon rains often came before a new crop could hold that soil. Not surprisingly then, as my family and I returned to those mountains of boyhood memory, the water now looked like chocolate syrup. It oozed rather than flowed. We were seeing rivers of mud. I felt sick.
I went over to ask old Mr. Fritschi and his wife, a dear Swiss couple living in Coonoor on the Nilgiri hills, about the havoc that was being wrought and to find out if there was anything we could do. They had been missionaries of the Basel Mission but were long retired and now owned a nursery of young plants and trees. They loved to help and advise farmers and gardeners about ways to improve their crops. It seemed to me that these devoted people would know if there was some way to advise the landowners about ways to save their soil.
Mr. Fritschi’s eyes were moist as he told me, “I have tried, but it is no use. They have no love of the land, only of money. They are making a lot of money, and they do not worry about the loss of soil, because they think it is away in the future, and they will have money to buy more.” Besides, he continued, they can deduct the loss of land from their income tax as business depreciation.
Thirty more years have passed and we have left India. But every year I go back to visit Vellore Christian Medical College and take part in the leprosy work there. I do not, however, enjoy going back to the Nilgiri hills. I look up to those slopes and see large areas of bare rock of no use to anybody. Those deforested areas that still have some soil look like gravel. And the clear streams and springs that ran off from these areas 60 years earlier are dry to day. When the rains come they rush in torrents and flood, then they go dry.
Oh Tata! Where have you gone? You have been replaced by businessmen and accountants who have degrees in commerce and who know how to manipulate tax laws. You have been replaced by farmers who know about pesticides and chemical fertilizers, but who care nothing about leaving soil for their great-grandchildren.
NOTE: Dr. Brand would be delighted to know that with a great deal of effort and time, the Nilgiris are being reclaimed. Though the paddies are gone, the hills are now filled with tea plantations.


January 19th, 2009 at 10:46 am
“They have no love of the land, only of money.”
Very inspiring story… unfolds the universal saga of human greed… Money is the root of all evil!
In the physical sense, Soil erosion is bad…affects food production and water availability…glad to know that the Nilgiris are being reclaimed!
In the spiritual sense, Soul erosion is eternally bad…
…I’m wondering about the affects of sin eroding away the “good soil” and exposing barren rocky surfaces of the human heart… Is there any hope… for the “good seed” to produce fruits… a hundred fold?
Yes! Jesus came to find and “reclaim” lost sinners! So, let us…
“Sing GOD a brand-new song! Earth and everyone in it, sing!
…Shout the news of His victory from sea to sea, Take the news of His glory to the lost, News of His wonders to one and all!
Get out the message—God Rules!
… Let’s hear it from Sky, With Earth joining in… Let Wilderness turn cartwheels, Animals, come dance, Put every tree of the forest in the choir— An extravaganza before God as He comes,
As He comes to set everything right on earth, Set everything right…” (Ps 96: 1-3, 10-13 The Message)
January 19th, 2009 at 10:54 am
I love this story. From several angles. First I am always humbled by the attitude of other cultures and their devotion to their old people. Secondly here in West Virginia the destructive culture of King Coal is very much like the “potato” growers mentioned in the story.
I live along the very head waters of the North Branch of the Potomac River. The State of Maryland actualy owns the river, and are always complaining about the Chessepeak Bay needing cleaned up. They have tried for decades to do so only to find out that things are getting worse.
It’s the old “Golden Rule”.
Them that has the gold gets to make the rules.
Soil and Water our only real natural resourses are under attack and even in danger of being an “endangered resourse”.
January 19th, 2009 at 4:31 pm
Good article by Dr. Brand. We need some Tata’s around here too. Maybe this blog should have something about tata in the name! Or some of us should become Tata’s for our areas. Hmmm. Not a bad idea.