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End poverty, preserve the planet, build community: A Uganda farming institute’s bold mission

Ten years after its founding, an ambitious sustainable farming community in Uganda is poised to enter a promising new phase of growth. Co-founded by Keough School of Global Affairs professor Emmanuel Katongole…

Ten years after its founding, an ambitious sustainable farming community in Uganda is poised to enter a promising new phase of growth.

Co-founded by Keough School of Global Affairs professor Emmanuel Katongole in 2014, the Bethany Land Institute’s 400-acre campus houses a working farm, a training and research center, a forest and a tree nursery that is on track to plant 300,000 trees by 2030. Its facilities also include housing for the young-adult trainees in its two-year caretaker education program, who take courses on sustainable land use, economic entrepreneurship and spiritual formation.

A smiling Emmanuel King stands at a wooden podium. He wears a dark suit jacket and clerical collar. Behind him, a projector screen displays the words "BLI INDABA 2024" and a graphic of several people holding hands.
Notre Dame professor, priest, and Bethany Land Institute president and co-founder Emmanuel Katongole speaking to supporters.

“Our motto has been to start small, to start now and to be very ambitious,” Katongole said to supporters gathered for the unveiling of the Bethany Land Institute’s new five-year strategic plan. “We have laid the foundation and during the next five years we will see tangible effects — signs of transformation marked by food abundance, the regeneration of soils and the reduction of poverty — all things we will be able to measure.”

Katongole, a professor of theology and peace studies at the University of Notre Dame, has served as the lead visionary for the Bethany Land Institute since its inception. A Catholic priest ordained by the Diocese of Kampala, Uganda’s capital city, he established the institute with two priest friends after being inspired by the message of Laudato Si’, Pope Francis’s 2015 encyclical on the environment. The document sets forth the concept of integral ecology — the interconnectedness of humans and the environment — that serves as the lodestar for the institute and its leadership.

A diverse audience sits at round tables covered in white linens and patterned table runners in a conference room. A presenter stands near a projector screen displaying a presentation slide. Natural light streams in from large windows along the right wall. Framed artwork rests on easels near the entrance on the left.
The Bethany Land Institute’s partners include the University of Notre Dame, Caritas Uganda, the Franciscan Sisters of Wheaton, Ill., and other universities, nongovernmental organizations and groups.

Through its Sowing Hope research platform the institute plans to study the health of its soil, evaluate its impact on local communities and caretakers and launch a longitudinal study following caretaker program graduates. This research is supported by the Ford Family Program in Human Development & Solidarity at the Keough School’s Kellogg Institute for International Studies, the Laudato Si’ Research Institute at the University of Oxford and the University of Makerere in Uganda. Other plans include creating an incubation center for new regenerative farming businesses, expanding the institute’s existing farmers market, providing courses in economics and business and expanding outreach to local parishes.

“Throughout Africa, the biggest landowners are churches,” Katongole said.

The institute’s tri-fold mission of reducing poverty, preserving the environment and providing spiritual formation brings together specialists in science and spirituality. Two dioceses in Uganda are sending seminarians for formation at the Bethany Land Institute, and Katongole has enlisted the expertise of renowned soil conservationist Ray Archuleta, a leading expert in the regenerative farming movement. Archuleta, who was featured in the 2020 Netflix documentary Kiss the Ground, has made two visits to the institute to teach trainees in its caretaker program. Archuleta and Katongole began corresponding in 2021 when Archuleta emailed Katongole after reading his book on rediscovering religious faith after the Rwandan genocide. With their shared belief that the vitality of people and planet go hand in hand, the two are kindred spirits.

Ray Archuleta holds a microphone while presenting in front of a projector screen. The screen displays text related to a "View of the World" and "Reductionism." He wears a dark gray sweater and maroon collared shirt.
Ray Archuleta, a leading expert in the regenerative farming movement has shared his expertise with the Bethany Land Institute, visiting its campus in Uganda twice.

“Regenerative agriculture imitates nature’s beauty, principles, patterns and intelligent design,” said Archuleta, who addressed the institute’s recent gathering of supporters. “This facilitates self-healing in human and biological communities.”

The Bethany Land Institute was created with the understanding that Uganda’s problems of deforestation, food insecurity and poverty are interconnected. That means the solutions are interconnected too. At the heart of the solutions lies a commitment to creating community that underlies and energizes all of the institute’s efforts.

“We have been building a movement because we want to go far,” Katongole said. “If you want to go fast, walk alone. If you want to go far, walk with others.”


Bethany Land Institute at UN Climate Conference (COP29)

Thanks to Uganda's Ministry of Water and Environment, the work of the Bethany Land Institute was featured at the UN climate conference COP29 in Azerbaijan. 

Originally published by Renée LaReau at keough.nd.edu on November 26, 2024.

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