Overview
- Title: Farmer's Troubles
- Description: This is an excerpt from a 2014 radio broadcast about agriculture in Nigeria. WinXP users should install Arial Unicode font.
- Speakers: Alhaji Haruna Sadik, Interviewer
- Program: Not available
- Publisher: RFI Hausa
- Publication Date: 2014-09-03
- Source Text Type: Radio
- URL: http://www.hausa.rfi.fr/20140903-emission-en-haoussa-03092014-07h00-tu
- Language: Hausa
- Level: 2+/3
- Topic: Economics/Politics
- Cultural Notes: Yes
- Modality: Listening
- Core Competency: Comprehension
- Estimated Duration: 45 minutes
- Preparatory Activity: Multiple Choice
- Nigeria's focus on its oil industry has negatively affected the country's farming industry.
- [ X ] True; [ ] False
- Feedback: Correct. The statement is true. Because Nigeria's economy has relied so heavily on the oil industry since the 1970s, other economic sectors, agriculture included, have suffered in terms of government support ("Needed" 2015).
"Needed: Agricultural Revolution in Nigeria." January 3, 2015. The Nigerian Observer . Accessed January 9, 2015. http://www.nigerianobservernews.com/2015/01/03/needed-agricultural-revolution-in-nigeria/.
Transcript
Comprehension Check
Comprehension Check Activity 1: Multiple Choice Why does the first speaker, Alhaji Haruna Sadik, repeat the word taki ? [ ] To emphasize its importance to the Nigerian farmers [ ] To criticize the farmers' complaints and unreasonable demands [ X ] To show that other countries are doing better than Nigeria [ ] To demonstrate its economic significance Feedback: Correct. Alhaji Haruna Sadik repeats the word taki 'fertilizer' to show that other countries are doing better than Nigeria. Whereas other countries help farmers, the Nigerian government only talks about taki , rather than taking the actions necessary to help farmers. Sadik does not repeat the word taki to emphasize its importance to the Nigerian farmers, to criticize the farmers' complaints and unreasonable demands, or to demonstrate its economic significance. Comprehension Check Activity 2: Multiple Choice What attitude does Sadik express with regards to the Nigerian government? [ ] Sadik is apathetic. [ X ] Sadik is critical. [ ] Sadik is ambivalent. [ ] Sadik is enraged. Feedback: Correct. Sadik expresses a critical attitude toward the Nigerian government. He evaluates government involvement with farming and agriculture unfavorably and supports his opinion with evidence. His attitude is not apathetic, ambivalent, or enraged. Comprehension Check Activity 3: Multiple Choice What does Sadik imply about the Nigerian government? [ X ] It has neglected the country's transportation infrastructure. [ ] It has made supplies like tractors and pesticides too expensive. [ ] It has delayed shipments of fertilizer to the country's farmers. [ ] It has emphasized manufactured consumer goods over agriculture. Feedback: Correct. In mentioning poor road conditions, Sadik implies that the Nigerian government has neglected the country's transportation infrastructure. He does not imply that the government has made supplies too expensive, has delayed shipments of fertilizer, or has emphasized manufactured consumer goods over agriculture. Comprehension Check Activity 4: Multiple Choice Sadik claims that delayed fertilizer delivery is a problem for farmers because by the time the fertilizer arrives, farmers are too deeply in debt to take advantage of it. [ ] True [ X ] False Feedback: Correct. The statement is false. Sadik claims that delayed fertilizer delivery is a problem for farmers because by the time the fertilizer arrives, the stage of the farming season during which fertilizer is needed has passed. Sadik mentions high interest rates and the problem of debt, but he does not say that by the time the fertilizer arrives, farmers are too deeply in debt to take advantage of it. Comprehension Check Activity 5: Constructed Response What does Sadik state are the consequences of Nigeria's poor transportation infrastructure? Model Response: Sadik states that, because the transportation infrastructure in Nigeria is so poor, farmers risk both personal injury in vehicle crashes on run-down roads and the possibility that their goods will have spoiled by the time they reach their destination. Comprehension Check Activity 6: Multiple Choice Sadik mentions the road between Kaduna and Abuja to suggest that road conditions in Nigeria are beginning to improve. [ ] True [ X ] False Feedback: Correct. The statement is false. Sadik mentions the road between Kaduna and Abuja to suggest that all the roads in Nigeria are in need of improvement and to emphasize that roads used to access farms are especially poor.
Glossary
zalunci oppression taki fertilizer cin bashi (lit: eat loan) debt ruwa (lit: water) interest ruɓewa to rot
Notes
The Notes provide cultural and linguistic information helpful for comprehending the text. Agricultural Transformation Agenda Nigeria's Federal Ministry of Agriculture initiated the Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA) in 2012 in order to improve the viability of agriculture as an economic sector and Nigeria's economy as a whole. The ATA's stated goals include exporting 20 million tons of food by 2015, creating 3.4 million jobs, reducing Nigeria's dependence on a struggling oil industry, and cutting spending on food imports (Natsa 2015). Natsa, Ruth Tene. January 2, 2015. "2015: Defining Year for Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA)." Leadership . Accessed February 22, 2015. http://leadership.ng/business/399129/2015-defining-year-agricultural-transformation-agenda-ata.
Dictionaries
Awde, Nicholas. 1996. Hausa–English, English–Hausa Dictionary . New York: Hippocrene Books. This bilingual dictionary includes terminology relevant to users with interests in computing, information technology, business, and telecommunications. It includes over eighteen thousand entries. Newman, Paul. 2007. A Hausa–English Dictionary , Yale Language Series. New Haven: Yale University Press. This Hausa to English dictionary includes appendices on grammar and calendar terminology. Newman, Roxana Ma. 1990. An English–Hausa Dictionary , Yale Language Series. New Haven: Yale University Press. This English to Hausa dictionary includes appendices on grammar, pronunciation, and currency systems. On-Line Bargery. n.d. A Hausa–English dictionary and English–Hausa vocabulary. Accessed October 14, 2014. http://maguzawa.dyndns.ws/. This online resource features approximately forty thousand Hausa to English entries.
Additional Information
For more information about agriculture in Nigeria, read "Feed Yourself," published in May 2013, by The Economist , and available at the following URL: http://www.economist.com/news/middle-east-and-africa/21577113-if-only-nigeria-could-revamp-its-farms-feed-yourself For a Nigerian academic's view of the plight of farmers in Nigeria and possible solutions, read " Harkar noma na cikin mawuyacin hali – Farfesa Dadari " (Farming is in a dire situation – Professor Dadari), by Hussaini Isa from Jos, published on January 9, 2015, on the website of the Daily Trust , and available at the following URL: http://www.dailytrust.com.ng/aminiya/index.php/mayan-labarai/8567-harkar-noma-na-cikin-mawuyacin-hali-farfesa-dadari