Today’s Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants 
will be presented in Ewe, 
with subtitles in Arabic, 
Aulacese (Vietnamese), 
Chinese, English, 
French, German, 
Indonesian, Italian, 
Japanese, Korean, 
Malay, Mongolian, 
Persian, Portuguese, 
Russian, Spanish 
and Thai.
Hallo, beloved viewers, 
and welcome 
to our program 
about the cassava, a plant 
that is consumed daily by 
over 700 million people 
in Africa, Asia, 
and Latin America.  
So vital is this plant that 
in Ewe, which is spoken 
in the African nations of 
Togo, Ghana and Benin, 
the name for cassava 
is agbeli, 
meaning “there is life.” 
In appreciation of the 
diligent and loving work 
of cassava farmers today 
we visit Togo 
to learn more about 
how this invaluable crop 
is planted, grown, 
harvested, and cooked.
Cassava is a woody shrub, 
widely grown by farmers 
in tropical regions 
for its long, tapered, 
and highly nutritious 
tuberous root. 
Because it can survive in 
almost any type of soil, 
and requires very little rain, 
cassava has become 
one of Africa’s most 
important staple food crops. 
About half of the world’s 
supply of cassava is 
currently grown in Africa.
Let’s start by seeing 
how cassava is planted. 
Unlike most other crops, 
cassava is not propagated 
from seeds. 
Instead, new plants 
are grown using pieces of 
an existing plant’s stem. 
A small hole is dug 
in the soil and then 
the piece is inserted 
either in an upright 
or slanted position. 
Planting is usually done 
by hand.
During the rainy season 
we prepare the field. 
We dig a hole like this 
and plant it. 
Then if it rains, 
it grows by itself.  
This is how we plant it.
How much time 
does it take before 
it can be harvested?
About seven months. 
If you come here you will 
find fully grown cassava.
The cassava will begin to 
develop fresh new roots 
in the soil within a few days 
of being planted. 
Then bright green leaves 
begin to burst forth 
on the upper stalk, growing 
quickly and vigorously 
in the warm sunshine. 
If you have a cassava field, 
you must cultivate it. 
The first thing to do 
is to take good care of it. 
But we always pray to God 
so that it rains. 
So our cassava 
can grow properly. 
Rain is 
the most important thing.
The traditional way 
of raising cassava 
is using sustainable, 
organic farming techniques 
which have been 
carefully passed down 
from generation 
to generation.
Here 
we never use fertilizer. 
No, we do not use fertilizer. 
It is what you have seen 
from your forefathers 
that you can also do. 
When we were children, 
we were taught 
by our father how to 
take care of the field. 
It was that way we began. 
Now that we have 
children, we have to 
teach them our tradition. 
This is the reason why 
they follow us to the farm, 
for them to learn how to 
take good care of a field. 
It is for them to learn.
During holidays, 
we help our parents to 
take care of their fields.
The cassava crop 
is very reliable. 
Even when 
there is very little rain, 
the crop can thrive. 
Because of this, it plays 
a key role in ensuring 
the economic well-being 
of many farmers.
Here we cultivate maize, 
pepper, and cassava. 
We use 
the cassava income to pay
the school expenses 
of our children.
In Togo, cassava 
is normally harvested 
by removing the tuber 
from the soil by hand. 
The fresh tubers 
can be peeled 
and eaten like potatoes. 
They can be baked, boiled, 
made into French fries, 
or mixed with 
other vegetables and 
made into delicious stews. 
They can also be turned 
into a sweet dessert 
called tapioca. 
But the most common way 
to enjoy 
this delicious tuber 
is to make it into flour. 
In Togo, the preparation 
of this flour is a lengthy, 
intensive process 
lasting at least two days. 
Much of the work 
is done by hand. 
First, the cassava tubers 
must be peeled 
with a sharp knife.
When we dig up 
the cassava, 
we peel it, like this. 
After peeling it, we crush it. 
Then we press it. 
After pressing it, 
we sift it the following day. 
The cassava root, 
once peeled, 
is placed in large baskets. 
It is then ready 
to be crushed. 
This is usually done 
with the help 
of a small machine. 
The tubers are fed 
into the hopper, and 
a finely crushed product 
is created. 
People who specialize 
in this segment 
of cassava processing 
offer their services 
to farmers.
Good morning sir.
Yes, good morning
Are you the one 
who crushes the cassava 
for them?
Yes, I’m the one.
Do you work every day?
Yes, if they call me then 
I come and do the job.
The crushed root is then 
placed into large sacks 
which are laid 
on a bed of sticks. 
Usually a weight 
is placed on top to 
squeeze out excess water. 
The next day, 
the dried product 
is ready to be sifted.
This is the crushed cassava. 
We press it. 
Now we are sifting it, 
like this, before cooking 
the gari (cassava flour).
Why are you sifting 
the crushed cassava?
	
There are some twigs 
in the crushed cassava. 
If we don’t sift it 
before cooking, 
the gari will not be good.
What are you sifting it with?
With a sieve.
What is it made with?
Out of a palm leaf.
The cassava root, 
having been carefully 
crushed, dried, and sifted, 
is now ready to be made 
into a wide variety 
of delicious foods, 
one of which is flour. 
Wood is gathered, 
carefully laid down, 
and a hot fire is started. 
Then a huge cast iron pan 
is placed on top. 
The crushed cassava root 
is placed 
bowlful by bowlful 
into the hot pan. 
It is cooked 
into a dried powder known 
as cassava flour or gari.
How many minutes 
are needed for it to cook?
Then we remove it 
from the fire.
How can someone 
use gari?
There is no wrong use 
of gari. 
When you wake up 
in the morning 
you can add gari to 
cooked beans and eat it. 
If you like, 
you can pour it in water, 
add sugar and 
groundnuts, and eat it. 
You can also use gari 
to make paste?
Yes. You can make paste 
and eat it with soup or 
you can add gari to soup 
and eat it.
One can make many things 
with cassava. 
What can be made 
with cassava 
apart from gari?
You can use cassava 
to cook many things. 
First you can cook tapioca. 
You can dry cassava 
to make starch powder 
out of it. 
You can make several 
things out of cassava. 
You can cook doughnuts 
or cook  foufou 
(sticky dough) or cook it 
and eat it like that.
One of 
the most delightful foods 
which can be made 
from cassava is doughnuts.  
When doughnuts 
are prepared 
starting with tubers, 
it is a relatively short process, 
taking at least half a day
to complete. 
There are many steps 
involved, and 
many hands are needed.
To cook 
cassava doughnuts, 
I buy the cassava 
in the field. 
After I buy it, 
I pay people 
to dig up the cassava, 
then we bring it home. 
We peel them. 
After peeling it, 
we wash it very well 
with water. 
Then we crush it. 
Then we put it in a basket 
so that water runs out. 
Then we put it 
in a flour bag and 
press it with big stones 
to remove water from it. 
We even use a stick. 
After all this, 
we put it in a bowl 
and add salt. 
Then we heat oil in the fire 
and make it boil 
and put them in the oil. 
That’s what we do here. 
That’s the job 
I live on here.
Do people like 
this doughnut? 
Oh, they like it so much!!
Mmmmm…
these doughnuts 
look so delicious!! 
Especially 
when served with 
chunks of fresh coconut!
Do you like 
cassava doughnuts?
Yes, of course I like it.
Is it sweet?
So sweet!
That’s why you buy it?
Yes that’s why I buy it.
Do you eat it every day?
I buy it and eat it. 
It is so sweet.
Cassava is known to have 
medicinal properties 
as well. 
Leaves from 
the bitter plant can be used 
to treat hypertension, 
headaches and 
other bodily pains. 
Cassava flour is also 
gluten- free, and thus for 
those with celiac disease 
who cannot eat wheat, 
the flour can be used 
to make bread.
During these critical times 
of climate change, 
where world temperatures 
are rising, and 
droughts are becoming 
ever more widespread, 
cassava is becoming 
more and more essential 
to our survival, 
as it can produce 
large quantities 
of nutritious food with 
only a minimal amount 
of water. 
Supreme Master Ching Hai 
has spoken about 
the tremendous value 
of this plant.
You know in Miaoli, 
we don’t have 
that much water 
I had to dig many wells. 
When we first came, 
there was no water. 
So, all they planted there 
was some grass, 
those for dry land grasses 
that grow anywhere, 
and cassava, 
which doesn’t need water. 
The land there 
is not even sandy. 
It’s like those very thick 
and sticky clay, 
and even then, 
the cassava lives. 
So, anyway, 
the cassava is very easy 
to plant anywhere. 
It’s a wonderful plant, 
and you can eat it -
you can eat it 
and survive. 
We are grateful 
for the bounty of nature 
and for the amazing plants 
such as the cassava 
which generously provide 
food, income, and health 
for hundreds of millions 
of people. 
We pray 
that we will continue 
to enjoy rich harvests 
as we live in harmony 
with Mother Earth 
and all her inhabitants.
Thank you for joining us 
today on our program. 
Enlightening Entertainment 
is up next, 
after Noteworthy News.  
May all beings 
on our planet 
be blessed with joy in 
a compassionate, noble, 
and peaceful vegan world.