Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2003-04, Page 10Attention: SHEEP FARMERS Atlas Tanning is accepting Wool as usual Custom Tanning Available CaII 519-523-4595 Atlas Tanning 1 mi. south of Blyth on Hwy. 4 behind The Old Mill Leather & Woolen Specialist ti CANADIAN CO-OPERATIVE WOOL GROWERS LIMITED • Now Available WOOL ADVANCE PAYMENTS Skirted Fleeces Well -Packed Sacks For more information contact: WINGHAM WOOL DEPOT John Farrell R.R. 2, Wingham, Ontario Phone/Fax 519-357-1058 6 THE RURAL VOICE Keith Roulston Where do I fit into us? buy supplies through retail co- operatives, we created mutual insurance companies to share the risk of fires and credit unions to allow those with surplus money to loan it to those requiring money all within our communities. We even began the forerunner of universal health-care through co-operative health plans. But these days rural Canada is being torn between the individual and the community. To some extent this struggle reflects the one going on in society in general as successful individuals resent being hamstrung by rules set up to help the less fortunate — but it goes beyond that. Increasingly farm families feel under pressure just to keep the farm going. Where once the response to struggle was to turn to your neighbours for strength of the group, today it seems to me the reaction is more likely to turn back to the farm and think there must be a way to work harder and get out of trouble yourself. The result sees many farm groups struggling for membership and parti- cipation. With check -offs a group can have finances, but it doesn't guarantee people taking the time to leave the farm and come to meetings. But while turning away from the group is just a response to personal pressures, for others the assault on the ability of people to come together for greater power has been direct and deliberate. From the Canadian Wheat Board to marketing boards there are many within commodity groups who feel shackled by the rules of the majority. They are sure they as individuals can do better on their own and are willing to pull the house down around them in order to be free of the majority. Has rural Canada moved into a new era when the we no longer need to come together to solve our problems? Or we have simply become more urban and think that the individual solves problems by acting on his own? The problem is that if we choose to act as individuals and we find out we're wrong, we may have undone the hard work done of generations of rural people who battled to set up the group solutions we're now prepared to dismantle.0 Keith Roulston is editor and publisher of The Rural Voice. He lives near Myth, ON. As children growing up there is a constant tug -o' -war between our sense of rights as individuals and our duty to the family. When we grow up generally the community or society replaces the family but the same struggle remains. Getting the proper balance between the rights of the individual and the needs of the group is tricky. The group is made up of individuals and the only way to measure its success is if each individual benefits. On the other hand, a situation where one or two indivduals win and the rest of the family/community members are suffering is not good even for the winners, if they care at all about others. We in rural areas have lots of practice walking this tightrope between freeing the individual and working things out as a group. Urbanites tend to think of us as rock- ribbed conservatives and we do generally prize the freedom for an individual to accomplish great things through vision and hard work. From the day when a hardy individual fought his way through the bush, saw a stream and envisioned a mill and a town surrounding it, we've known the power of the entrepreneurial spirit. We worry about hobbling it with too many rules and regulations. Yet about two weeks after that visionary arrived, he also likely realized the task ahead was too daunting for him to carry out by himself, or with just his family to help. Rural people quickly learned to work together to build each other's homes and barns, the community's schools and its churches. Later we learned to work together to create cheese plants and creameries to provide a market for farm products; we banded together to