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The Rural Voice, 1990-02, Page 26OF MUTUAL BENEFIT • An interview with Don Langford, farmer and development worker • by Peter Baltensperger Agricultural aid and emergency relief to developing nations are not just necessities in this time of drastic economic discrepancies and world-wide change. They are important responsibilities for anyone living in the industrially developed countries of the affluent west. This is the basic philosophy of Don Langford, a farmer and seed grower in Kerwood, Ontario. Above all, Langford says, agri- cultural exchanges with developing nations provide invaluable learning experiences and the opportunity to reassess the value systems that Don and Carol Langford with daughters Molly and Julie and grandson Robbie. Don stresses the importance of family in farm life. "Family values are important to society." characterize family farming, commu- nity relationships, and social attitudes. "We have much to give, but we also have much to learn," he adds. Don Langford has impressive qual- ifications and wide-ranging practical experience to back up his beliefs. He first went to Africa more than 20 years ago, and has been involved in various foreign aid and agricultural exchange programs ever since. In 1967, when he was studying crop science at the Ontario Agricul- tural College, he joined the student exchange program Operation Cross- roads and spent the summer building a youth centre in Niger, North Africa. By the end of the summer, he already knew that he wanted to go back as soon as he could. "I wanted to under- stand, not just observe," he says. He subsequently married Carol, who was studying food and nutrition in Guelph, and the two went back to Africa as United Church agricultural missionaries in 1969. They spent three years in Algeria as extension workers and soil and crop specialists in a program organized by the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, the Mid- dlesex County agricultural office, and the World Council of Churches. 22 THE RURAL VOICE