Sep 13 2009
Undersung Hero and Iowa Farm Kid
Norman Borlaug has died after a life spanning 95 years. The life began around Cresco, Iowa, found early achievement as a formidable Golden Gopher wrestler at the the high level of University of Minnesota, and reached a pinnacle at Oslo in 1970, where he was handed the Nobel Peace Prize.
His prize came in recognition of his work as a plant scientist developing a strain of dwarf wheat that did well in hungry countries such as Mexico and Pakistan, places that turned from net importers to net exporters of grain. His achievement was central to what was then being dubbed a “green revolution.”
The ideas and effects of the green revolution are justifiably criticized and Professor Borlaug was understandably defensive. This scientific approach married the farm economy of countries to a more capital- and chemical-intensive type of farming, which ignored most of a country’s indigenous knowledge and neglected the plight of its poorest farmers.
I’ve studied those harms more than most people, but still believe Professor Borlaug is underappreciated and deserves wider recognition. This article in The Atlantic by a right-leaning writer agrees for reasons with which I disagree (great portrait though). I have to admit, part of my sympathy stems from my fellow experience as an Iowa kid who went out for wrestling.
I also had the honor of meeting Professor Borlaug when he spoke in Platteville around 1988.

from the New York Times