

Since 1979, Fukuoka has been touring, giving lectures and sowing the seeds of natural farming all over the world.

"One Straw Revolution" was followed by "The Natural Way of Farming" and then by "The Road Back To Nature." In 1975 his first book "One Straw Revolution" was released and has had a profound impact on agriculture and human consciousness all over the world. In his 60's, Fukuoka sat down to document what he had seen and done. Without soil cultivation such as plowing or tilling, chemical fertilizers, pesticides, weeding, pruning, machinery or compost, Fukuoka was able to produce high-quality fruit, vegetables and grains with yields equal to or greater than those of any neighboring farm. Through 30 years of refinement he was able to develop a "do-nothing" method of farming. As a result, he resigned his job as a research scientist and returned to his father's farm on Shikoku determined to demonstrate the practical value of his vision by restoring the land to a condition that would enable nature's original harmony to prevail. He saw how this trend was driving the Japanese even further from a oneness with nature, and how destructive and polluting those practices were. From that moment on, he has spent his life trying to return to the state of being one with nature.Īt the time of his revelation, Fukuoka was living in a Japan that was abandoning its traditional farming methods and adopting Western agriculture, economic and industrial models. He saw that humans had become separated from nature and that our attempts to control or even understand all the complexities of life were not only futile, they were self-destructive. He saw that all the "accomplishments" of human civilization are meaningless before the totality of nature. He had a vision in which something one might call true nature was revealed to him. While recovering from a severe attack of pneumonia, Fukuoka experienced a moment of satori or personal enlightenment. He was educated in microbiology and worked as a soil scientist specializing in plant pathology, but at the age of twenty-five he began to have doubts about the "wonders of modern agriculture science."

Masanobu Fukuoka was born in 1914 in a small farming village on the island of Shikoku in Southern Japan.
