What really caused the Irish Potato Famine - Stephanie Honchell Smith

814,011 views ・ 2023-11-02

TED-Ed


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In the fall of 1845, the bright green leaves of potato plants
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dotted the Irish countryside.
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For over 200 years, the South American vegetable had thrived
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in Ireland’s rough terrain and unpredictable weather.
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Packed with carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals,
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the potato was a remarkably nutrient-rich crop
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that made it easy for less wealthy families to maintain a balanced diet.
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By the mid-19th century, potatoes had supplanted other staple foods.
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And since British mandates ensured Ireland’s more valuable
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agricultural products were exported,
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roughly half the country’s 8.5 million residents
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lived almost entirely on potatoes.
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But when harvesting began in 1845,
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farmers found their potatoes blackened and shriveled.
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Those who ate them suffered severe stomach cramps and even death.
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Today, we know the culprit was Phytophthora infestans—
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a fungus that flourished in the season’s unusually damp weather.
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But at the time it was simply called “the blight.”
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The fungus likely originated in the Americas,
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traveling across the Atlantic on ships.
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And while it destroyed potato harvests across Europe,
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wealthier countries— then as today— generally fared better,
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as they had more resources to draw on.
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Meanwhile, the southern and western regions of Ireland
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were already impoverished and entirely dependent on the single crop,
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making them disproportionately vulnerable.
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The impacts of food insecurity are often most severe at the poverty line.
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But while the failed harvest created a class crisis,
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the government's response turned it into a national catastrophe.
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For centuries, Ireland had been under varying degrees of English control,
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and by 1845, it was part of the United Kingdom
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with its government based in London.
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During the famine’s first year,
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this distant ruling body imported corn from North America
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and offered the Irish employment on public works projects.
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But this relief only caused more problems.
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Imported food was poorly distributed and offered insufficient nutrition,
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making the previously healthy population more vulnerable to disease,
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and increasing maternal and child mortality.
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Worse still, the British continued to export Ireland’s grain and livestock.
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Meanwhile, the public works projects required lengthy shifts
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of grueling manual labour and were far from where most workers lived.
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For example, just one of countless tragic incidences is the story of Thomas Malone,
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who walked 18 kilometers roundtrip to work every day.
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One night, exhausted and starving,
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he collapsed and died just before reaching home,
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leaving behind his wife and six children.
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Despite the year’s countless tragedies, many families managed to scrape by.
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But in 1846, the damp weather returned and the blight worsened,
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impacting 75% of Ireland's potato yield.
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British relief efforts diminished substantially in the famine’s second year.
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And while international aid helped save lives,
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the overall need was enormous.
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As the crisis wore on, the government limited who was eligible for relief
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and tasked Ireland with funding the relief efforts themselves
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by increasing local taxes.
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Most modern historians view these disastrous policies
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as stemming from a mix of toxic religious ideology,
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laissez-faire economic policies, and political infighting.
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British news sources callously depicted the Irish
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as lazy, simple-minded alcoholics,
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and some London decision-makers believed the famine was God’s punishment
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for these sinful behaviors.
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Other government officials purposefully blocked efforts
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to provide meaningful relief due to internal political rivalries.
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As with famines and food insecurity today,
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it wasn't a lack of resources preventing the British from aiding Ireland,
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but rather a lack of political will.
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Seven years after the blight began,
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Ireland’s weather patterns returned to normal
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and the potato crop finally stabilised.
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But over 1 million people had perished from starvation,
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malnutrition, and disease.
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Between 1 and 2 million more fled the country,
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beginning a trend that dropped Ireland’s population to half its pre-famine levels
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by the 1920s.
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Today, climate change is making extreme weather more common and sustained,
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leading countless agricultural communities to face similar struggles.
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Just as in Ireland, farmers living on the margins
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are increasingly facing starvation, malnutrition, and disease
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due to global weather patterns for which they bear little responsibility.
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But history doesn’t have to repeat itself if governments and institutions
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can provide the kind of aid these regions need:
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relief efforts that are coordinated and ongoing,
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provide sufficient nutrition to prevent disease,
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and are offered with compassion rather than judgment.
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