Students tending to a school garden where they learn about the lifecycle of vegetables.
AMSTERDAM · April 7, 2026 : The Netherlands produces the majority of Europe’s broccoli through precision. Yet, as Amsterdam integrates urban farming, it looks toward Delhi for the "pedagogy of care." While Dutch expertise excels in design, Pragati Chaswal’s SowGood Foundation proves that the critical innovation is teaching children to value the earth.
From a Single Plate to 78,000 Classrooms
The movement started because Pragati Chaswal wanted her son to eat broccoli. By growing food together, she found that children value what they help create. This realization evolved into an initiative reaching 78,000 Delhi students. It shows cities change when one person follows a problem long enough to find a solution that scales.

A young student planting seeds in a recycled container.
Beyond Design: The Pedagogy of Care
Amsterdam leads in urban farming as an economic feat. Delhi offers the curriculum. The SowGood model uses farming as pedagogy: teaching children to pay attention. It shifts urban plots from production sites to essential tools for human development.
Resilience Through Persistence
Lasting change stems from personal motivation over government mandates. Amsterdam has the infrastructure; Delhi provides the proof of concept that connects the harvest to the heart.
Source: bcdW Current Today : Delhi Edition · April 7, 2026 · bcd-w.xyz
Tags: Delhi / Urban Farming / Education / SowGood Foundation / Pragati Chaswal / bcdW Current Today : April 7, 2026


