Agriculture

Cultivating Skills, Harvesting Hope

At Yehudah Training Institute, the Agriculture Program is more than farming—it’s about equipping students with sustainable, smart, and profitable techniques to fight poverty, hunger, and unemployment. With the land as their classroom, students grow their skills—and their futures.

Why Agriculture?

     In Uganda, over 70% of the population relies on farming to survive—yet most still use outdated, subsistence methods. Our program bridges that gap by training students in modern, climate-smart agriculture that increases yield, improves soil health, and builds food security.

“Teach someone to farm, and you’ve fed a village for generations.”

What Students Will Learn

✔️ Crop Production (Maize, Beans, Vegetables, etc.)
✔️ Soil Preparation & Fertility Management
✔️ Organic & Climate-Smart Farming Practices
✔️ Irrigation, Composting & Pest Control
✔️ Animal Husbandry (Goats, Chickens, Cows)
✔️ Harvesting, Storage & Post-Harvest Handling
✔️ Agri-Business & Market Access

Students learn on-site in demonstration gardens and training plots, working alongside experienced agricultural trainers and local farmers.

Program Outcomes

Upon graduation, students will be able to:

  • Launch small-scale farms or agribusinesses

  • Grow food for income and household nutrition

  • Train neighbors in climate-resilient methods

  • Supply produce to schools, markets, and co-ops

  • Improve food security in their communities

Your Gift Grows More Than Crops

     Donations to the Agriculture Program fund tools, seeds, irrigation supplies, livestock, compost bins, and protective gear for students. Every gift sows seeds of long-term impact.

Sponsor a Farming Student or Garden Plot

     Your generosity helps grow local food systems and thriving futures.

Want to help start a school farm, sponsor livestock, or provide drought-resistant seeds?
     Contact us: info@ytiuganda.orgNTBInternational.org

“Together, we are planting purpose and reaping transformation—one seed, one student, one season at a time.”