
The Bustan Paradise Institution is an integrative impact corporation leading the path to the eco-cultural restoration of civilizations. By creating a series of large-scale decentralized restoration projects in political and ecological hotspots - we can achieve an economic and cultural jumpstart throughout humanity.
The Bustan Paradise Project is a - Carbon Powered Platform for elevating levels of complexity and integration in eco-nomic production ecosystems. The ability to analyze and configure based on levels of complexity allows to redesign and re-evaluate existing systems and turn them into engines of regeneration rather than ultimate depletion.
After years of research conducted around the world - in 2016 The UN published a paper calling for a worldwide polyculture movement - of small-scale producers that can create a fully autonomous cycle in their local production system.
The Bustan or the Pardes - is a carbon-positive small agricultural garden - that holds a variety of plants, animals, and herbs that can coexist and thrive under the loving hands of the traditional farmers of the Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, Asian, and European regions. These gardens hold ancient knowledge and varieties that are the basis of the healthiest diet in the world and the key to sustainable eco-management of ecosystems around the region.
The word Bustan (in this pronunciation) exists with similar meaning in languages throughout afro-eurasia -
बुस्तान-सिरा - Hindi
بُستان سِرا - Urdu
Μπουστάν (bostani) - greek
بستان (bustan) - Persian
בוסתן - Hebrew
بوستان - Turkish
Swahili - Bustani
bo(s)tanical garden - English
The methodology behind the initiative is based on the life work of millions of traditional farmers around the world who spent thousands of years perfecting this eternal and exquisite production system, In addition - this project follows the framework of three individuals -
John D Liu - has taken part in restoration projects of major scales throughout northern China, Africa, Northern Egypt and Spain. His global initiative - Ecosystem Restoration Camps is creating a global impact by implementing methods that can take degraded landscapes and cultures and bring them back to life - through a tool kit fashioned by the best scientists on the planet.
Amit Pompan - has dedicated the last twenty years to finding and preserving a variety of rare heirloom plants of ‘’traditional Middle Eastern agriculture together with the ancient practices of the Bustan. The Bustan is a local word describing an abundant and diverse farm that can provide all of the community's needs sustainably. The Bustan is an ancient concept developed over thousands of years in this region and has been the core method of maintaining the thriving natural ecosystems of the Middle Eastern region.
Wangarĩ Muta Maathai; 1 April 1940 – 25 September 2011) was a Kenyan social, environmental, and political activist who founded the Green Belt Movement, an environmental non-governmental organization focused on the planting of trees, environmental conservation, and women's rights. In 2004 she became the first African woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize. In Kenya alone - the movement was able to train 30,000 women who have planted over 51 million trees since 1977.