05/26/2026
In Farmer's Footprint, the recent article “Cacao: The Origin, The Medicine, and Call to Liberation” traces cacao’s roots from ancient Mesoamerica, where it was revered as a sacred food and medicine, to the realities of today’s global chocolate industry — where many cacao-growing regions face poverty, deforestation, and exploitative labour practices.
It’s an important reminder that chocolate does not begin on a store shelf. It begins in living ecosystems, in farming communities, and in relationships to land that have existed for generations. At ChocoSol, these conversations are deeply connected to our work. From the beginning, we’ve believed that cacao is more than a commodity — it is a cultural food rooted in ecology, reciprocity, and care. That’s why we continue to support forest garden and agroforestry systems, build direct relationships with growers, and work toward a chocolate economy that values long-term sustainability over extraction.
A thoughtful and worthwhile read for anyone curious about the deeper story behind chocolate:
Farmer's Footprint is a nonprofit documenting the journey toward regenerative agriculture, through farmer stories, films, and education that connect food, health, and land.