He is also trying to broaden his community’s consumer base by promoting Menarbu’s sustainably caught fish and seafood products through social media.
He and his community have acquired new business skills thanks to the Coastal Fisheries Initiative (CFI), a project which is implemented in Indonesia by the Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries (MMAF) and the WWF.
A change in mindsets
The CFI provides mentoring and capacity building workshops for fishers and fish workers, women and men. This has led to “a change in people’s mindsets” about the need to preserve natural resources, Yustus says.
“The presence of the project has been very important,” Yustus comments. “The information and knowledge it delivered have increased our understanding, so that we can continue to manage our natural resources in a sustainable way. Thanks to this technical assistance, we can become a learning model for Sasi marine management in other regions.”
“Almost all the people of this village now understand that the benefits of Sasi are very important for them, for the natural ecosystem and for future generations,” he explains.
Like the rest of his community, Yustus and his wife are educating their nine children to uphold conservation values in their lives.
“They were born and grew up in an environment that taught them a lot about kindness, patience and sincerity in protecting nature,” says Yustus.
Engaging in Sasi is “proof of the love that the people of Menarbu have for their children and grandchildren,” he says.
“Our hope for the future, which we are proud of, is that they will inherit a healthy natural world and not tears,” he adds.
A World Oceans Day Message from Yustus
“The most important thing that fishers must do to preserve marine ecosystems is to use environmentally friendly gear and maintain the availability of fish in the sea,” says Yustus.