...

Logo Pasino du Havre - Casino-Hôtel - Spa
in partnership with
Logo Nextory

In Spain, migrants are saving sheep farms by taking over shepherding

• Oct 26, 2025, 8:49 AM
5 min de lecture
1

In Spain's rural areas, sheep farms are having a hard time finding employees willing to herd the animals. To fill that gap and also find work for recent migrants, a government program is training recently arrived migrants, many from African countries, to become shepherds.

The bells and bleats faded as Osam Abdulmumen, a migrant from Sudan, herded sheep back from pasture, the sun setting over a centuries-old farm in Spain’s arid heartland. From dawn to dusk, Abdulmumen, 25, has looked over a flock of 400 animals for months in Los Cortijos, a village of 850 people in the plains of Castile-La Mancha, the region in central Spain made famous by the 17th-century classic “Don Quixote.”

Los Cortijos is among hundreds of rural villages and towns in the region coping with depopulation that has made it tough to fill a job that has existed since biblical times, but which Spaniards seldom pursue these days: shepherding.

To fill that gap and also find work for recent migrants, a government program is training arrivals like Abdulmumen — many from countries in Africa, but also from Venezuela and Afghanistan — who local farms depend upon to herd the animals whose milk produces central Spain’s prized sheep’s milk cheese.

"There is a lot of work for shepherds here in Spain, but people don't like to work in the countryside. I just want to be working, this was the quickest job I could get," said Abdulmumen.

The challenges of finding workers in rural Spain are personal for Álvaro Esteban, the fifth-generation proprietor of the farm. Esteban left Los Cortijos himself for eight years, first to study history at a nearby university, and then to Wales, where he worked odd jobs before returning home during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I didn’t see my future here,” said Esteban, 32. “But due to life circumstances, I decided to come back and … being here made me say, ‘Well, maybe there is a future.'”

Spain's interior has experienced decades of rural exodus, starting around 1950, as generations of young people left the countryside in search of work and opportunity in cities. Today, about 81% percent of the country's residents live in urban areas. In 1950, about 59% did, according to the Bank of Spain.

Less than 4% of Spain's population works in farming, even though the country is one of Europe’s leading agricultural producers.

Five days of training

After he came back, Esteban took the same shepherding course as Abdulmumen, and looked at how he could modernize his family’s farm. He works alongside his 61-year-old father and Abdulmumen, using drones to monitor the animals and pastures. He also makes cheese that he later sells at markets and to restaurants. The new shepherds begin their training in a bare classroom just outside the fortressed medieval city of Toledo, where, on a recent morning, nearly two dozen migrants learned about coaxing flocks of sheep, handling them and guiding suction cups onto their teats.

They are taught the fundamentals over five days — just enough time to convey the basics to students who often speak only halting Spanish, but are eager to work. After a day of on-site training, and if they are authorized to work in Spain, they can apply to be matched with a farm. Sharifa Issah, a 27-year-old migrant from Ghana, said she wanted to train to work with sheep because she had tended to animals back home.

Since 2022, about 460 students, most of them migrants, have gone through the program, which is funded by the regional government, according to program coordinator Pedro Luna. Besides the 51 graduates now employed as shepherds, another 15 work at slaughterhouses, he said, while others found jobs on olive or other fruit farms.

Many students are asylum-seekers, like Abdulmumen, fleeing home in the Darfur region of western Sudan. Organizations including the International Red Cross connect migrants with Luna’s program.

Preventing farms from closing

Like many of his peers, Abdulmumen's journey to Spain was anything but simple. At 18, he left Sudan, arriving first in Egypt, where he found work in construction. Over the next four years, he moved between Tunisia, Morocco and Egypt again before finally crossing into Ceuta — the Spanish enclave on Morocco’s northern coast — where he applied for asylum. Eventually, he made his way to mainland Spain.

Today, Abdulmumen lives alone in Los Cortijos, where he is one of three Africans. At home, he studies Spanish and watches television. On weekends, he plays soccer with people around his age who visit from a nearby city, but the lack of young people in town is challenging, he said.

Abdulmumen's days begin at five in the morning with Muslim prayer before he heads to the farm, where he stays past sundown. About once every month, he calls his family in Sudan, where civil war has raged since April 2023, but cell service is spotty in their village. A month can become two, he said. He last saw them seven years ago.

He earns 1,300 euros ($1,510) a month, slightly above Spain's minimum wage. With that, he said he can send some money home once every couple of months.

Without help from migrants like Abdulmumen, Esteban said many livestock farms in the region — including his family’s — would be forced to close down in the next five to 10 years. Very few young people want to work rural jobs. Even fewer have the know-how, he said. “Most of the businesses that exist right now won’t have anyone to take over, because the children don’t want to follow in their parents’ footsteps,” Esteban said.


Today

Ivory Coast: vote counting in the presidential election has begun
• 11:27 AM
2 min
Polls have closed and counting has begun in Ivory Coast’s Saturday presidential election, as longtime President Alassane Ouattara seeks a fourth term.<div class="small-12 column text-center article__button"><a href="https://www.africanews.com/2025/10/26/i
Read the article
Louvre jewels theft: window through which thieves entered becomes attraction
• 9:42 AM
1 min
The window through which thieves entered the famous Louvre Museum in France to steal priceless jewels has become an unexpected tourist attraction. Meanwhile, two men have been arrested over the theft, according to latest information released on Sunday mor
Read the article
In Spain, migrants are saving sheep farms by taking over shepherding
• 8:49 AM
5 min
In Spain's rural areas, sheep farms are having a hard time finding employees willing to herd the animals. To fill that gap and also find work for recent migrants, a government program is training recently arrived migrants, many from African countries, to
Read the article
Morocco: more than 1,500 prosecutions after Gen Z protests
• 8:00 AM
1 min
A local NGO said that more than 1,500 people participating in the widespread protests in Morocco demanding better healthcare, education and an end to corruption, were facing prosecution by authorities. The protests have lasted for a month.<div class="smal
Read the article
Tanzanian opposition diminished as dissent is stifled ahead of polls
• 6:00 AM
1 min
The country's two main opposition parties are not taking part in the vote and candidates from both have barred from taking part.<div class="small-12 column text-center article__button"><a href="https://www.africanews.com/2025/10/26/tanzanian-opposition-di
Read the article