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André Luiz de Oliveira Domingues (at left in red T-shirt) helps the
Davis families plant their own garden at the Food Bank's urban farm, Las
Milpitas de Cottonwood, in Tucson, Ariz. Photo courtesy of Asha
Greyeyes.
View in Photo Gallery
View additional photos
A UMNS COMMENTARY
By Amy Rebecca Mellor and André Luiz de Oliveira Domingues*
7:00 A.M. ET January 31, 2012
Until a spirit from on high is poured out on us, and the
wilderness becomes a fruitful field, and the fruitful field is deemed a
forest. Then justice will dwell in the wilderness, and righteousness
abide in the fruitful field. The effect of righteousness will be peace,
and the result of righteousness, quietness and trust forever. Isaiah
32:15-17, NRSV
People have been growing food along the Santa Cruz River for thousands of years.
Flowing north from Sonora, Mexico, to Arizona, the Santa Cruz always
has been an important part of desert and riparian life in this region
of little rainfall. Because of the growth of the cities in southern
Arizona and the overpumping of groundwater, the Santa Cruz now flows
only after rainstorms. Even though the river is dry, the tradition of
farming along the banks of the Santa Cruz is maintained.
Just south of 29th Street in Tucson, Ariz., is a community farm
managed by the Community Food Bank and City High School. Known as “the
Urban Farm,” Las Milpitas de Cottonwood began in March 2011 on about
seven acres stretched along the floodplain of the Santa Cruz. After a
series of open community visioning meetings and site designs, our group
of seven high school and college youth spent the summer working on the
foundations of this community farm.
Summers in Tucson are harsh, especially the 110-degree days before the arrival of the monsoon rains.
Digging began in summer
Students from the after-school garden class at Davis Elementary plant with André Luiz de Oliveira Domingues.
Photo courtesy of Julie Diaz.
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During the summer, Youth Farm Project interns began digging sunken
garden plots for community members to grow vegetables. Each bed
required digging down two feet and filling with a mixture of the native
soil and compost made from donated horse manure. The rest of the soil
was taken by wheelbarrow around the farm to where it could be formed
into swales, berms and raised pathways designed to direct and capture
rainwater for the shade-giving mesquite trees, walls of prickly-pear
cactus and the native crops that thrive from the rain that slowly
infiltrates the soil.
Working at the farm is labor intensive, but we persisted through the summer.
In late fall, the visible impact of our work was our motivation: 50
plots with families growing vegetables, fun community events, gardening
workshops, and community and youth groups volunteering regularly.
Why did we do it when there was not much more than bare soil and some desert plants? For three reasons:
- To help create a space where the community could share, learn and spend time together
- To involve more youth like us in learning the importance of growing our food
- To be part of something bigger than ourselves
Mexican-American families from the surrounding neighborhoods, Bhutanese refugees and community groups have adopted milpitas at the farm, increasing their access to organically grown and nourishing foods.
A few families started planting at the farm after their children
began growing a garden a few miles downstream on the Santa Cruz at
Davis Bilingual Elementary.
André Luiz de Oliveira Domingues and school parents check out the growth
of the pumpkin patch. Photo courtesy of Amy Rebecca Mellor.
View in Photo Gallery
In January, when we started interning at the public elementary
school, the garden did not have much more than weeds and a couple of
garden beds. Since bilingual education was almost eradicated in
Arizona, Davis has been one of the few schools to hold on to its strong
bilingual program.
Sitting at the south end of Barrio Anita is an old-time barrio, which,
after various urban “renewal” (removal) projects, has been isolated to
the west by the freeway, to the east by the railroad tracks and Main
Street, and by the major roads of Speedway to the north and St. Mary’s
to the south. Davis stands out as a symbol of the resilient Chicano
culture in southern Arizona, and long ago, made social justice one of
its major focuses.
Reviving the school garden
It was not surprising when parents and teachers expressed interest
last fall in revitalizing the school garden across the street, a garden
started in 1994 as a dedication to a student who died on a trip back
to Mexico. It was not long before the land grew into a thriving school
and community garden. The excitement of the students and the dedication
of the parents were louder than the endless train whistles and car
noises that surround the garden.
In less than a year, El jardíncomunitario de Davis
has grown to include five classroom keyhole sunken garden beds; four
long sunken garden beds where pumpkins grew during the summer and now
where wheat is growing; a herb and medicinal garden featuring
traditional Mexican herbs like epazote, yerba buena, ruda and cilantro;
a native flower garden, an outdoor adobe classroom area under the
shade of a mesquite; heirloom fruit trees, a chicken coop, and a native
tree and bush perimeter to create a natural barrier from the street
and tracks.
As the garden has been built, a strong sense of community has
developed around it. More than 70 students, parents, teachers,
neighborhood residents and volunteers tend to show up on community days
to eat, dig and garden.
Amy Rebecca Mellor and André Luiz de Oliveira Domingues
A UMNS web-only photo by Jorge Luiz Domingues.
As garden interns, we help to make this possible. We work with
students from kindergarten to fifth grade and with after-school
classes. We hope to work with the teachers to integrate the garden into
the school curriculum, going beyond the generic state-issued
curriculum to demonstrate the garden’s potential for critical thinking
and outdoor and experiential learning.
Students have the opportunity to witness the whole process of
growing food: making compost, preparing soil, planting seeds, caring
for plants, harvesting, cooking and saving seed.
Students take pride and ownership in their achievements, teaching
their parents how to pollinate, start gardens at home and even daring
to try arugula, okra, calabacitas and quesadillas de flor de calabaza,
which they grew and prepared themselves. We enjoy working at schools to
help children develop a connection to the food they eat. The Earth
that nourishes us is what we value as crucial for environmental and
social change.
It does not take long before the students start to make cultural and
social justice connections. The students have connected what we have
done in the garden with what their grandparents grow and use and with
the struggles of César Chávez and the farm laborers.
*Mellor and de Olveira Domingues are United Methodists from the New
York Annual (regional) Conference. They are students at the University
of Arizona, in Tucson, and garden interns at the Urban Farm and Davis
Bilingual Elementary School.
News media contact: Amanda Bachus, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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