Plant Our Seeds Together to Grow Souls and Safety

[Music]

my name is sherry

i was born and raised in the city of

detroit on the west side

i grew up in a neighborhood that by

today’s standards will be called low

income

but i didn’t know it at the time where i

grew up

on a block with families and children

where we played outside all day playing

together

and we ate what i call the original

lunchables

which was empty bowls that we took

outside that we would collect

mulberries and pears and apples

and all kinds of fruits and things that

were growing in the neighborhood and sit

on the porch and eat

and our original juice boxes came in the

form of water hoses

that we drank out of on the side of

somebody’s house wherever we were

so we played in our neighborhood for

hours which turns into weeks and months

and years because we all lived on the

same block for a long time

but when i was a kid i never thought

about things like

urban agriculture or farming or

local growing because nobody i knew did

that

when i grew up and went away to college

i moved to the suburbs for a few years

and at the age of 38 i moved back to the

city of detroit

and i quickly realized that things were

different

i couldn’t easily find things like

the fresh fruits and vegetables and

organic produce that i could find right

up the road in livonia

or birmingham or in dearborn

i also noticed something else was

different about the area where i grew up

is that there was less of a lot of

things less businesses

less schools and less people

and less houses and so

i had the opportunity to be introduced

to something called

urban agriculture which was a new term

when i was 38

but it seems to be something popular

happening in the city and so i had the

opportunity in the form of a fellowship

at a farmers market to learn about urban

agriculture

and that became

an exciting journey for me when i

learned that people

inside the city of detroit were actually

growing food like actual food that you

could eat

pears cucumbers squash and this was

amazing to me because even when i was a

kid

and some of our elders used to have like

the backyard gardens and

my aunts and uncles and my grandmother

would try to get me to plant with her i

was very

very adamant that that was not what i

wanted to do

i was a city girl and i was not about

the the backyard garden life

so at 38 when i started to spend time

with urban agriculture in an amazing

neighborhood called hope village

at the whole village farmers market i

started to discover that all around the

city

gardens were popping up green spaces

things that

people said were great for neighborhood

revitalization and food was growing

but then i noticed something else

because i would sit in meetings with

people philanthropic organizations and

community stakeholders and all these

groups of people that said gardens are

great

green spaces are great these things are

great for the neighborhood they’re going

to revitalize they make everything

better

but as i worked with the farmers market

and i moved throughout the city to see

more and more of these spaces i noticed

something common was happening i would

see spaces that had been planted

but never fully developed and then i

would see things that looked more like a

desert than a garden though they were

designed really nice

and what i discovered was what was being

planted

wasn’t being planted the right way what

do i mean by the right way

things were being planted food was there

crops were there

the zucchini was there the kale was

there but something was missing

and i realized that there were certain

conditions that were missing

and certain seeds that were missing and

so i want to share those with you guys

because there’s lots of them right

so the way that things were being

planted wrong was that

nothing was being planted in connection

and by connection i mean in connection

with people spaces were being cropped up

things were being designed empty lots

were being

renovated but no one was connected to it

so what would happen and you’ve probably

seen this is if you’ve gone to

a place and seen what looked like it

might have been a garden

that now looks deserted or someone’s

yard who

was really excited about getting into

gardening until they realized how

overwhelming

this seemingly relaxing hobby could be

so what i started to learn was that when

people plant in connection

with one another we plant better we’ve

been told a lot to just

do something as individuals you know

plant a garden

go out and start something in your

backyard on your windowsill

or in a little pot on your desk it’s

great for you

it’s going to lower your stress levels

and that’s great when we do things as

individuals

as far as the marketing companies are

concerned but not so great in our

communities

especially in low-income communities

what we found was that

when things weren’t in connection nobody

participated

so we ended up with empty green spaces

that soon turned into brown spaces

so how do we plant in connection how do

we get

people involved in

this urban agriculture and plant the

right seeds the right way

well what are some of the right seeds

well the first right seed

is a welcoming environment part of my

journey in the whole village farmers

market

was planting flowers and things to

beautify the space

for the neighborhood to come in and one

day two elder women

walked up to me as i was weeding in the

garden

dancing and listening to r b because

that’s the best way to do your weeding

in the garden

and they walked up to me and they said

thank you for doing this here

and the here that they were speaking of

is a park

on the west side of the city of detroit

that borders highland park

that in 1997 was the site of a tornado

and so decimation homes destroyed

was a horrible sight and then became the

site of intense illegal dumping

so it was almost a trashing ground until

a local organization decided to renovate

it into a park

to a beautiful little gated park with

gardens and so

when i started volunteering and i worked

in this garden and these women from

a senior citizens home next door came

and said thank you so much for doing

this here because we’ve never seen

anything like this

here because in this neighborhood we

didn’t grow dahlias and

and verbena bonariensis we didn’t have

those things

growing up we didn’t have food growing

right next door

not on purpose anyway the mulberries

were great

but that sparked something in me because

i realized they felt

welcomed into this space they felt

welcome to come in

and hang out with the children at the

farmers market and seeing

the seniors talk to the school-aged

children and show them how to fly kites

and show them

how to knit and share skills with them

that they wouldn’t have normally had

were the seeds of connection with the

seeds of

the welcoming environment where

everybody felt like they could come in

where we had people from the homeless

housing across the street and the senior

citizen home and the school children

all together and the working class

people from up the street

all working together all singing and

dancing together

because they were in a welcoming

environment so one of the seeds that we

have to plant is a welcoming environment

the second seed which goes back to those

same events

is intergenerational communication

one thing that i learned about in the

garden is that

whether you’re 5 or 65 nature works

pretty much the same

everybody still has to drop the seed in

the ground and wait for it to grow

everybody still has to wait for the

fruit to be ripe to eat it

and we all are kind of on a level

playing field there’s no technology

that anybody has to be afraid to use

though

there’s apps we have apps but

in the garden young people and older

people and adults and children can all

work together

and help each other because everybody

has the ability

to help and take part and feel like they

belong in connection

because in the garden diversity is

important and so we don’t want anybody

to feel left out

the next seed that we have to have in

the garden is sound

i’m big on sound and one of the things

in urban areas is you’re always

listening for things

and one thing that always gets

everybody’s attention is

loud noise and music so

in the garden i believe you have to have

the seeds of sound

whether that is music whether that is

laughter or drumming or dancing

or children playing or reciting or

a wireless bluetooth speaker playing

everything from sam cook

to stevie wonder to beyonce there has to

be a sound because sound

is a universal language music is

universal to everyone it makes people

feel like there must be a party going on

let’s go see what it is

and so if we plant the sounds more

people get drawn into our urban spaces

and the last seed that we have to have

in all of our gardens in urban

agriculture

is purpose and participation one thing

that we find in low-income areas

is there sometimes is a divide between

people who are

employed and unemployed and we know in

low-income areas

unemployment is an epidemic but in the

garden

there is no resume workshop there is no

what what school did you go to in the

garden everybody can drop a seed in the

hole everybody

can tend the soil everybody can pour

water and in the garden many

people have found their purpose i’ve met

people who

didn’t fit into traditional corporate

settings and didn’t know that they were

farmers until they were exposed to urban

agriculture

and didn’t know that they could produce

food for not only themselves but for

dozens of households

and they found their purpose the garden

allows everybody to have a purpose and a

role

and to fit in and to feel like they

belong which is what

breeds connection and so

the seed of participation and purpose

is vital in every situation where we

want to see connection and so

i challenge everybody to grow in

connection because food grown in

connection

tastes better i’m certain of it the

fruit is sweeter

when it is grown in connection food has

less calories

when it was grown in connection that

might not be totally true

but you got to trust me on that you

won’t gain as much weight

if you eat food in connection okay so

my challenge for everyone is to find

someone

even though you could grow on your own

even though you might have the space

or the seeds grow in connection with

someone else because when we grow in

connection

we grow our communities and when we grow

our communities we grow ourselves

because when we grow together we grow

together

thank you

you

[音乐]

我的名字是雪利酒

我在西区的底特律市出生和

长大 我在一个按照

今天的标准被称为低收入的社区长大,

但我长大的时候并不知道

在一个有家人和孩子的街区

,我们整天在外面玩耍

,我们吃我所谓的原始

午餐

,这是我们带到

外面的空碗,我们会收集

桑椹、梨、苹果

和各种水果和

东西 在附近长大,

坐在门廊上吃饭

,我们原来的果汁盒

以水管的形式出现,

无论我们在哪里,我们都在别人家的旁边喝水,

所以我们在附近玩了

几个小时,变成了几周, 几个月

甚至几年,因为我们都在

同一个街区生活了很长时间,

但是当我还是个孩子的时候,我从来没有想过

城市农业、农业或

当地种植之类的事情,因为当我长大的时候,我认识的人都没有这样做过

起身去上大学

我搬到了郊区几年

,在 38 岁的时候我搬回

了底特律市

,我很快意识到事情

不同了,

我不容易找到

新鲜水果和蔬菜之类的东西 和

有机农产品,我可以

在利沃尼亚、伯明翰或

迪尔伯恩

的路上找到 房子少了,所以

我有机会接触

到一种叫做

都市农业的东西,这是

我 38 岁时的一个新名词,

但它

似乎在城市里很流行,所以我有

机会以奖学金的形式

在 农贸市场了解都市

农业

当我

得知

底特律市内的人们实际上

正在种植食物,就像你可以吃梨的实际食物时,这对我来说是一次激动人心的旅程

黄瓜南瓜,这

对我来说很神奇,因为即使当我还是个

孩子

的时候,我们的一些长辈曾经

喜欢后院花园,

我的阿姨和叔叔以及我的祖母

都会试图让我和她一起种植,

我非常

非常坚持 那不是我

想做的

我是一个城市女孩,我不

关心后院花园的生活

所以在 38 岁时,当我开始在全村农贸市场的

一个名为希望村的令人惊叹的社区花时间从事都市农业时,

开始了 发现

城市

花园周围都出现了绿色空间

人们说这些东西对社区

振兴很有好处,食物也在增加,

但后来我注意到了别的东西,

因为我会参加

与慈善组织和

社区利益相关者以及所有这些

团体的会议 人们说花园是

很棒的

绿地很棒这些东西

对社区来说很棒他们将

要振兴他们制造一切

更好,

但是当我在农贸市场工作

时,我在整个城市中看到

越来越多的这些空间,我注意到

一些常见的事情正在发生,我会

看到已经种植

但从未完全开发的空间,然后我

会看到看起来更多的东西 像

沙漠而不是花园虽然它们

设计得非常好

,但我发现

种植的东西没有以正确的方式种植我所说的正确种植方式是

什么意思

食物有

庄稼有

没有西葫芦 那里有羽衣甘蓝

,但缺少一些东西

,我意识到缺少某些

条件

和某些种子,

所以我想与你们分享这些,

因为它们中有很多是正确的,

所以

种植的方式 错误的

是没有种植任何东西,

我所说的连接是指

与人相关的空间被突然出现,

东西被设计为空的l ots

正在

装修,但没有人与之相连,

所以会发生什么,你可能已经

看到了,如果你去了

一个地方,看到它看起来

可能是

一个现在看起来空无一人的花园或某人的

院子,

对从事园艺工作感到非常兴奋,

直到他们意识到

这种看似轻松的爱好可能是多么令人难以抗拒,

所以我开始了解到,当

人们相互种植时,

我们种植得

更好 你知道

种一个花园

出去

在你后院的窗台

上或你桌子上的一个小花盆里做点什么,这

对你很有好处,

它会降低你的压力水平

,当我们作为营销公司的个人做事时,这很好

在我们的

社区,

特别是在低收入社区

,我们感到担忧,

但不是那么大

那些很快变成棕色空间的绿色空间

那么我们如何种植连接

我们如何让

人们参与到

这个城市农业中并

以正确的方式播种正确的种子

什么是正确的种子

以及第一个正确的种子

是受欢迎的 环境 我

在全村农贸市场的旅程的一部分

是种花和

美化空间

,让邻居进来。有一天

,当我在花园里除草时,两个老妇人走到我面前

跳舞,听着 rb,因为

那是 在花园里除草的最好方法

他们走到我面前说

谢谢你在这里做这

件事 他们所说的这里

是底特律市西侧的一个公园

,与高地公园接壤

1997 年是龙卷风的发生地

,因此摧毁房屋

是一个可怕的景象,然后变成

了严重的非法倾倒地点,

所以它几乎是一个垃圾场,

直到当地组织 决定把

它改造成一个

带花园的漂亮的带门控的小公园

,所以

当我开始做志愿者并

在这个花园里工作时,

隔壁老人家的这些妇女

过来说非常感谢你在

这里做这件事,因为 我们在这里从未见过这样的

事情

,因为在这个社区我们

没有种植大丽花

和马鞭草,我们没有

种植这些东西我们没有在隔壁种植食物

无论如何不是故意的,

桑葚很棒

但这激发了我的一些想法,因为

我意识到他们觉得

欢迎来到这个空间,他们觉得

欢迎进来

和农贸市场的孩子们一起闲逛,

看到老年人与学龄儿童交谈并教

他们如何放风筝

和 向他们

展示如何编织并与他们

分享他们通常不会拥有的技能是与

每个人都觉得他们可以的欢迎环境的种子建立联系的种子 来到

这里

,街对面的无家可归者,

老人院和学校的孩子们

都在一起,街上的工人阶级的

都在一起工作,一起唱歌

跳舞,

因为他们在一个受欢迎的

环境中,所以一个 我们必须播种的种子

是一个温馨的

环境第二个种子可以追溯到这些

相同的事件

是代际交流

我在花园里学到的一件事

是,

无论你是 5 岁还是 65 岁,大自然

每个人的工作方式都差不多 还是要把种子撒

在地里等它长大

每个人还是要等

果实成熟才能吃掉

它 我们都处于公平的

竞争环境 没有

任何人必须害怕的技术 虽然

有应用程序我们有应用程序,但

在花园里,年轻人和

老年人以及成人和儿童都可以

一起工作

,互相帮助,因为每个人

都有

帮助和参与的能力,并感觉他们

属于联系,

因为在花园中多样性很

重要,所以我们不希望任何

人感到被忽视

,我们必须在花园里拥有的下一颗种子

是健全的,

我很喜欢 声音和

城市地区的一件事是你总是在

东西,而总是

引起每个人注意的一件事是

大声的噪音和音乐,所以

在花园里我相信你必须有

声音的种子,

不管那是音乐还是那 是

笑声还是打鼓还是跳舞

还是孩子们在玩耍或背诵

或无线蓝牙扬声器播放

从山

姆库克到史蒂夫奇迹到碧昂丝的一切

必须有声音因为声音

是一种通用语言音乐

对每个人来说都是普遍的它让人们

觉得必须 成为一个正在进行的派对,

让我们去看看它是什么

,所以如果我们种植声音,更多的

人会被吸引到我们的城市空间

我们在城市农业的所有花园中必须拥有的最后一颗种子

文化

是目的和参与

我们在低收入地区发现的一件事

是,有时在

就业和失业人群之间存在鸿沟,我们知道在

低收入地区

失业是一种流行病,但在

花园

里没有恢复工作坊

不是什么 你在

花园里上过什么学校 每个人都可以在

洞里撒种子 每个人都

可以照料土壤 每个人都可以

浇水 在花园里很多

人找到了自己的目标 我遇到

了不适合的人 传统的企业

环境,

直到他们接触到都市

农业

,才知道自己是农民,不知道他们不仅可以

为自己生产食物,还可以为

数十户人家生产食物

,他们发现了花园

让每个人都有自己的用途 目的和

角色

,融入并感觉

属于他们,这就是

产生联系的原因,因此

参与和目的的种子

在我们想要的每一种情况下都是至关重要

的 ee 联系,所以

我挑战每个人都联系成长,

因为联系种植的食物

味道更好,我敢肯定,联系种植的

水果更甜

但是你必须相信我,如果你吃食物,你

不会增加那么多的体重

,好吧,所以

我对每个人的挑战是找到

一个人,

即使你可以自己成长,

即使你可能有空间

或种子 与其他人一起成长,

因为当我们在联系中成长时,我们会

成长我们的社区,当我们发展

我们的社区时,我们会成长自己,

因为当我们一起成长时,我们会一起成长

谢谢