Black Agricultural Solutions to Food Apartheid: A Teach-Out
Offered By: Johns Hopkins University via Coursera
Course Description
Overview
Black Agricultural Solutions to Food Apartheid is a series where we dive deep into the historical, ancestral, and spiritual connections that Black people have to land and agriculture. Throughout this course, we encourage participants to learn about their ancestral foodways, agrarian practices, and spiritual connections. These sessions share wisdom and highlight the importance of food sovereignty, rebuilding community, and land based living.
Participants will gain a deeper understanding of the spiritual and ancestral relationships that many Black people have to a higher power, land, plants, and each other.
Participants will walk away from this series with an understanding of the many benefits of gardening and farming, including but not limited to social capital, collective agency, physical wellbeing, deepened spiritual connections, community resilience, economic autonomy, organizing, mobilizing, and improved mental and emotional health.
Participants will leave this session with the desire to learn more about their own familial relationships to food and land, as well as a greater understanding of Black agriculture.
Syllabus
- Land is at the Center
- A Brief History of Structural Racism Experienced by Black Farmers
- Community Gardening in Philadelphia: Past and Present
- Threatened Gardens and Advocacy Efforts
- We will discuss our visions for our communities and develop a greater understanding of how community gardens and urban farms can serve as a central place for rebuilding and world building to occur. We are joined in conversation by Soil Generation organizer, Sonia Galiber.
- Stewarding from Spirit
- The facilitator will discuss some of her practices to connect to Earth, hear from the plants, and techniques for growing in pots and small spaces.
- Overcoming Barriers to Growing in a City
Taught by
Ashley Gripper, PhDc, MPH and Shannon Frattaroli, PhD, MPH
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