Food Access
Philly Urban Creators Inspires our Youth, with Poetry, Food Awareness, and Civic Imagination
Last week’s presentation with the Philadelphia Urban Creators was a tremendous success. We started with a quick recap on the Philly Rising session, since many of the students missed that presentation. The children who were present for that session eagerly caught up their peers on the highlights of the Philly Rising workshop. I was impressed at how well they had retained the information from the week before. It appears they are really taking in the sessions, both actively listening and understanding the topics.
Philadelphia Urban Creators Co-Founder Jeaninne Kayembe came to talk to our students about food access but she opened up the conversation to the students and what was on their mind was broader than food access.
Jeaninne introduced herself and opened with a spoken word piece, the students were instantly intrigued but what they recognized as hip hop and you could see an almost tangible respect for Ms. Jeaninne as she closed her poem. The poem was about earth, women, and respecting each other. It was a very moving piece; you can see the video of Jeaninne’s poem on the Philly311YouthEngagement Facebook page.
After her poem, Jeneanine asked the students if they had ever heard of Whole Foods. What do they sell at whole foods? Where is it located? Who lives there? What is the closest place to your house that you can buy food? Do they sell organic food there? Why not?
One child answers her matter-of-factly, “Because that is not where the money is.” Why do I have to buy the bottom of the barrel? She asks. “Everyone deserves good food.” Another student adds.
“Exactly!” she says, and with that she introduced their urban farm, located at 11th and York. She explains that her and her friends started this garden when they were not much older than our YEP participants. She told the students that they mostly started Hoodstock because they were bored, and also because they wanted everyone to have access to good quality, affordable foods near their homes. She talked to the students about how they found the land for their garden extremely dirty, it had diapers and drug paraphernalia, etc. and they cleaned it up, built garden beds and grew food. She told the children that when they started the organization they had a budget of $0 and have now grossed more than $500,000, attracting the attention of celebrities and local officials alike. She showed pictures from their annual music festival Hoodstock (play on Woodstock, but in the “hood”) with Nick Cannon.
The most important lesson she taught this group was that if you are passionate about something and you set your mind to it, you can make an incredible difference in your community. She also told the children that if they wanted to build an urban garden in their community that they could contact her and she would help them organize it.
Then she gave everyone a piece of paper and instructed them to write down five things that they like about their neighborhood and five things they would change. Many of the students said they wanted to see less litter, less criminal activity, more plants (trees, flowers, fruits and vegitables, etc.) and a greater sense of community.
This process of identifying what you want to see in your neighborhood is civic imagination. First you imagine what it could be, and then you take it into your own hands and you make it happen. One young woman spoke up about how angry she was about the state of her neighborhood, and she was angry at the police who come to her neighborhood and shoot the young black men, but she was also mad at the young black men who are not acting right and taking responsibility for their own senseless acts of violence. It was chilling to hear this young person express these complex problems with such insight and clarity. It is easy to see that many of these young people will grow up to be great leaders and have a real impact on their community and beyond. I hope that this program will help give them the tools that they need to achieve their goals.
This week, we look forward to our closing session, facilitated by our fantastic and incredibly supportive partners, the Philadelphia Youth Commission. It will be sad to see this program end, but we are starting our series at the Martin Luther King Jr. Recreation Center next week. So even though we must close out our work with the Penn Treaty students, we will continue to expand this program and work with more young people to inspire, educate, and engage as many students as we can reach. As always, we thank all of our tremendous partners, for working with us on YEP and for all of the great work that they do every day to improve the lives of young Philadelphians all across the city.