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Views and opinions: Book addresses basics of farming for anyone to try

Farming While Black: Soul Fire Farm’s Practical Guide to Liberation on the Land by Leah Penniman, foreword by Karen Washington

c.2018, Chelsea Green Publishing

$34.95/$47.50 Canada

368 pages

Your hands are filthy. Dirt lines every crease and covers much of your knuckles. It’s beneath your fingernails, all the way up to your wrists, soiling the edges of your sweatshirt and down your front.

Yes, your hands are filthy, but once you’ve read Farming While Black by Leah Penniman, your smile will be wide.

Years ago, in search of a way to make a difference in black lives, Leah Penniman fell in love with cilantro. She met it on the first day of an urban program to teach people to grow food, and when she smelled the herb, it was “magical.”

It made her want her own farm, to feed her children, to ease the dire statistics she knew about obesity and heart disease among African-Americans and Native Americans and to lessen the terrible commonness of “food deserts.”

To begin, she says, “Aspiring farmers need three essential ingredients … training, land and material resources.” Training can be received through classes or intern programs, but be careful what you ask for – some programs might require you to work for free, which may be “all too reminiscent of the exploitation of (your) ancestors.”

As for acquiring land, you may find what you need by “squatting” (check local laws), or by finding a farmer who’s retiring. Know your options when it comes to financing, and make a business plan; in fact, never tackle a farm without a plan.

If the land you want has been ill cared-for, don’t despair. There are ways of restoring land that has been neglected. Know what to “feed” it, then know proper land management methods to maintain soil health. Think carefully about what you’ll plant; food and medicine may both be welcome in your community.

Know the proper (and safe) way to use tools, and how to take care of those you use. Add animals to your farm. And finally, remember that you don’t have to have acres and acres to farm; a small, abandoned corner is a perfectly valid way to dip your toes in the dirt.

Although it’s a little pricey as paperbacks go, Farming While Black is absolutely one of those books where you get your money’s worth. Starting with the illustrative story of Soul Fire Farm’s beginning, author Leah Penniman offers statistics to prove ongoing need, and history to show that farming isn’t anything new for black Americans.

In today’s world, though, Penniman advocates community-based farms that are tended not by one set of hands but by many – and she takes their creation step-by-step so readers don’t feel overwhelmed. Indeed, her thoroughness here (it seems as though every little detail is covered) makes this a solid reference book for farms and community gardens of all sizes.

Be aware that this book may seem somewhat New-Agey at times, and it can overreach, too; some chapters seem superfluous. Even so, for budding farmers, new green thumbs or aspiring back-to-the-landers, it could be the exact right book to have. For you, missing Farming While Black would be a dirty shame.

 

Terri Schlichenmeyer has been reading since she was 3 years old and never goes anywhere without a book. She lives on a hill in Wisconsin with two dogs and 14,000 books.

11/21/2018