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271. Sustainable Agriculture and Food Justice | Farm School NYC | Onika Abraham | Brooklyn, NY

Author
Jackie Marie Beyer
Published
Fri 07 Jun 2019
Episode Link
https://organicgardenerpodcast.com/271-farm-school-nyc

Onika Abraham from Farm School NYC shares her passion for sustainable agriculture and food justice education in New York’s 5 Boroughs.


I’m so excited to introduce my guest from Farm School NYC Onika Abraham!



Tell us a little about yourself.


I reside here in beautiful Brooklyn NYC.


I’m originally a New Yorker from the lower side Manhattan, if anyone is familiar with NYC accents, it’s obvious.


Grew up in NYC from parents who grew up on farms, always loved visiting my grandparents seeing them grow what they eat and always inspiring to me! 


I have come full circle by being the director of Farm School NYC


Tell me about your first gardening experience?


I have to say, I grew up on the lower east side on the 18th floor an apartment



  • lucky to have a little terrace

  • little concrete shelf

  • does not sound like a bucolic farm

  • but was definitely my first gardening experience



My mother grew up on a mid size family farm in Alabama, when she moved here she brought her love and passion for growing things with her and she just recreated that in a little postage size terrace.


I really grew up in pots and containers on my parent’s terrace


had to be flowers


house plants and all different flowers



  • zinnias

  • marigolds



were some of her favorites I remember from when I was a kid! 


Awwww that’s like the sweetest story. I didn’t really get to meet a lot of people from NYC proper, even tho my cousins lived on the Upper East Side, but we only saw them at Christmas and it’s fun to imagine, a little children’s book. Have you seen Sarah Stewart’s book The Gardener



What is FARM SCHOOL NYC? Is it for adults for kids? What kinds of classes do you have?


 


FARM SCHOOL NYC is for adults


folks who are interested in learning how to grow sustainably



  • sustainable organic practices

  • people who want to use that knowledge base to




address some of the inequities in our society


resources


health wellness


 access to healthy food


cultivate an awareness of how to grow food and collecting or make an impact on those health and wealth disparities


bringing things together culturally


See our work at FARM SCHOOL NYC as a way of 



  • building community

  • building justice



through food


cohort moving through our certificate program


certificate in Urban Agriculture


20 courses in succession


20-30 people moving through that program at any given year


Take a variety of courses at FARM SCHOOL NYC


containers grounding in the methodology



  • educate entire communities

  • comes onto the farm



one point of entry of a whole community of people who can learn with this person and share that knowledge


come in


start taking courses


anyone over the age of 18



  • youngest student is about 20 maybe 21

  • oldest student is about 62



Cohort



  • racially diverse

  • culturally diverse

  • age diverse

  • gender



diversity



Did you tell us already? Is there an actual farm FARM SCHOOL NYC?? And if so where is that and how big?


feed each other


that’s the beauty


we were originally created as a collective of farms


things we have here at our fingertips and resources that we have


and one thing NYC does not lack at all believe it or not is space to grow




  • rooftop farms




  • over 600 community gardens in NYC




  • farming spaces





because we were developed as a collective of groups, we didn’t want to create something else that would compete with that for resources to fund these projects


or an alternate income that is required to make it happen


didn’t want to create another resource to be maintained by this community


access and feed and invest in what already existed


Community Diversity at FarmNYC


Most of hands on activities and most of our FarmNYC coursework happens on different farms and gardens around the city


founder


seed


so we don’t have our farm


every farm is our farm in some sense


where we go to different places throughout the five boroughs! 


That is so cool! Other people are gonna learn so much more by seeing all these different systems and who would have thought there are so many? Is there a map? Can the public go see them? 


Oh yeah sure!


How fun it would be to go tour 600 community gardens or even 25 of them!


there are some great non profits


community gardens are part of my childhood


postage stamp that my mother turned into this beautiful sky garden


grew up on the lower east side of nyc


reclaimed vacant lots from the 60s and 70s


and create wonderful oaises like all over that neighborhood


I would weed my mothers garden, and see all of these little pocket gardens


20×20 footprint of a brownstone building in NYC where that house was torn down or vacated in someway and 


communities would come together and reclaim that space and create a lush collective for that community


I think a huge part of what I saw growing up.



Me too! One of my first college experiences out of high school was a Pratt Institute in NYC and I was just there this summer they have a huge rose garden. Some of my fondest memories were of being at the quad at Pratt, it was 


I live not far from there, I ride my bike past there quite often.


I was surprised we went to the Brooklyn Grange and walked right past there a couple of blocks away.


The certificate program is really intensive, 20 different courses and takes at least 2 years


It’s a level of commitment that is not for everyone.


We have other points of entry into our courses


Beginning in the springtime individual courses


not enrolled into the program you can take one course there


range in terms of how long they are


They are stand alones


dont need prerequisite of another course


one I taught for many years, this is the first year I wont teach it myself


propogation


working with seeds/transplants


working with seeds for scale


If you have aspirations for becoming a market farmer it will give you a better sense of what it would tae and looking at the resources you might have at your home



  • getting a grow light

  • finding a sunny window

  • looking at large production scale

  • visiting greenhouses



how all of the seedlings sold and come into being


hands-on course with a lecture component


meant for full-time working adults



  • evenings

  • weekends



classtimes so people are able to take them


folks can visit our website


Farm School NYC


to get more information on the course offerings




  • propagation





Growing soils all about soil science with a practical perspective



  1. hands on

  2. farmers need to know about building soils and caring for them

  3. developing a lifelong relationship with land



10 courses for anyone in the public


smaller workshops


some are free with partnerships


folks can find a way


so much of what we do is building community


Like minded of finding people who are growing and interested in social justice


stay in our community


how to plan


people on this planet


Do you have any major steps or tips you would share with listeners if they wanted to start a community center in their place or a sustainable tip to do in their home.


I like the first question of people wanting to have some impact in their community. People come to us with that 



  • hope

  • wish

  • desire



first thing I say is 



  • teachers

  • staff

  • tells folks



check in with what’s happening in your own community


work to be isolated in some sense of all the things going on already see if there are already projects that need support


often tempting to have an idea that we think is wonderful and want to run with that


something already existing that is also a wonderful idea, it might not be yours totally but if there is something ingrained a community already and there is already support and interest help those projects that are already needing help as opposed to competing for resources


I suggest walk the neighborhood and find out what



  • community gardens

  • community centers need a volunteer



abandon your own idea but get involved in an interaction


Boy we could sure use you in Congress right now! You’re very eloquent and have a lot of background knowledge and the kind of person who can unite multiple groups of people while putting our planet first!



That’s a big part of our mission here at


Farm School NYC


everywhere


work at diversity


inclusion


work


ongoing challenges that are inherent


prestige bar


practice


applicable no mater what



  • growing food

  • creating policy

  • creating relationship there



not everyone who comes into FARM school is looking to be a full time farmer


definitely


central to that



  • people who come in as lawyers

  • policy advocates

  • teachers

  • educators



very visceral


hands on ways


learning from farmers


food system that


whole ways that we interact with our system


that’s what were trying to do


sustainable ag and a more just food system


folks more educator


I was talking about the diversity of farm school some ways the deeper meaning of that


wrap my thought about how we got on there…


One thing that what makes farm school different as far as education as farmers



  • our broader goal

  • our aim

  • vision



is a more just food system


larger food system that corrects the inequities that are systemic in America


farmers are a foundation of that


feeling that there is a real connection to land is a huge part of grounding ourselves in our what relationships were’ looking for food systems


I

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