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sheshe2

(87,469 posts)
Sat Aug 1, 2020, 04:44 PM Aug 2020

Living off the land: the new sisterhood of Black female homesteaders

From the South Side of Chicago to tiny Carolina farms, a growing number of Black women are reclaiming the land – and their wellbeing

The car made its way along a tree-lined gravel road. The sky was clear, and as the car drove by, the trees swayed from side to side, almost like a sign of welcome. The road opened up into a large pasture. In the middle of the pasture was a wooden pergola with grapes growing on it and a circular garden surrounding it. Tiny houses dotted the pasture, as brown children played merrily in the mud. In the center of all of this, planting in the circular garden like she was Mother Earth herself, was a Black woman.


For Chantel Johnson, this scene was “heaven”. It was actually Bear Creek, North Carolina, in May 2016, but more importantly, it was Johnson’s first glimpse into homesteading, and she was hooked at first sight.

snip

Johnson was grieving and depressed. It had been less than a year since her younger brother, who had been shot and paralyzed on the South Side of Chicago in 2014, succumbed to his injuries and passed away, in August 2015.

She carried that grief with her up the gravel road that day to visit her boyfriend’s friends, an interracial couple – Black wife and white husband, with kids – who owned a 30-acre homestead in Bear Creek. When the friends offered Johnson and her beau the opportunity to live with them on the homestead and help out, Johnson jumped at the chance. If this was heaven, then perhaps she could find the antidote for her grief here.



One of the first official uses of the term “homesteading” was in 1862, with the passing of the Homestead Act, signed by Abraham Lincoln to encourage western expansion and US agricultural development. But the act of homesteading – a focus on self-sufficiency dependent on the land, with an emphasis on subsistence agriculture – predates the Homestead Act, especially for Black Americans.

Much more here: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/jul/31/living-off-the-land-the-new-sisterhood-of-black-female-homesteaders

Three women. This is their story.

Beyond this shared intention, these women’s stories are connected in their origins – experiences with trauma as Black women in the US and a decision to return to the land for healing: sisters of the soil, victors of their destiny.

......................................

Perhaps today more than ever before we need to seek changes in our lives. Earth is becoming unsustainable. Return to the land. The virus is about to wreck havoc on all our lives, the death toll, yes. Fact is we will not be able to go back to where we were. Change is coming.



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Living off the land: the new sisterhood of Black female homesteaders (Original Post) sheshe2 Aug 2020 OP
I enjoyed this article, thanks Sheshe2 MLAA Aug 2020 #1
Thank you for reading, MLAA! sheshe2 Aug 2020 #2
This year I planted my first garden.... MLAA Aug 2020 #3
Keep on keeping on. sheshe2 Aug 2020 #5
What a great read! blm Aug 2020 #4
Thanks for reading, blm. sheshe2 Aug 2020 #6
I love hearing about women joining in community. blm Aug 2020 #7
Working with the earth and land is totally natural, appalachiablue Aug 2020 #8

MLAA

(18,598 posts)
3. This year I planted my first garden....
Sat Aug 1, 2020, 04:59 PM
Aug 2020

I have harvested about 6 small tomatoes, 10 radishes, a boatload of basil and two beautiful but tasteless cantaloupe making each organic item extremely expensive haha. I am hoping for a bumper crop os sweet potatoes To bring down the cost per item to under $100 each haha! I will learn 🙂

blm

(113,817 posts)
7. I love hearing about women joining in community.
Sat Aug 1, 2020, 06:31 PM
Aug 2020

It does take a village for ALL of us, sometimes.

appalachiablue

(42,906 posts)
8. Working with the earth and land is totally natural,
Sun Aug 2, 2020, 01:40 AM
Aug 2020

healing and fulfilling. It's what we evolved from and are supposed to be connected to in this life.

Thanks for posting, the story inspires, provides hope for all God's creatures and the enduring gift of the earth.

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