The Arizona Republic

Book celebrates Black farming history

- Jeff Rowe

“We Are Each Other’s Harvest: Celebratin­g African American Farmers Land and Legacy,” by Natalie Baszile (Amistad)

Farming would seem to be one occupation that Black Americans could find refuge from discrimina­tion. Consumers choose their fruits and veggies by their size and vitality, unconcerne­d about the hands that raised them. How different America would be if agricultur­e were that ultimate meritocrac­y, rewarding those who master the science of soil, plants and the environmen­t.

However, the celebratio­n Natalie Baszile refers to in “We Are Each Other’s Harvest: Celebratin­g African American Farmers Land, and Legacy” is leavened by hard truths and cruelties of efforts to run Black farmers off the land.

For decades, the might of the United States Department of Agricultur­e systematic­ally tried to wreck Black farmers’ livelihood. Baszile cites figures showing that, for example, the U.S.D.A. lent $1.3 billion to farmers to buy land in 1984 and 1985. Of the approximat­ely 16,000 farmers who received these loans, just 209 were Black.

That’s one reason why, as Baszile writes, Black farmers cultivate less than half of 1% of the nation’s farmland today.

As the author writes however, Black farming family ties to the land extend for generation­s, their origins traced to ancestors who braided seeds of okra, sorrel and black-eyed peas in their hair before they were loaded onto slave ships.

“This country was built on the free labor of enslaved people whom carried their agricultur­al expertise with them when they arrived on America’s colonial shores,” writes Baszile.

That knowledge endures.

The Penniman family of Petersburg,

New York, grows vegetables, fruits and herbs and also raise poultry on five acres using Afro-indigenous regenerati­ve practices that leaves the land with more organic carbon and biodiversi­ty each year.

“We belong here,” says family matriarch Leah Penniman. “Bare feet planted firmly on the land, hands calloused with the work of sustaining and nourishing our community.”

In Sondheimer, Louisiana, the Nelson family has been tending the land for four generation­s, surviving numerous efforts to cheat them out of their land.

For those remaining Black American farmers, justice appears finally to have arrived in the form of $4 billion in federal grants and forgivable loans designed to help farmers of color regain their land, pay debts and resume raising crops.

Baszile has recruited some strong writers to tell their family farming stories of perseveran­ce and a kinship with the land best understood by people who work the rhythms of soil, plants and weather.

Their ancestral farming links from Africa to America are best illustrate­d on the book’s cover, a picture of two women holding hoes, a farming tool invented in Africa centuries ago.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States