Houston Chronicle

In Milwaukee garden, residents grow strong

Rare oasis in city’s historical­ly Black side offers escape

- By Tyrone Beason

MILWAUKEE — On the first day of fall, Venice Williams joined a small group ofwomen for a morning tea ceremony at Alice’s Garden to celebrate the autumn equinox.

The garden was in transition. The last tomatoes of the season hung overripe on the vines. Sunflowers with fading petals drooped under their own weight. The first frost, not far away.

Williams, who serves as the communal farm’s executive director, told the women that the changing of the seasons can help them cope with upheaval, sorrow and loss — private heartache, the death of a loved one, a stranger killed by police.

The garden itself is a rare oasis in Milwaukee’s historical­ly Black northwest side, which has few public places for people to reflect.

In a society with a history of treating Black people and other people of color as if they don’t belong, Williams wants them to know that in this garden, they don’t have to doubt it.

“We grow community, we grow friendship­s, we grow families,” Williams said. “It’s got to be more than food sometimes.”

Despite the looming election, talk of politics here takes a back seat to yoga sessions on the grassy lawn, lessons in urban farming and classes on coping with grief.

Growing on the 120 parcels are rows of beans and kale, collards and corn, orange calendula, fragrant lavender and different varieties of mint. A meditation labyrinth paved with stones spirals inward along a path over grown with shrubs, offering a space to get lost in one’s own thoughts or lay down burdens.

Some people come just for the tranquilit­y.

“A garden gives you a picture of what theworld could be,” said Anthony Courtney, a retired Black schoolteac­her.

“You’ve got people coming in peace,” Courtney, 74, said. “You don’t have no drama out here. You walk outside these doors, you’ve got drama.”

Police killings of Black people. A coronaviru­s pandemic that’s taken the lives of more than 230,000 Americans, a third of them Black. A president who’s staked his law-and-order message on depicting peaceful anti-racism protesters as thugs and anarchists.

Tamara Swanson, 41, felt inspired by what Williams said at the tea ceremony. She lives in Oak Creek, a suburb that’s a short drive south from downtown, and this was her first visit to Alice’s Garden.

Swanson, who’s Black, works as a nurse. She’s used to thinking about the fragility of life and the certainty of death.

“Alot of times, we’re so quick to get past things, especially with everything going on in theworld and with the deaths of Black people by police officers — it’s like, ‘On to the next,’” Swanson said.

“It’s important to sit with the deaths — and not forget.”

Swanson curved along the labyrinth’s gravel path, which was lined with hyssop. The mint like herb was used in African and Black American tradition to cleanse the bodies of the dead, an act that soothes survivors, Williams said. She urges Black visitors to take some home to use in the event that a loved one dies.

This part of Milwaukee, a city of 592,000 that’s 44 percent Black, is known as one of the most inhospitab­le in the nation for Black people because of the high poverty and incarcerat­ion rates, widespread joblessnes­s and struggling schools. Empty lots that once belonged to working-class Black households line some of the streets that surround the garden.

“It’s even more important to have this space here because we don’t have a lot of them on our side of the city,” said Williams, 59, who spends much of her time at the garden in warmer months but lives in a different neighborho­od farther out.

She says these 2.2 acres shed light on the racial injustice that sparked protests in all 50 states this summer.

America’s discrimina­tion against Black people runs deep in the garden’s dark soil.

In the decades leading up to the Civil War, the white-owned farm that once stood on this land offered safe houses for runaway enslaved Africans who’d made their way fromthe South on the Undergroun­d Railroad.

“This nation’s land is saturated with the blood of people of color, of indigenous folk, enslaved folk, immigrant folk,” Williams said.

“We always want to think that when it comes to issues of land, politics is far away, but no, no, no, no, no,” she said. “If land and food aren’t political, then I don’t know what is.”

There are other painful connection­s to America’s racist past.

North Avenue cuts through the neighborho­od a couple of blocks from the garden. It was once the de facto border separating the white neighborho­od from what was known as Bronzevill­e, the Black side of town.

The16th Street Viaduct, about a 10-minute drive from the garden near Marquette University, served as the gateway separating Black and white residents on the south side of Milwaukee

“They had a standing little joke: You could go over there to work, but be back across that viaduct by sundown,” a 75-year-old man who gave his name only as Joe said as he cleared withered bean vines on his plot one day.

When awhite priest led racially mixed marches fromthe segregated Black side of Milwaukee across the viaduct to push for fair housing laws in the summer of 1967, white mobs numbering in the thousands taunted and attacked them.

Black residents who were forced to live in this neighborho­od establishe­d shops and a thriving nightlife scene. But by the early 1970s, the city had demolished scores of residentia­l blocks, including the one where the garden now stands, to make way for a freeway that was never built. In the aftermath of that destructio­n, residents planted a garden here in 1972, later naming it after longtime community activist Alice Meade-Taylor.

Williams moved to Milwaukee from Pittsburgh in1989 to become a youth minister for a local nonprofit that planned to expand use of the garden after it had fallen into neglect. While she was working in the garden, curious residents would stop their cars or walk up to the fence to share memories of the old days. Itwas then that the greater importance of the land, and the anger of those who remember its better days, sank in.

“It was a village,” Williams said of that period leading up to the early ’70s. But then the whole community was uprooted.

Williams asked a colleague — whose family used to live in houses on the garden’s land— to build a white picket fence in the center of the lawn, a reminder of the lives lived and what was lost.

Williams wants to find a way to attract more young Black people to the garden, especially now when the stress of the racial injustices they’ve inherited feels so pressing.

Later that night, about 50 young protesters, some on foot and some riding inside and on top of cars, stopped traffic as they marched through the city to protest a Louisville, Ky., grand jury’s failure to recommend murder charges in the killing of Breonna Taylor. They lighted candles at a mural for George Floyd on North Avenue with the words “I can’t breathe” painted beside his portrait. They kept on until they reached amural dedicated to Taylor.

Someone in the racially mixed group called for a moment of silence. People raised their fists and fell as quiet as the garden. But there was no look of peace on their faces, no willingnes­s to patiently wait for change to arrive like the seasons.

One young Black man splashed water on the pavement and cried out for the pain felt by Taylor’s family, as well as for the suffering of his Black ancestors.

Another shouted his demand for racial justice.

“We’ve got to go back and plant new soil over the blood that was spilled in America,” he said.

The vigil felt more raw and urgent than the yoga and workshops that take place at Alice’s Garden, but all share the same mission.

A hand-painted sign in the garden echoes the defiance — and the determinat­ion to lift up an oppressed race —- that the protesters expressed.

“Tried to bury us,” the sign reads. “We were seeds.”

 ?? Tyrone Beason / Tribune News Service ?? Visitors to Alice’s Garden do yoga on its grassy lawn. The community farm has become a respite in Milwaukee’s historical­ly Black community, a place where people can meditate and grow food.
Tyrone Beason / Tribune News Service Visitors to Alice’s Garden do yoga on its grassy lawn. The community farm has become a respite in Milwaukee’s historical­ly Black community, a place where people can meditate and grow food.
 ??  ?? VeniceWill­iams holds a sprig of hyssop in Alice’s Garden.
VeniceWill­iams holds a sprig of hyssop in Alice’s Garden.

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