June 2011

WhyHunger has been a proud supporter of the development of Live Real, a new national initiative uniting youth and communities across the country. Live Real believes real food should be the norm—not the exception — and will be working towards that goal through some exciting projects beginning in the next few months.

First up is the announcement of the first class of Real Food Fellows, 11 emerging young leaders who will work together and in their communities to tell their own stories about food justice – and change the national conversation about our food system.

2011 Real Food Fellows

1st row top (left to right): Aaron Cardona (McNeal, Arizona), Vanessa Ryann Bourgeois (Olney, Illinois), Corey McCord (Detroit, Michigan), April Taylor (Lexington, Kentucky)

2nd row (left to right): Kyoka Akers (Bessemer, Alabama), Jesus Villalba (Bronx, New York), Courtney Oats (Eupora, Mississippi)

3rd row (left to right): Anthony Ciocco (Durango, Colorado), Carmen Fourd (Pine Ridge, South Dakota), Jason Patterson (Old Hickory, Tennessee), Marina Saenz Luna (Mission, Texas)

Follow Live Real on twitter (@liverealnoworg, #livereal) as fellows will:
•    ride across America on the “Food and Freedom Rides
•    blog and vlog about their projects on a new social networking website launching this summer
•    transform America’s food system!

And stay tuned here for more on how you can connect with Live Real as it launches its official website and campaigns in just a few weeks!

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The Neighborhood Story Project“The one who tells the stories rules the world.” – Native American (Hopi) Proverb

In cities and towns across the United States and around the world The Neighborhood Story Project collaborates with communities to help them share their stories. From creating and publishing books to radio broadcasts, they can help you and your community share your experience and participate in the national conversation around food safety, security, and sovereignty!

The Neighborhood Story Project worked with 2009 Harry Chapin Self-Reliance Award winners New Orleans Food and Farm Network (NOFFN) to create their “Food Talk Project.” Listen to a story about the project broadcast on WWOZ’s Street Talk radio.

What’s your story?  How are you sharing it? On a blog, in a video, on the radio…?  Leave a comment and let us know.

 

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WhyHunger is pleased to be partnering with Andrianna Natsoulas, long-time food sovereignty activist and author of the forthcoming book Food Voices: Stories of the Food Sovereignty Movement.  For the past year, Andrianna has been on a journey across the Americas to capture the stories of people working towards and living a just and sustainable food system. Below is the latest highlight of her work.

Bonsai farms on Try-on Life Community (TLC) Farm in Portland, Oregon. He has always had a passion to farm, teach others about food, and promote sustainability. Bonsai is able to do all three through his community farm and the nonprofit arm of the operations. They run training programs and a fully outdoor nursery school called Mother Earth School. They also grow an array of fruits, vegetables, and medicinal herbs, as well as raise goats, sheep, and chickens.

“A few of us lived here in the early 2000’s.  The owner wanted to sell this land and developers were the only ones making offers. He served us an eviction notice, so he could sell it easier. The eviction went through, but we filed an appeal.  During that appeal period, which was ten months, we were allowed to stay here.  At that time we started the non-profit and raised $1.5 million through our relentless capital campaign to protect this piece of land.  It was an easy choice: condo development or a community center.  Canvassing was happening all over the neighborhoods, so everyone could see the vision. Kids were walking down the driveway with their piggy banks, giving us a dollar in change.  It was on that level.  People were sending in checks for tens of thousands of dollars.  The city gave us grants to start this community center.  We had very low interest loans, personal bridge loans at no interest. All those things culminated into the purchase of this land.  We put it into a land trust, called OSALT, Oregon Sustainable Agriculture Land Trust.  They hold the title for the land.  We have a one hundred year lease from them, so we can be stewards of the place, operate the place and operate the nonprofit.

“The nonprofit, called the TLC Farm, is focused on hosting workshops and teaching about sustainability, food production, natural building, and animal rearing. We do consensus and facilitation trainings, workshops regarding how to plant food, when to plant it, what to plant, how to harvest, how to preserve food, how to grow medicine, how to tend animals, how to milk, how to shear sheep, how to tend bees. Land-based skills, we call it. The community is Cedar Moon. The community is focused on the cottage industry, making and distributing products.  Our best one so far is a raw, delicious hot sauce that we make from garlic and peppers that we grow.  I’m running a bonsai nursery and a medicinal plant nursery. The school is the Mother Earth School. It’s Waldorf inspired, but not a registered Waldorf school.  Their focus is on earth-based spirituality, which is nothing more than awareness of the surroundings, awareness of the elements at work, the cycles of the sun and moon and the seasons, the systems that are happening in the field to make this life flourish.

“We feed everybody [in the community], but we still are buying certain stuff.  The paradox of farming these days is it’s hard to grow your own grains and oils, so we’re buying stuff like olive oil, rice and oat grouts. We make yogurt and cheese and a ton of milk.  Eggs are covered and all the veggies – root crops, salads, squash, cucumbers, tomatoes.  We grow plenty of that, enough to feed ourselves year round.  The goal is to keep all those things within the extended community, so whereas we have a ton of goat milk, we can trade that if someone is making sunflower oil at the next farm.

“These concepts of how to work with the land and off the land have been in every culture forever. People have always been thinking about the smartest ways to go about agriculture and life.  Permaculture has been around forever. It’s just a new term that was given in the ‘70’s. Now, here in the 21st century, I can see not only people going back to the land, but incorporating the appropriate technologies to do so in a much more effective and efficient way.  It’s the age of information now, and so this information can spread faster than ever.  People who are interested, even remotely interested, can get on board and become involved in projects that they’re finding out are just around the corner.  We are reinventing these systems in a way that’s applicable to our modern reality and looking back through history at how people have done that and what’s necessary, what’s needed for the future survival of our communities. This non-violent revolution is the kind of thing that we’re trying to usher in.”

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Harry Chapin Self-Reliance Awards (HCSRA)
The Harry Chapin Self-Reliance Awards (HCSRA) is a national grant program providing economic resources and networking opportunities to outstanding community-based organizations for their creative and effective approaches to fighting hunger and poverty in the United States.  Selected organizations will receive up to $7,000 in cash for developing a new project or replicating an existing one. Click here for more details.

Deadline to apply: Friday, July 1, 2011

Current Funding Opportunities

Awardees participate in a peer-to-peer consulting activity at the 2011 Harry Chapin Self-Reliance Awards' annual networking day.

RISE-NYC
The New York Women’s Foundation is now accepting applications for their RISE-NYC grant program! If your organization works to help women and girls secure economic security and justice in low-income neighborhoods in the 5 boroughs of NYC, you may qualify to receive a one-time grant of $50,000.  Click here to learn more.

Deadline to apply: July 18, 2011

The Foundation Center‘s RFP Bulletin
Looking for up to date information on available grants, fellowships, and other funding opportunities to be delivered directly to your email? Sign up to receive the RFP Bulletin – a free, weekly e-newsletter that lists recently announced requests for proposals (RFPs) from private, corporate, and government funding sources.

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