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Home»Health»Local church receives grant to fund a community garden
Health

Local church receives grant to fund a community garden

2UrbanGirlsBy 2UrbanGirlsFebruary 17, 2021Updated:December 8, 2021No Comments4 Mins Read
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Councilman Marqueece Harris-Dawson tours the community garden at St. Mark's United Methodist Church. (courtesy photo)
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The Faith Community Coalition received a generous grant from Logos Faith Development LLC to sponsor two new community gardens in the South LA area.  The awards of $2,000 each towards the creation of the gardens and are designed to ensure that the community continues to have access to fresh food options during the COVID-19 pandemic. The first recipient being St. Mark UMC.

The USDA defines a “food desert” as an area that has limited access to affordable and healthy food.  There are many food deserts within the South LA area, as well as a wide variety of organizations that work to mitigate the problem of food insecurity in various ways.

However, the USDA also notes, in one study, that minorities and poverty (low-income, high unemployment) are more prevalent in food deserts.

Food deserts are not a new phenomenon in South Los Angeles and community gardens are one way to begin to address creating healthier eating options within the minority community.

Rev. Jennifer Oliver, who is a community-based food justice advocate, is spearheading the program to bring community gardens to South LA and is looking forward to working with Rev. Gary Bernard Williams, who leads St. Mark UMC.

Rev. Oliver collecting soil samples at St. Mark’s UMC. (courtesy photo)

“St. Mark UMC was an ideal candidate as a pilot site for our program because the church already participates in mitigating food insecurity by distributing food to their community and has a leader, Pastor Williams, who understands the correlation between food accessibility and health disparity,” said Rev. Oliver.  “We envision this garden being a wonderful opportunity to nourish the community with food, love, care, and concern for the whole person.”

Oliver has spent six years studying and conducting research in the food science areas of food toxicology/ safety and nutritional biochemistry, specifically focusing on diseases that more adversely affect people of color.  When she left academia to pursue a ministerial call, she never imagined that I would go back to it.

“After studying at Fuller Seminary, I realized that my purpose in life was to play a role in empowering individuals to overcome poverty barriers, whether physical, spiritual, or mental by creating and restoring community,” said Oliver.  “My expertise and training in diet/disease and food systems are vital to that purpose. “

It became clear to Rev. Oliver that forming strong partnerships within the faith-based community would be an ideal place to start the discussions to incorporate the community gardens on land owned by the churches receiving the awards.

Rev. Williams shared that he was motivated to bring a community garden to the members of his church when he sees the oversaturation of unhealthy food options in his community.

“With the lack supermarkets and access to fresh produce, African-Americans are experiencing disproportionately higher rates of diagnosis and death from diet-related chronic diseases like diabetes and hypertension that I’ve seen that in my congregation and in my own family,” said Rev. Williams.  “There are over 2 million residents in Los Angeles County who are food insecure, therefore, food justice needs to be a priority in our churches and I realized we had the beginnings of what could become a model for churches to establish gardens and farmers markets on church-owned land. Black churches are uniquely positioned to use their land to address the injustices associated with food insecurity in our community.”

The Faith Community Coalition is aware of the long-term affects of South LA being a food desert and welcomed the opportunity to fund the program to assist some of the city’s most vulnerable residents.

“I watched as supermarkets in South Los Angeles burned during the 1992 civil unrest, which created food deserts for black and brown people,” said Pastor John Cager, Founder of the Faith Community Coalition.  “These grants will provide access to fresh, healthy options for BIPOC.”

The garden program is a part of FCC’s Health and Wellness platform, utilizing the Coalition’s focus on building transformational relationships in order to tackle complex issues (i.e. food insecurity, poverty, housing) in our community.

“I am very pleased that LOGOS can underwrite the coalition’s work in the area of community gardens said Martin Porter, Managing Partner of LOGOS.  “Its our intention to take targeted action that maximizes social impact and the opportunity for people to both live in the Kingdom of God and to build it up. I can think of no better way to do this than community gardens that cause us to eat better, garden in community, get off of our phones and screens, and into the soil together.”

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2UrbanGirls has been cited in Daily Breeze, Daily News, Inglewood Today, Intersections South LA, KCRW, KPCC, Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Wave, LA Weekly, LA Watts Times, Mercury News, New York Times, Orange County Register, Sports Illustrated, The Atlantic, and Washington Post. Former contributor to CityWatchLA.

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