Below you will find our food sovereignty PMA that was submitted to the USSF PMA organizers for inclusion among the official resolutions coming out of the PMAs at the 2010 USSF.  Thank you so much for all your work, collaboration, and great energy and spirit that you put into this process.  Onward towards food sovereignty!

Here are some visuals from Phil of the PMA at the food justice canopy in the USSF Tent Village. you can also see some photos from our work bridgade days, where we installed a hoophouse at Smallville Farm.

Statement from the People’s Movement Assembly on Food Sovereignty, US Social Forum 2010

Over a half-century ago, Mahatma Gandhi led a multitude of Indians to the sea to make salt—in defiance of the British Empire’s monopoly on this resource critical to people’s diet. The action catalyzed the fragmented movement for Indian independence and was the beginning of the end for Britain’s rule over India. The act of “making salt” has since been repeated many times in many forms by people’s movements seeking liberation, justice and sovereignty: Cesar Chavez, Nelson Mandela, and the Zapatistas are just a few of the most prominent examples. Our food movement— one that spans the globe—seeks food sovereignty from the monopolies that dominate our food systems with the complicity of our governments. We are powerful, creative, committed and diverse. It is our time to make salt. 

A movement for food sovereignty – the people’s democratic control of the food system, the right of all people to healthy, culturally appropriate food produced through ecologically sound and sustainable methods, and their right to define their own food and agriculture systems - is building from every corner of the globe.

We find that our work to build a better food system in the Unites States is inextricably linked to the struggle for workers’ rights, immigrant’s rights, women’s rights, the fight to dismantle racism in our communities, and the struggle for sovereignty in indigenous communities. We find that in order to create a better food system, we must break up the corporate control of our seeds, land, water and natural resources. 

Because at a time of record harvests and record profits we have over one billion hungry people on the planet; because poverty is the root cause of hunger; because the world’s oceans are being polluted and plundered, because industrial agriculture contributes one third of all greenhouse gas emissions, because increasing inequality, poverty, hunger, a global land grab, and environmental destruction are threatening the livelihoods of family farmers, farmworkers, fisherfolk, and marginalized communities worldwide; and because community based food systems and agroecological farming can cool the planet, build resilience to climate change, and eliminate poverty;

We therefore commit to re-building local food economies in our own communities, to dismantling structural racism, to democratizing land access, to building opportunities for the leadership of our youth, and to working towards food sovereignty in partnership with social movements around the world;

We call on others in the US to demand an end to the global land grab, to end both corporate and military land occupations, to demand fairer trade, aid and investment policies, land reform, and support for sustainable peasant and community agriculture and sustainable community fisheries;

We endorse actions that include: the liberation of land and water resources for the production of food and sustainable livelihoods; the creation of new structures for cooperative ownership of land and food production, processing and distribution; the integration of labor rights, immigrant’s rights and food justice; the valuing of women as primary food providers, and the denouncement of false solutions and false partnerships addressing climate change, hunger and economic development;

We demand a world in which everyone has control over their food and no one has to put food in their mouth that hurts people or the environment.

Organizations and individuals among us have therefore committed to the following actions:

 

  • Launching a campaign for food sovereignty as a right of the people
  • Growing and harvesting as much food as we possibly can everywhere
  • Liberating land through reclaiming urban and rural spaces for the production of food for communities; demanding the use of public lands for food production
  • Participating in a global campaign against land grabs, in which corporations and governments grab up the lands of communities
  • Carrying forward the people’s agenda coming out of the Cochabamba climate summit — including popular education around food and climate justice and promoting sustainable agriculture as a solution to climate change
  • Standing with the people of Haiti, Palestine, Honduras, and other countries whose food sovereignty is threatened by political, military, and/or corporate occupation
  • Hosting collective meals in our communities as a way of connecting people across generations and cultural backgrounds and as a tool for dismantling racism in the food system
  • Forging new models of collective control of land and waterways; assuring legal protection of the commons
  • Building the leadership of the next generation; providing opportunities for urban and rural youth to have a future in food and farming
  • Rejecting GMOs and other forms of the corporate takeover of our food systems
  • Creatively and strategically working to dismantle the corporations who have hijacked the world’s food systems
  • Affirming the sovereignty of indigenous peoples in North America and throughout the globe
  • Committing our food movements in the US to be active participants in the global movement for food sovereignty and to work to stop our government and corporations from practices that undermine food sovereignty globally.
  • Challenging US food and agricultural aid and development policy (e.g., Monsanto and USAID’s recent “donation” of seeds to Haiti)
  • Working towards a people’s food and farm bill based on principles of food sovereignty
  • Hosting community seed exchanges
  • Engaging communities in popular education on GMOs and the role of corporations in our food system
  • Engaging communities in popular education on community nutrition and public health
  • Creating more community farmers markets that are accessible and affordable to all; affirming everyone’s right to food that is good, safe, healthy, and fair
  • Helping everyone understand where their food comes from and who helped bring it to their table
  • Highlighting the common struggles between farmers and farmworkers in the US and their counterparts throughout the world
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Food Justice Presence Felt at the USSF: a Beautiful People’s Movement Assembly

Jessica Walker Beaumont

The Food Justice Canopy situated in the USSF village was a beacon of energy and life in a field of canopies empty as people fled or kept away by rainy skies.  Those who work with food and nature are not easily deterred by a little rain (or big rain in this case).  Just as our People’s Movement Assembly (PMA) was scheduled to begin the skies parted and we had the whole village to ourselves.  Despite the long distance to the village, a beautiful stream of activists found their way to the canopy. Over 150 people gathered for four hours of deliberation, discussion and sharing.  Many commented on how refreshing it was to have so many voices in the space coming from diverse perspectives, and yet the commonality among so obvious.

Together we decided on ten different breakout groups – allowing the space for everyone to have a voice.  A true democratic and transparent process can be long and messy, but as we returned to the large group to report back, the basis of a declaration and call to common action came forward.

Together we are meeting each morning to fine tune the declaration and find inspiration for common and creative action.  All this to prepare for the Food Justice/Sovereignty contribution to the all USSF PMA scheduled for Saturday afternoon.

Food Justice movements are here in Detroit being felt and heard and (I must say) our New York presence is felt.  People left energized and ready to contribute to the hard work of bringing our divergent and disconnected movements working under the banner of Food Justice or Food Sovereignty together.  Stay tuned for the final declaration!

Music to our ears

Gourd crafting at it’s best. This is how one of the vans listened to music all the way from NYC. Thanks to Phil for his ingenious i-gourd!

For all you social media mavens, you can also follow us on twitter at #nycfoodjustice. You can also follow the happenings huge at #ussf2010.

We’re in the D!

And we’re loving every minute of it. Among the 20,000 people that traveled to Detroit from all over the US were four vans from New York carrying the NYC Food Justice Delegation. Our mission is “…New Yorkers working together on Food Justice mobilizing for the USSF and planning how to get to Detroit, what to do in NYC before and after Detroit, and what to do in Detroit.” Out of the over 900 planned workshops, the group has highlighted over 60 relevant food justice related. Also, everyone has a chance to plan, discuss, organize and mobilize in the food justice tent in tent city, look for us there!

After navigating the registration station at the USSF, we had time to get settled and check out some organizations that were holding court at CoBo Hall in downtown Detroit between 10 am – noon.

Sarah Grieb and I (Bilen Berhanu) were lucky enough to catch the Detroit Black Community Food Security Network talk about their work alongside representatives from Earthworks Urban Farms, an urban agriculture program of a local soup kitchen. Board Members of the Black Community Food Security Network presented the history and evolution of their work since the inception of the network in 2006. Monica White, a board member and professor at Wayne State University, emphasized the importance of having people of color in leadership roles in efforts aimed at addressing the food security crisis in a city like Detroit with a population that is 85% African American.

Monica White, of the Detroit Black Community Food Security Network, discussing the intersections of race, class, food and resistance.

“It’s fine to come and engage in this work with us but you don’t need to teach us how to do what we’ve been doing all along,” she said. The importance of creating safe spaces for folks to come together and talk about issues of race and class were central to developing strategies, building the network and strengthening ties to allies throughout the city. The network credits the People’s Institute for Survival and Beyond for facilitating a workshop to that galvanized groups and individuals. This workshop enables people to generate a common language that helped continue the work they started in their sessions. Suffice to say, we learned a lot from and felt inspired by their continuing commitment to work as a open, honest and beloved community .

Before we knew it, it was time for lunch and we strolled down to Hart Plaza, where we caught a glimpse of the Joe Louis memorial, his powerful fist symbolizing the strength and resilience of our host city. We were excited to see folks getting prepared for the opening march and ceremony.

Joe Louis Memorial

Opening Ceremony of USSF in Cobo Hall, Deroit, MI.

The opening ceremony was very moving yet grounding. There is something truly amazing about a gathering of this nature we come face to face quite literally with realization of our power as a people. We left with our hearts full and ready to sink out teeth into workshops, work brigades, PMAs and so forth!

Stay tuned and thanks for reading!

Bilen & Sarah

Getting ready for the D!

Meet the delegation!

Thank you Jess and Lida for organizing and throwing an awesome party last Friday.

Food Justice at USSF

If you are attending the US Social Forum from June 22-26 in Detroit, MI, you should know about the Food Justice events that have been organized. There will be a Food Justice Canopy, located in the Canopy Village along the water in downtown Detroit near Cobo Hall, the main workshop site. There will be events, receptions, and meetings held in the canopy throughout the Forum, and it will serve as the main convergence site for food justice folks. Every morning at 9 am we will hold a food justice caucus to recap the previous day and plan for the current day. We hope to see you there. For a schedule of the Food Justice Canopy, go here:

http://www.foodchainworkers.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/2010-06-Food-Justice-Canopy-schedule.xls.

We have also helped to put together an informal Food Justice/Sovereignty Workshop Track. This short flyer lists some of the food justice workshops and events scheduled for the Forum. We hope it helps you to navigate the 1000’s of workshops available. There is also a more extensive list of workshops here:

http://usfoodcrisisgroup.org/files/Updated%20of%20USSFFoodRelatedWorkshops%20v.pdf.

Our apologies if your events or workshops or those of your allies were left off the Food Justice/Sovereignty Track. Come to the Food Justice Canopy and let us know about your work!

HELP US CLOSE OUR $1,500 funding gap: 60 NYC Food Justice activist US Social Forum delegation

ANOTHER WORLD IS POSSIBLE – ANOTHER FOODSYSTEM IS NECESSARY – ANOTHER DETROIT IS HAPPENING

We had a dream that a delegation of NYC community members dedicated to foodjustice would come together to travel to the second United States Social Forum (www.ussf2010.org) in Detroit, Michigan from June 22 – 26, 2010. Detroit is a national leader in the urban farming world transforming devastation into community based solutions starting from the roots.

Our dream to be a part of this is now a reality with 60 New Yorkers traveling together to the USSF — the majority of whom are low-income adults and youth representing many different communities and over a dozen grassroots organizations.

We have raised $7,000 among us from foundations and people have paid to their ability.
But we are short $1,500!  Help us close this funding gap!

THE USSF, inspired by the World Social Forum, promises to bring together 20,000 activists mostly from grassroots movement building organizations.  Food justice activists from all over the country and world are joining local Detroit activists under a Food Justice Canopy planned at the Social Forum.  The canopy will provide a space of convergence to advance strategies of change.

Lida and Bilen with donated tools at the GreenThumb compound

The NYC delegation will strengthen connections between activist leaders in the NYC Food JusticeMovement and provide space to exchange programmatic ideas and best practices, and deepen our capacity for advancing food justice in NYC.

Together we are collecting gardening tools to donate to Detroit urban farms and will be hosted by Smallville Farm where we will help construct a hoop house to extend their growing season.

Hoop house used to extend growing season

UPON RETURNING TO NYC, we will organize a city-wide gathering for reflection about lessons learned at the USSF, focusing on practices and strategies employed across the country that we could incorporate to strengthen our work.

SUPPORT US in closing our funding gap! You can make a tax deductible donation directly online (please specify a “Designation” of ‘USSF NYC delegation’) by visiting our fiscal agent Just Food donation page http://bit.ly/cx4cZl

You can also send a check to Just Food, with ‘USSF NYC delegation’ in the memo line, to Just Food 1155 Ave of the Americas, 3rd flr, New York, NY 10036.

In solidarity!

The NYC Food Justice Delegation goes to Detroit