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    corn leaves growing in the sun

    Streams in the Desert

    Letter from North Carolina

    By Richard Joyner

    May 24, 2019

    Available languages: français

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    Gardens teach freedom. Here in Conetoe, North Carolina, our community is surrounded by a food desert on all sides. A quarter of households in our county live below the federal poverty level. Poor nutrition has caused more young deaths here than car accidents. I’ve been a hospital chaplain for years, accompanying one family after another as they stand at the graveside of someone who died too young. I remember the day on the way home from the hospital that I pulled my car over and prayed. It was like I heard God saying, “Open your eyes and look around.” There were fields flowing out in every direction.

    Richard Joyner at Conetoe Family Life Center with coworkers

    Richard Joyner at Conetoe Family Life Center with coworkers. Photograph courtesy of the author

    But there’s been a hard past in those fields. My parents and grandparents were sharecroppers. The generation before them were slaves. Those fields didn’t spell freedom for me. But now a new vision began to overwrite the past. What if our community could turn this around, find our freedom in good soil, and start to believe in a future where families can survive and thrive through determination, creativity, and last year’s seeds?

    Conetoe Family Life Center has been running for fourteen years now. Young people in our program build social and spiritual skills as they discover what it’s like to be one with the land. Yes, we learn how to grow everything that can grow in this soil. But we’re also learning how to invest in the community, putting food on family tables as well as selling vegetables, fruit, and honey to local restaurants, hospitals, and school systems. Then we reinvest those proceeds in the ground.

    I want the children to know, “I can do this! I can contribute to my family’s and community’s well-being.” We’ve gone from being a dangerous food desert to being a community that can feed hundreds of families each week without relying on outside sources. Our financial income levels have not changed. But what we do with our shared strength means that our net income has changed. We’re not dependent – we can speak and work justice. If a child knows that because of work and community, the lights aren’t going out, the food will be on the table, the roof will stay over his head, that’s justice. The early mortality rate is dropping steeply, and that’s justice.

    When our community gathers for a festival, we’re celebrating our own roots. We acknowledge pain and injustice; we know there is much that still needs to change. But we also give thanks for the chance to grow God-given food, and to eat it in peace together. Here in Conetoe, gathering around a table is a life-saving action.

    Contributed By RichardJoyner Richard Joyner

    Rev. Richard Joyner is pastor of the Conetoe Chapel Missionary Baptist Church in North Carolina, where he also runs the church's community garden. He was named a 2015 CNN Hero.

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