In season three of the podcast, we are dedicating a number of our episodes to the exploration of environmental justice themes. In this episode we talk with Ray Williams, Director of Black Farmers Collective, and Yeawa Asabi, a volunteer at Yes Farm—an urban community project that the Collective has established in the heart of Seattle. Yeawa has also been a student in the graduate program where Forrest served as a professor. As is the case with so many of his students, Forrest learned new things from Yeawa—such as the restorative power of farming to heal the social wounds of her generation.
Guests:
- Ray Williams - cofounder and director of Black Farmers' Collective
- Yeawa Asabi - volunteer at Yes Farm - urban community farm run by Black Farmers' Collective Small Axe - 2nd teaching farm started by Black Farmers' Collective
Mentions:
- Northwest University MA in International Community Development (where Forrest teaches and Yeawa is earning her master’s)
- food sovereignty
- housing segregation's continued effects in the U.S.; Brookings Institute: The Great Real Estate Reset
- affinity groups - Example: Racial Affinity Group Guide for schools
- Black Lives Matter
- BIPOC = Black, Indigenous & People of Color
- BSU = Black Student Union
Keywords: food justice, food desert, urban agriculture, safe spaces, Seattle, environmental justice, social justice, Black Lives Matter, ally, race and identity, community development, Northwest University
Find us on our website: Earthkeepers
Support the Earthkeepers podcast
Check out the Ecological Disciple
Fler avsnitt av Earthkeepers: A Circlewood Podcast on Creation Care and Spirituality
Visa alla avsnitt av Earthkeepers: A Circlewood Podcast on Creation Care and SpiritualityEarthkeepers: A Circlewood Podcast on Creation Care and Spirituality med Forrest Inslee finns tillgänglig på flera plattformar. Informationen på denna sida kommer från offentliga podd-flöden.
