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Community with One Another and Our Ancestors

November 5, 2024

Partners in Progress,



The reds, oranges, and yellows of fall’s great show are magic. Our eyes and hearts are overwhelmed by the natural golden beauty of life inside a miracle as we balance the sorrow behind the constant impacts of the climate collapse that stretches and changes our seasons as we have witnessed all year.


Holding the devastation and the miracles in balance, we are filled with optimism and determination as we continue to invest in a more just and equitable food system. Collaboration moves us forward and is essential as we imagine and empower a self-reliant, self-determined community. 


Following Earth’s example, we move into a season of gratitude, healing, and reflection as we celebrate the many community members who share their time and play a powerful role in this work and our vision of food sovereignty! Our faithful compost crew has transformed organic waste into rich, nourishing compost, helping to close the loop on food waste and nurture the soil our community depends on. Their dedication demonstrates the hands-on commitment that drives our shared mission forward and brings us closer to a sustainable, community-centered food system.


Getting our hands in the dirt and nurturing Earth helps us tend to ourselves, invest in community, and commune with our ancestors. 


Thank you to all our volunteers—whether you’re turning compost, planting seeds, or sharing our mission. Your hard work and belief in the importance of food sovereignty create a real impact, one small act at a time. Together, we’re cultivating a future where our food systems are resilient, sustainable, and community-driven.


Thank you for growing with us,

Julius


P.S. Check out this article about our Inaugural Sprout Grants (or you can listen to it on WEMU).


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During the Montgomery Bus Boycott, when formal fundraising was surveilled and criminalized, Georgia Gilmore organized something deceptively simple: a kitchen network . Known as The Club From Nowhere , Gilmore and other Black women sold pies, cakes, and home-cooked meals to quietly raise money for the movement. Their anonymity was protection. Their food was infrastructure. For over a year, as the boycott stretched on, these funds paid for carpools, gas, and daily survival. While history often centers on speeches and marches, Gilmore reminds us that revolutions are sustained behind the scenes by those who feed people, organize logistics, and keep the lights on. Her kitchen was a site of resistance. Her recipes were tools of liberation. At Growing Hope, we honor this lineage every time we invest in food entrepreneurs, incubator kitchens, and cooperative models. When food businesses are community-rooted, they do more than generate income; they fuel movements . Never underestimate what food can do. And never forget who has always been doing the work.
By Julius Buzzard February 11, 2026
“If you have 400 quarts of greens and gumbo soup canned for the winter, nobody can push you around.” Fannie Lou Hamer said this not as a metaphor, but as a lived experience. In 1969, after being evicted from her plantation home for registering to vote, Hamer founded the Freedom Farm Cooperative in Sunflower County, Mississippi. The goal was simple and radical: Black families deserved land, food, housing, and economic independence, without having to ask permission. Freedom Farm grew vegetables, raised livestock, built homes, and supported cooperative ownership. It addressed hunger and poverty at their roots, refusing the lie that liberation could come without material security. Hamer understood what we still grapple with today: political rights mean little without food sovereignty . Voting doesn’t protect you from hunger. Legislation doesn’t replace land. Dignity requires access to the means of survival. This is why Growing Hope centers farming, education, and entrepreneurship together. Food sovereignty is not just about what’s on your plate; it’s about who controls the systems that decide who eats .
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