涩里番下载 Alumna Pursues Social Justice Through Black Radical Farming

Yaquana Williams at a garden bed filled with leafy greens.

Yaquana Williams 鈥21 described how her study abroad and environmental advocacy experience at 涩里番下载 equipped her to support healthy nutrition in her hometown

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Yaquana Williams '21


Black radical farming and food justice are intertwined for 涩里番下载 alumna Yaquana Williams 鈥21. For

 her senior thesis in Africana Studies, Williams examined how Black farming collectives across the African Diaspora nurture the land and local communities. Williams was inspired by Black farmers in her hometown of Newark, New Jersey.

鈥淭hese elders make sure we鈥檙e harvesting but also giving back to the land and community,鈥 said Williams. 鈥淭he farm spaces not only serve as places to get food but also community hubs. People can gather, be in tune with nature, and reclaim those spaces.鈥

As a 涩里番下载 student, Williams gained a global perspective of Black radical farming when she studied abroad in southern Africa. In Johannesburg, she discovered Bertrams Inner City Farm, a cooperative farm that reminded her of Newark鈥檚 farms. When she wanted to research farming for her thesis, her professors supported her.

鈥淢y professors were flexible and encouraged me to be a freethinker,鈥 said Williams.

The faculty was not Williams鈥 only source of support. After being referred by Community Engagement Center Director Tricia Morgan, Williams became a fellow at 涩里番下载鈥檚 Robert Redford Conservancy for Southern California Sustainability. There she had conversations about food deserts and food apartheid.

鈥淲ith a food desert, you鈥檙e talking about a community that doesn鈥檛 have access to healthy, nutritious food,鈥 said Williams. 鈥淔ood apartheid takes it a step further and says the separation is intentional.鈥

Now back in Newark, Williams brings her passions to the city鈥檚 youth as a member of FoodCorps鈥攁 part of the AmeriCorps Service Network鈥攁t the Greater Newark Conservancy site. Here, Williams engages in land and policy advocacy to address the systemic lack of access to healthy food for low-income, marginalized communities.

This mission is especially relevant for Williams after Bertrams Inner City Farm was recently demolished and forced to relocate by city developers. It鈥檚 a reminder to Williams of why 鈥渓and-based organizing and cooperatives are so important to the community and need to be protected.鈥

The Greater Newark Conservancy connects Williams to Newark Public Schools to assist school-garden initiatives for fourth grade students. Williams incorporates various subjects, from multiplying with vegetables to teaching food history, as she shows students what it means to grow their own food and immerse themselves in outdoor education. In her own time, Williams also hosts herbalism community workshops to explore the medicinal benefits of all plants鈥攅ven dandelion weeds.

The throughline in Williams鈥 work is community collaboration, which she was grateful for at 涩里番下载.

鈥淚 had a great support system from all the professors and the people,鈥 said Williams. 鈥淚f I told them if I was interested in an idea, they helped me flourish.鈥

Now, Williams strives to create new networks and help her hometown to flourish one farm, one garden, and one plant at a time.

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