[guitar music playing] just three months ago this land was not utilized by people. It had weeds so high you couldn't walk through it, and today it is a thriving, abundant garden where black, indigenous, and people of color can come together, grow community, and grow food and medicine. The community garden started in my dreams a few years ago, and I was finally able to realize it a couple months ago when we broke ground on this property. [guitar music playing] The BIPOC Community Garden is a small garden that I've put in right in my side yard. It is a place for the BIPOC community in my area to come and be able to garden. Most of the beds are communal beds, so we are growing a lot of vegetables and herbs. Folks can come in, they can help tend, they can harvest, they can make medicine, and then we have a few beds that are individually stewarded. So folks who want to have the whole experience of planting the seed, planning the graden, tending it, they have the opportunity to do that here with a bed as well. We have a community herb-drying shed. It houses our tool lending library, a lending library of books related to herbalism, and a library of medicine- making supplies. So if folks come to the garden, and they do not have any tools, or anything to make medicine with, everything is in the shed for them. It is also a place where folks can dry herbs, so if they grow something in the garden, such as a bunch of mint, and they are like "oh, I would love to have this over the winter so I can have tea," they can harvest the mint here and put it on the drying racks. It will dry beautifully for them and then they can take it home and have tea for the winter. The garden is the Jane Minor BIPOC Community Medicine Garden and it is named after an amazing herbalist and healer, Jane Minor, who was enslaved in Virginia. In 1825, a fever epidemic swept through Virginia. She was so skilled that she not only healed other Black folks but her enslaver enlisted her to heal white folks as well. Because she was so adept at that and so many people got better where everywhere else folks were dying, they granted her her freedom. She did not stop there! She kept working as an herbalist and healer, saved up her money, and was able to purchase the freedom of sixteen other enslaved folks. The inspiration to create the garden was to be able to have a space where BIPOC folks could access the land. That is a really big challenge for a lot of folks nationwide but even in my community where there is not a lot of free land access. I also wanted to create this space to be a safe spot for BIPOC folks. I wanted this to be an outdoor sanctuary where people can really feel like themselves, feel safe, and be able to connect with the earth. The garden is just such an amazing place of connection. It is a place where folks can really reclaim their connection to the earth. Lots of folks have been disconnected from the land. Just having a space where you can put your hands in the earth, and get to understand the cycles of the plants, and the seasons and how the light changes as we move through the year, that all just helps to connect you to the land, to the seasons, and I think to yourself. Your own innate rhythms that we have been disconnected from. It is also a beautiful place of community connection. Folks are coming out to garden together, and then they make medicine together or go for a swim together and it builds these beautiful friendships. It is a way to tap into something that is bigger than yourself. Earth is the source of everything. It is our life, it is our food it is our medicine, it is our clothing, it is our housing, so just being able to touch that is really magical and I think brings people home to themselves. [guitar and piano music playing] One thing that a lot of folks have mentioned is that this is their happy space, this is a place where they can feel totally themselves and feel safe because it is a sanctuary. It is a place that was created by folks of color for folks of color and that we are navigating through a lot of white-dominated spaces in our day-to-day life, and it is just nice to be able to come to a space where it is just your community. It helps us to breathe a little bit. People also are growing vegetables, so they are getting good food to eat. They are growing plants for medicine, so they are also able to harvest and make medicine. 2020 has been such an intense year, there has been so much trauma and pain that we have all experienced, and folks have been able to come here and let go of that for a moment, and that is such a gift. There is no community garden without community. Absolutely not. When I came here and I was like "Oh, I have a yard, I can have a garden! Oh great, I can grow this and I can grow that! But wait... that feels like something is missing. If I have this opportunity, I want the community to have this opportunity." And because I opened up this space for other people, that also opened up the community to want to support it, so it has been a really beautiful coming together. In just three months it went from six-foot-high overgrown brush to all of these amazing beds and really without a lot of work. We used a tarp which was great so we did not have to bring in machinery to cut things down or to till a bunch of times. After the tarp came up, the neighbor came in with their tractor and they tilled just once, and then I had a work party. Fifteen folks came out and we got all the beds made in a few hours. We planted the beds over the next couple weeks and then we have just been weeding and mulching. [guitar music playing] It is also I think really helpful for folks to see the scale of this, to see that "I could totally do this in my yard as well. I do not have to have a bunch of acres, I do not have to even live in the country. You can turn any plot of earth into a beautiful abundant garden." It is all right there, it is such a huge potential, we can not continue to rely on big agriculture and monocropping and the degenerative ways in which food is grown. I feel like there is so much potential and land that can be turned into flourishing gardens for community. Do not be intimidated! It is something you can do just in a yard. You can do it literally in just one bed if you live in a city. Even if you have a porch, you can have a community garden of potted plants. There is no limit to where you can do this, you can absolutely do this anywhere. It is about community though, so make sure you connect with your community, see what is needed, see what is wanted, see how a garden can serve folks, and then just do it! [music playing]