麻豆传媒

a green striped tomato on the left and yellow tomato on the right hang together from a vine

Just Food for a Just World

Season 3 Episode 1

LaDonna Redmond holds a bushel of tomatoes

There has never been a fair, just, or healthy food system in the United States of America. So how do we get there? LaDonna Redmond has some ideas. Redmond visited 麻豆传媒 in fall 2018 to give a talk titled 鈥淔ood and Justice: The Commitment To End All Oppression.鈥 She understands that if you want a better world, you鈥檙e gonna have to get your hands dirty and work the soil.

Evidence has been accumulating for years and years that this country鈥檚 industrial food and agriculture system is deeply flawed, potentially irredeemably so. Redmond has been an activist for a long time 鈥 in reproductive justice, violence prevention, and sustainability 鈥 but the issue of food justice didn鈥檛 come into focus for her until her son, Wade, developed serious food allergies.

The Personal Becomes Political

Through her struggle to find healthy food for her son, she realized, 鈥淢aybe this is bigger than just me not being able to get food, maybe it鈥檚 really about a community not being able to get food.鈥 Then, the personal became political.

She looked around her neighborhood in Chicago for signs of healthy food and she saw lack: a lack of grocery stores, a lack of fresh produce. But there was no lack of vacant lots, and that鈥檚 where she got to work, along with fellow members of the Northwest Austin Council, turning them into gardens for the community.

Healthy Soil for Healthy Communities

People dismissed Redmond鈥檚 vision as unrealistic, but she was not deterred. When she proposed the idea of farmer鈥檚 markets accepting Electronic Benefit Transfer (food stamps), people also told her it couldn鈥檛 be done. Refusing to accept 鈥渘o鈥 as an answer is a common thread for Redmond, she says. 鈥淚 focus my attention on what I believe to be the right thing, and I do the best that I can with it and most of the time I鈥檓 pretty successful with it.鈥

Another part of her 鈥渘o鈥 philosophy, which has served her so well over the years, is saying 鈥渘o鈥 to the term 鈥渇ood desert,鈥 which she abhors and implores people to avoid using. As she says, 鈥淚t makes absolutely no sense why we make up metaphors that indicate lack.鈥 Additionally, Redmond says, the phrase has been used as a marketing tool to attract big corporations like Walmart to set up shop in communities struggling to access healthy food.

Resilience Through Food

Through her years of work in food justice, Redmond has seen substantial progress in her communities and around the country. More young people, especially young Black people, are interested in growing and learning about food. As Redmond sees it, food justice is an integral part of bigger discussions about ending poverty and oppression, and one cannot be achieved without the other. She says, 鈥淲e have to start talking about ending poverty. We have to start talking about ending oppression, and then we can see how we can get exploitation out of our food and agriculture system.鈥

Understanding the nature of exploitation in our food systems is critical to her effort, and that understanding reaches far back into history, back to the beginnings of this country鈥檚 economy and its reliance on slave labor, which continues to this day through prison labor. Exploitation is rampant throughout the system, says Redmond. 鈥淢any of the workers are exploited, whether they鈥檙e picking our food or whether they鈥檙e working in factories or in plants, farmers are exploited by corporations. And we don鈥檛 like to talk in those kinds of terms, but that鈥檚 what it is, it鈥檚 exploitation. But exploitation has always been a part of our land and agricultural system.鈥

More than Food

Food is more than just exploitation, though. Food is essential to humans as more than pure survival, something which Redmond believes is often lost during discussions about food justice or food security.

鈥淚t becomes about calories in, calories out, or you just got to get somebody something to eat, and it misses the idea that food conveys culture. So in all of these different ways, when we talk about justice, in it we鈥檙e just really talking about being a human being. So a woman鈥檚 right to choose is also coupled with a woman鈥檚 right to have food. A person鈥檚 right to live free of violence is also a person鈥檚 right to live free from food used as a weapon against them.鈥

Indeed, as Redmond says, 鈥淓verything that we do that鈥檚 special to us as humans has food involved in some way.鈥 And it鈥檚 all connected, in ways that we can鈥檛 even imagine.

Pushing the Conversation Forward

Redmond also took her fight to the political realm in 2018, as she ran for political office in Minneapolis. She 鈥減ushed the issues around eliminating cash bail and not criminalizing poor people because they can鈥檛 get out of jail, but just simply writing tickets. We talked about racial equity and I suggested a civilian council on racial equity.鈥 Although she lost the election, she received a substantial 36% of the vote, and pushed the other candidate to acknowledge and care about the important issues of her campaign.

Food Justice in 麻豆传媒

So what do these issues of food justice look like in 麻豆传媒? Well, we鈥檙e surrounded by corn and soy fields that tout themselves as feeding the world, but food insecurity remains a problem in 麻豆传媒. Something鈥檚 amiss and it鈥檚 not just in 麻豆传媒: it鈥檚 everywhere. Working to solve these problems can be daunting, but it also means you can make the world a better place by starting wherever you are with the soil beneath your feet.

Resources and action-based information about food and racial justice:

: A podcast from the New York Times. and

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