Sunday, November 20, 2011

African American history: homegrown

Yesterday's Bayview History Day event at Washington Carver Elementary School was as much an historic event as an educational one. Shapers of history shared firsthand experiences about the neighborhood's unique and important past. Others celebrated the new library in the neighborhood's future.

The event was dedicated to Eloise Westbrook, a locally and globally recognized change-maker who passed away recently at age 94. A full program kicked-off with the screening of a short video about Mrs. Westbrook.

Shirley Jones, one of the women known as "The Big Five," was featured in the video. She told the story of Eloise Westbrook, speaking in her usual no-nonsense manner, to House Speaker Tip O'Neill.

"I don't call you Tip. You don't call me Eloise."

New political clout

While topics at the history event were wide-ranging, Bayview Hunters Point's role in important political struggles emerged powerfully.

John Templeton, writer, historian and expert on the 60-plus black-owned restaurants in San Francisco, made a few comments and then interviewed esteemed members of Bayview Hunters Point's African American community.

"Bayview is of national importance," Mr. Templeton pointed out.

Templeton noted that, in the 1960's, the Ford Foundation promoted Bayview as the country's best organized community. At that time, everyone knew everyone, and the neighborhood was organized down to the block level. When word needed to go out about something, it went out fast and wide.

Espanola Jackson was at the front of the fight to integrate public housing. "If they called it an annex, that meant it was for black folks," she said from the stage.

Housing justice. Affordable health care. Neighborhood health clinics. These movements began here according to expert testimony at the history event.

Developing new leaders

Espanola Jackson found herself in the thick of the welfare rights struggle of the 1960's. She knew she wanted to help change the inequality she, her family and friends were experiencing, but wasn't sure how to go about it. She had been told she should find her leader, and so she approached Mrs. Westbrook.

"I was scared," Jackson said about meeting Mrs. Westbrook. "I tried to look tough."

But Mrs. Westbrook was famous by that point, and a large woman with a reputation for talking loudly and using language Jackson did not use.

Westbrook message to young Espanola Jackson has well-served both Jackson and the issues she has championed ever since.  "You don't need me to lead you," she said. "You can be your own leader."

Westbrook made sure Jackson had help getting flyers out about a first meeting. By the second meeting, Jackson found herself Chair of the group.

Many elders at the event expressed how important new leadership and involvement is to the struggles they continue to work on.  For some, leadership was about having faith and getting busy.  Say "Yes I can," one participant said, "and you will be able to do it."

"No one gave us anything," Jackson said. "We fought for all of it."

Referencing the Block C Organization and George Earl, Essie Webb gave an example of a rent strike that was waged when the Housing Authority failed to maintain public housing.

Instead of paying rent, "twelve families put their rent money into a bank. And it worked. Does anyone remember the showers? We wanted better showers, and to pick our own contractors."

They got both.

Food and culture
In a brief on-stage interview, Mr. Templeton asked Rev. James Hall, an organizer for the annual Black Cuisine Festival, why he believes knowing about his culture's food is important.

"When your food goes, your culture goes with it," Rev. Hall said. He went on to say that this is why George Davis was inspired to start Black Cuisine which has been an important part of Bayview Hunters Point's cultural landscape in one form or another for 33 years.

Rev. Hall explained how food is connected to struggle, and how families had to get creative simply to survive. Over time, making do with free or low cost ingredients, such as the fruits and vegetables raised by families themselves, became customary.

"Let me tell you something about greens," Rev. Hall said of growing these hardy and productive plants. "Once you get that first batch going, you almost can't get rid of them."

In Butchertown (now known as Dogpatch), the slaughterhouse workers threw out scraps that were part of a food tradition that continues in new ways to this day.

"$5 a pound for ox tail?!" Espanola Jackson said of today's prices for an ingredient once considered worthless.

Mrs. Pickering shared how she gardened, raising food just like nearly every Bayview Hunters Point resident. "My husband didn't like gardening, but I did it year after year."

"Every major decision that was made in my family was made at the kitchen table," said Rev. Hall. "The women would call us in, and we would go."

Friday, November 18, 2011

Quesada, path of struggle

By Jeffrey Betcher


When I met Vivian Richardson about five years ago, I liked her right away. She was warm and friendly, quick to get involved in the life of her community, always smiling. She impressed me as the type of person most anyone would want to have as a neighbor.


That's why it's so hard to imagine her living anywhere but in her Quesada Avenue home.


In 2006, Vivian had joined Maggie Apostol and other neighbors on her block to talk about an organizing project which eventually resulted in the installation of a backyard garden. In fact, she was one of the first to express support of the effort.


Since then, like so many others in our neighborhood, Vivian has been injured by the home foreclosure crisis. But what would be a crushing blow to most of us, is a call to action for Vivian who moved back into her home, organized a march, and landed on the front page of Wednesday's Bay Area section of the SF Chronicle.


Vivian is pictured leading a group down Quesada Avenue toward 3rd Street. See the full article here.


For me, seeing Vivian in the newspaper was an important reminder that, for all our attention to positive change where we live, many folks are more vulnerable than ever. Too often, those losing a foothold here are those who contribute most to making Bayview Hunters Point a unique San Francisco neighborhood.


The cornerstone of our collective history that is about "struggle" ... losses and victories (against all the odds) ... is precious. For Vivian and many others caught between a bank and a hard place, history is a current event.

Waddling is new QGI Vice Chair

Quesada Gardens Initiative has even more to thank Chris Waddling for. First for his massive contribution to the Palou Garden project, and now for expressing his commitment to Bayview Hunters Point through expanded leadership with the feisty band of neighbors known as Quesada Gardens.


Chris agreed to fill QGI's Board of Directors Vice Chair position, which had been empty since co-founder James Ross moved to Kentucky, and the Board voted its unanimous and enthusiastic approval. He will work with Chair (Emeritus) Annette Smith and all the residents associated with QGI to grow the network of involved residents building social cohesion through consensus and asset-based approaches to community change.


Taught the value of gardening and sustainable living by his mother and
grandmother, Chris has become an avid backyard gardener himself, with a passion for improving the community by working the soil and bringing neighbors together.


Chris credits his "can-do" attitude to lessons passed down from his working-class ancestors - the Jamaican meat-packer, the English ship-builder, the American iron-worker - and credits his parents for encouraging his demand of himself to strive for better.


Chris sees the founders and members of the Quesada Gardens Initiative as sharing many of the same values as his family. He has found QGI to be a good fit for all those who believe that nurturing our community's strengths and building consensus as a way to solving our problems are simply part of being a good neighbor.


You can often find Chris working at QGI's Palou Community Garden, where he continues to serve in a project leader capacity, or walking from his home to his job as a PhD scientist at UCSF, Mission Bay. He also does his best to keep himself and others in the district informed through his D10 Watch blog.


Chris immigrated to the US in 1994. He has lived in San Francisco since 2000, and in the city's Bayview neighborhood with his family since 2004.


Pictured is Chris at the Palou Garden after a recent mulching effort. Bridgeview Garden neighbor Sherry Scott pitched in.



Locals win Best Green Community Project award

The Bridgeview Teaching and Learning Garden, a project of the Quesada Gardens Initiative and its partners, accepted a Neighborhood Empowerment Network 2011 award for Best Green Community Project at a gala City Hall event on Thursday November 16th. Joel and Mary McClure, project leaders, and star volunteer Rika Kruse accepted the award on behalf of their neighbors and hundreds of other contributors.

Cheering from the audience were the Vidal Perez family (Vidal and his nephew, Jose, built the new gathering space and entryway at the Bridgeview Garden), QGI's founding gardener Annette Smith (also QGI Board Chair), and Chris Waddling (QGI Vice Chair) with his partner Tim Chan. Seth Wachtel, Professor of Architecture and Community Design at University of San Francisco (a major QGI partner) and Jeffrey Betcher, QGI organizer.

The open space project located at Bridgeview Drive and Newhall Avenue just above the original Quesada Garden has received support from Michael Lee Environmental Foundation, SF Environment, and the SF Community Challenge Grant Program. In addition to the new entryway, the site includes an art bench by Mark Baugh-Sasaki, and art glass signage by Herb Dang (Public Glass), both local folks with big hearts.

The garden is tended by neighbors including John, Sherry, Rika, Serenity, and the SEFA Food Guardians. Critical contributions also come from hundreds of individual and organizational volunteers.