Parvati Magazine November 2013 | Page 21

FILM D etroit, Michigan is in some ways Ground Zero of the recession that hit the United States in recent years. Automakers closed down plants, leaving the local economy staggering as other businesses closed down in turn. With jobs hard to come by and homes being foreclosed, people have been leaving the city in droves. Its population is now less than half what it used to be. Whole neighborhoods lie semiabandoned, a handful of people living among an incredible number of sagging, neglected, tumble-down homes. It seems unlikely that Detroit - sprawled out to such an extent that Boston, Manhattan and San Francisco could all fit within its surface area - will see a resurgence of population to fill all these homes again. So what do you do with the land? The documentary Urban Roots has an answer to that question. Under cooperative commu nity movements, seasoned growers and beginners alike are growing organic gardens on abandoned plots of land, and keeping livestock such as chickens or bees in abandoned houses. They clean industrial fill off the land, and enrich it with compost to redevelop the topsoil. They eat the food they grow, or sell it in farmer’s markets or simply out of the trunk of their car. Detroit has major potential for redevelopment in this manner. Michigan, as the film points out, has significant agricultural diversity. And there is ample land in Detroit to turn into places to grow food so that people are not dependent on produce shipped in from thousands of miles away. The film points out the serious issue of “food deserts” in Detroit where many residents live almost twice as far from a supermarket as they do from a convenience store. Food deserts are an urban issue in many cities in North America and are often linked with low income neighborhoods and increased trends toward obesity as people eat what is available to them: cheap, fatty, starchy packaged food with little fresh produce. What we see over and over in the movie is the enthusiasm by the growers. They care about the food they grow, they see the value in what they’re doing, and they feel deeply appreciative of what they get out of engaging with the land, even the physical challenges of tending a garden in the hot sun. They work without a handbook, without any kind of legislative framework. They simply start revitalizing a patch of abandoned land. If growers such as these continue to transform the lands of Detroit, the city could finally see the true renaissance it has been in need of for decades. Watch the film and be inspired to add purpose and growth to the world around you. Pranada Devi is a communications professional living in Toronto, Canada. She is the Managing Editor of Parvati Magazine, and serves as an advisor on marketing communications for Parvati’s various projects. Recently, she edited Parvati’s new book “Confessions of a Former Yoga Junkie”, which has gone on to sell out its first printing run.