White Earth Project Creates Farm-School Guide

One of First Nations Development Institute’s grantees, White Earth Land Recovery Project (WELRP) on the White Earth Indian Reservation in northern Minnesota, recently completed a great new guide for establishing farm-to-school programs in Native communities. The publication is titled Indigenous Farm-to-School Programs: A Guide for Creating a Farm-to-School Program in an Indigenous Community.

The guide was made possible with a grant provided by First Nations Development Institute through support from the Walmart FoundationThe guide can be found at this link.

Founded in 1989, WELRP is a nonprofit, multi-issue Native American organization. It has long recognized the overwhelmingly critical food state on the White Earth Reservation. After efforts to improve the lives of its youth with various gardening and cultural projects, it decided to implement the farm-to-school program. It was introduced at a time when 35% of the adult population of the White Earth community was suffering from Type 2 diabetes. The children also were facing unprecedented health risks, with Indian Health Services recording a 70% increase in childhood diabetes and obesity.

The focus of the proposed farm-to-school program was the Pine Point Elementary School, where 89% of the students qualified for free meals through the federal school breakfast and lunch program, and another 8.5 % qualified for reduced-price meals. Since the program launched, two other schools have been added – the Nay Tah Waush Charter School and the Circle of Life Academy.

WELRP worked with more than 50 growers from its own community and others close by, and has served more than 60 foods (naturally or organically grown, with no known use of pesticides).  These include bison, wild rice in various forms, fresh berries and squash, which are just some of the foods that came from the traditional diet of the Anishinaabe people. WELRP’s goals in the project were to improve the health of youngsters while helping revitalize White Earth’s local economy and reintroduce Anishinaabe food traditions and practices.

Our congratulations to WELRP for completing this important project!

By Raymond Foxworth, Senior Program Officer

5 thoughts on “White Earth Project Creates Farm-School Guide

  1. Congratulations on completing a health guide for indigenous populations. The guide’s developers could get financial support by piggybacking the farmer markets around the nation. I don’t know what the profit margin would be for you given bulk shipping expenses to the markets and initially setting up the contacts. It’a JUST AND FAIR to ask the farmers to carry your book without expecting a profit for themselves. Afterall, without indigenous people of this nation we’d have had no organic farming motivation which led to the huge industry it is today. A further hope is that indigenous people use this sellers market for organic farming for profit. Further, I hope the major distributors would (will) be shamed by trying to interfere with indigenous organic products avenues. Gambling with our food isn’t rewarding even by chance. Raise your voice, raise your market, please, our planet is crying.

  2. Pingback: White Earth Project Creates Farm-School Guide | indiangiver | Native Economies

  3. Pingback: White Earth Project Creates Farm-School Guide | The Garden Project

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