Archive for the 'Food Not Bombs' Category

Aug 05 2008

Friendly neighborhood anarchists

In what is sure to prompt some interesting comments and letters to the editor, an article in the Wilmington Star News just came out featuring my partner Kristin and some other folks from Be Your Own Hero. While the writer of the article, Si Cantwell, starts off with a quick sprinkle of the bomb-throwing cliche, it is for the most part a straightforward review of what BYOH is all about.

The anarchism behind the local Be Your Own Hero movement is about decentralizing leadership and giving everyone a say in group decision-making.

“I think everybody is an anarchist, to some extent,” (Kristin) Henry said. “There are things they can do every day that are positive and community oriented, that are from the heart.”

neighborhood anarchists
Staff photo | Paul Stephen

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Feb 01 2008

Food Not Bombs

As part of the Really Really Free Market last Sunday, there was a return of the Wilmington version of Food Not Bombs.

 

food not bombs

 

The purpose of FNB is to divert food that would otherwise go to waste into the hands (and mouths) of hungry people. So we diverted some food. And we ate a bunch of donuts.

 

really really free market

 

I went dumpstering with Lynn and two strangers (to me anyway). We drove to a number of places, grabbing bagfuls of stuff here and there. There was no real agenda…just find good food. We drove fast and talked very little.

 

car window

 

We came back with a pretty good assortment of produce, donuts and bagels. Lots of various colored peppers and many, many pound of potatoes. Yeah, seventy pounds of potatoes is considered “many, many”, right?

 

peppers

 

We also found a bunch of squash, cucumbers and broccoli. Potato chopping goes on in the backgound.

 

broccoli and potatoes

 

Lots of radishes and cauliflower and onions…

 

radishes

 

A huge head of collards amongst the bags of donuts…

 

collards and donuts

 

When it all comes back, there is plenty of prep work – washing, cutting, mixing, cooking. The fruit we found was mixed into two giant bowls of fruit salad. Watermelons, mangoes, apples, oranges, bananas, limes, cantaloupes, and pears all sharing the same space.

 

cutting fruit

 

preparing fruit

 

The soup had so many vegetables that I lost count as I washed them. Eggplant, cauliflower, broccoli, tomato, squash, kale, mushrooms, scallions, sweet potatoes, peppers. This was the epitome of Food Not Bombs soup…anything goes as long as it is a veggie.

 

soup

 

Everyone took a turn on the giant potato masher.

 

taters

 

At the end of the night we had twenty pounds of mashed potatoes, two bowls of fruit salad, six quarts of steamed collards, a massive pot of soup, two bags of donuts, and a bag of bagels. With this we fed about thirty people. Total cost – $0.00

 

As friends and strangers come together to make food to serve to hungry folks, all you can think about is that “this is community building”. No money exchanged, no arguments about who is in charge of what, no issues about food origins. This is Food Not Bombs.

 

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