metro » Seeds To Table Downtown Synagogue to unveil new community garden initiative on Tu b’Shevat. Barbara Lewis | Contributing Writer 14 January 21 • 2016 a harvest dinner. “How wonderful will it be when we invite those same folks to IADS to eat meals featuring the plants they nurtured from seeds?” said Purcell, an energy ana- lyst for EcoWorks, a Detroit nonprofit. “We think it will be pretty special.” EVERGROWING GARDEN A grant from the Jewish Women’s Foundation supports the Seeds to Table program. Eden Gardens gets most of its seeds and plants from Detroit’s Garden Resource Program. The Eden Gardens project was started in the summer of 2013 by two IADS mem- bers, Blair Nosan and Chava Knox, who is also president of the Eden Gardens Block Club. Several dozen volunteers work in the garden throughout the summer. Some pro- duce goes home with the volunteers; the rest is used for the Downtown Synagogue’s regular Friday night dinners and Saturday afternoon lunches. In 2014, the garden added a rain catch- ment system that can store nearly 600 gallons of water on site. Previously, work- ers had to haul in buckets of water with a wagon, since the garden is not hooked into the city water supply. Last summer, a grant from Do It For Detroit paid for a shipping container that was placed in the garden to hold tools and supplies. Knox said the garden coordina- Noah Purcell P lant a seed and watch it grow. That’s what the Isaac Agree Downtown Synagogue (IADS) is hoping to do with an innovative new urban agriculture program called Seeds to Table. They’ll introduce the program just before Tu b’Shevat, which starts at sun- down Jan. 24. The holiday, known as the New Year of Trees, is often observed with a seder celebrating the produce of Israel. Hazon, a national organization dedi- cated to promoting environmentalism and sustainable living practices in a Jewish context (see sidebar), will coordinate the IADS’ Tu b’Shevat Tasting Plates event, which will feature a variety of fruit and nut delicacies. The program starts at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 24, at the Downtown Synagogue, 1457 Griswold St., Detroit. Members of the Eden Gardens Block Club, from the east side of Detroit, will join IADS for the seder and to help with the “soft launch” of Seeds to Table. The block club and the congregation have maintained a large community garden on two vacant lots on Glenfield Street for three years. A small group of volunteers will take home seeds, containers, growing medium and instructions for transforming the seeds into plantlets; they’ll report back about what works and what needs to be tweaked before the program’s official roll- out later this winter. Noah Purcell, 36, of Detroit co-chairs Seeds to Tables with Erin Piasecki, a Repair the World Detroit Fellow. They came up with the idea while cooking together in the IADS Noah Purcell kitchen one evening. Purcell said the Eden Gardens partners regularly meet for Building a Bridge Over Dinner, where neighborhood residents and IADS members learn and enjoy a meal together. Seeds to Tables materials will be distributed at the February and March dinners. In the spring, the program coordinators will invite the seed growers to a “trans- plant day” at the community garden, encourage them to care for “their” plants through the summer and bring them back to the Downtown Synagogue in the fall for A view of the garden from the Eden Gardens shipping container/tool shed that served as a sukkah last year tors hope to find a volunteer who can help them design the container’s interior. The garden itself has grown, Purcell said. “A cadre of youth from the Grow Detroit Young Talent program and some German volunteers from Action Reconciliation Service for Peace helped clear a significant patch of land at the back end of the garden, which we hope to culti- vate into a youth garden featuring various berries.” The IADS Tu b’Shevat seder is free, but space is limited. To register, contact Noah Purcell at npurcell@gmail.com. * Hazon Detroit Plans Eco-Awareness Projects H azon, a national organization whose founded as the Jewish Working Girls Vacation mission is to create a healthier and Society in 1893, in Falls Village, Conn. more sustainable Jewish community, Former Detroiter Cheryl Cook was Hazon’s opened its Detroit regional office last year. chief operating officer for many years. Hazon Regional Director Sue Salinger, former now has several regional offices, including director of lifelong learning at San Diego, Denver and Boulder, Temple Emanu-El, has an office in Colo. the Max M. Fisher Jewish Federation Salinger said she is working with Building in Bloomfield Township. Jewish schools, congregations, youth groups and other organiza- With a name meaning “vision” tions to promote eco-awareness in in Hebrew, Hazon seeks to answer the community. questions about what it means to Hazon Detroit is gearing up for be Jewish in the 21st century and a Detroit Jewish Food Festival next how we, as Jews, should address Sue Salinger fall. environmental changes in the “This will be our signature event,” Salinger world, Salinger said. said. It will include a number of learning Hazon was founded in 2000 in New York tracks for cooking, health and food justice; a City and, in 2014, it merged with the Isabella shuk (market) for Detroit food vendors; and Freedman Jewish Retreat Center, which was lots of do-it-yourself workshops, like how to pickle, make lip balm and compost with worms. Hazon is also eager to do oral histories with people whose family members were butchers, grocers, bakers and deli owners or others who worked in Jewish food businesses in Detroit. “The Metro Detroit Jewish community has given Hazon a very warm welcome,” Salinger said. “We’re eager to collaborate on projects that can create meaningful Jewish connec- tions around health, the environment and building a more just community for all.” For information about volunteering for the Detroit Jewish Food Festival or providing an oral history, contact Salinger at sue.salinger@ hazon.org or (720) 434-0470. *