
For more than 20 years in her native
Somalia, Asli Huba worked a family farm with her eight children.
Then the civil war in the east
African nation took the lives of four of her offspring, hurled the country into
chaos and sent Huba to Columbus, where she has made her home for the past year.
Huba doesn't know the language in
her new nation, but she does know the earth.
She has transferred her knowledge to
a small community garden on the North Side.
With her hands in the dirt, she
feels useful and at home.
Even her aches and pains disappear
in her garden, the 64-year-old said recently.
For almost a dozen Somali
immigrants, mostly women, the garden near their Capital Park Apartments
provides food for their tables and nourishment for their spirits.
Horn of Africa, which offers social
services for African immigrants, started the garden three years ago to help
families in the apartments for low-income residents. With a grant from the
Columbus Foundation, 20 raised beds were built on a 1.5-acre lot in the
neighborhood.
The garden has become a place where
the gardeners have also undergone changes.
"Most of these people who are
doing this used to be farmers back home," said Mussa Farah, who heads Horn
of Africa.
"They have been depressed in
their home, doing nothing, having nothing to do. It's friendship. Most of the
women didn't know each other."
With their long skirts dusting the
ground, the women, laughing and chatting, tend the garden.
Each gardener has a plot from which
she harvests a variety of vegetables, including green, cayenne and jalapeno
peppers as well as squash, onions, cucumbers, tomatoes and watermelons.
Huba likes the "original
food" from the ground.
Because the women cook daily, the
fresh vegetables they harvest are considered essential to their meals.
"It will save them money even
if it's small," Farah said of the gardeners, many of whom receive public
assistance.
"It is money they can save for
another purpose."
Ayan Hashi, daughter of Huba, has a
plot, too.
They save about $100 a month growing
food for their table, the 20-year-old said.
With the vegetables, Hashi cooks
soups, stews and sambusa -- meat and vegetables in a pastry shell that is
fried.
She shuns canned and frozen
vegetables.
"The ones we grow from our
hands are sweeter," Hashi said.
She numbers among the eight
gardeners who work their plots after attending an English class.
Beth Stock, who teaches English at
the apartments, sometimes conducts sessions at the garden.
"It's been a real community
experience," said Stock, who has toiled in the garden on weekends.
"It has forged community. It's
like a magnet: It just attracts good energy and good people."
Mission Statement:
The Horn of Africa community center inc is a community based service
organization. Our Mission is to work for the success of the refugees to undergo
a smooth transitional process and attain a self-sustainable status in their new
country.
Goals
:
A. Increase academic performance of Somali youth.
B. Reduce school dropout rate among Somali students.
C. Increase Somali parent and community involvement.
D. Prevent involvement in drugs and crime among Somali youth.
E. Increase communication between the Somali community and the School
Districts.
F. Build understanding of Somali culture in the mainstream community, while
strengthening the self-esteem of Somali youth.
Contact: Mussa Farah 614 975 8967
Email us at: mashqul2001@yahoo.com
Visit us at: www.hooa.org