October 5, 2012

The Iskashitaa Harvesting Project

Refugees find kinship, community in harvesting Tucson’s unwanted food

marian ahmed spot Marian Ahmed harvests tomatoes with the Iskashitaa Refugee Network. Ahmed is a refugee from Somalia who arrived in the U.S. more than eight years ago.
Gisela Telis

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When Barbara Eiswerth came back from Africa, all she saw was waste. Walking the streets of Tucson, she found sidewalks littered with oranges, figs and pomegranates—the unharvested yield of people’s backyard trees.

Having worked as a researcher in the impoverished villages of Malawi and witnessed hunger firsthand, Eiswerth couldn’t stand by and watch the food go unclaimed.

“As an environmental scientist, the road to sustainability is using what we have right here,” she says. “We can do the right thing, which is not let food go to waste.”

So Eiswerth started doing something she’d trained to do in graduate school: making maps.

With help from teens she recruited through a local high school, she scouted for friendly homeowners and productive fruit trees or garden plots. Then she mapped the unwanted bounty.

That year, her team redistributed the harvest from nearly 200 homes to local soup kitchens.

Then, in 2003, Eiswerth met refugees from Somalia who had just arrived in Tucson, and was struck by the challenges they faced. Like refugees elsewhere in the country, Southern Arizona’s refugees encountered language and cultural barriers, few job opportunities and limited resources to pay bills or support their families. Many had left family members and friends behind, and found themselves struggling to adjust to a strange land with little support.

Eiswerth wondered: what if the harvesting could help them? What if feeding people could create community ties too? And she decided to invite refugees into the gleaning.

Since then, the Iskashitaa Refugee Network has touched the lives of thousands of refugees, who volunteer with the network to glean and cook the city’s surplus food together. In the process, they develop some of the language and job skills they’ll need to build new lives.

The refugees also form new cross-cultural friendships that help ease the loss of leaving their homelands. Iraqi refugee Faeza Hililian says she found a sense of community and belonging in Iskashitaa that made Tucson finally start to feel like home.

faeza helilian port Iraqi refugee Faeza Hililian prepares a dessert made from sour orange peels during an Iskashitaa gathering.
Gisela Telis

“We get together and cook and have good times, and I feel like I’m giving back to the community and that’s a good thing,” Hililian says in Arabic. “I wish that people will help and support this organization, because it helps refugees so much.”

Almost ten years after its founding, Iskashitaa has grown beyond Eiswerth’s dreams. Over its lifetime, the network has gathered about 400,000 pounds of produce and fed thousands with its harvests. It has also grown to include English and swimming classes for refugees, cooking classes for the Tucson community, sewing and craft circles and even catalog sales of the goods Iskashitaa refugees make.

But Iskashitaa’s—and Eiswerth’s—mission is still simple: to fight injustice and make peace through food.

“How we reach world peace is through communication, through cross-cultural experiences, and that’s where the common denominator of food comes in,” Eiswerth says. “It’s a journey for each of us to learn from each other.”

This piece was produced in collaboration with the NPR program State of the Re:Union. Learn more about the Iskashitaa Refugee Network and other local stories by tuning in to the Tucson episode of State of the Re:Union at 3 p.m. on October 7, 2012, on NPR 89.1.

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