It's a very traditional community and doesn't abide by Western
traditions of table manners. Everyone did have their own plate, but
since there were no spoons, you had to dig in with your hands to get
your food. I was a bit reticent at first, but a man encouraged me to
help myself, saying this is exactly how the army did it.
— "30 Mosques in 30 Nights"
Zuhair Sadaat, 25, knew the Bay Area Muslim world was more varied
than his parents’ 3,000-member, suburban Santa Clara mosque, where the
congregation encompasses doctors, engineers, and other successful
professionals.
In 2010, he set out to discover just how diverse it was.
The result: “30 Mosques in 30 Days,” a blog that's clicking with American-born Muslim millennials.
Sadaat (rhymes with Zagat) visits a different mosque each night of
the holy month of Ramadan, sizing up everything from shoe shelves and
parking to the imam’s ability to inspire when leading the nightly taraweeh prayers.
He began the blog last year. This year he's visiting some of the same and some new mosques during the current
Ramadan, which began Aug. 1.
Sadaat compiles a droll, candid and
revealing catalog that sizes up everything from shoe shelves and
parking to the imam’s ability to inspire when leading the nightly taraweeh prayers.
All in all, it's another one of those oases in a pretty rough
neighborhood. And man, it is rough because this place is imposing from
the outside. If that iron gate's closed, you're shiz out of luck. Come
during prayer time or don't come at all.
Sadaat is a UC Berkeley-educated grant writer. (He calls himself “a
nonprofiteer.”) He began his odyssey in his hometown of Santa Clara and
now lives in Richmond, where he devotes plenty of space in the blog to
rectifying misconceptions about his beloved adopted city. He worked his
way north, then East across the Bay, before stopping to tell it like it
is in six counties.
The three mosques in Richmond, and many more in Oakland, pull members from different strands of Muslim culture and ethnicities in the East Bay.
I wasn’t even planning on visiting this mosque tonight. I mean,
sure, it was on my radar, but I was aiming for an entirely different
Oakland mosque. Yes, there are so many mosques in Oakland you can shoot
for one and land in another.
Some included only a handful of worshippers; others, hundreds. Some
were spacious and beautifully architected; others a grim use of
available space.
In a word, eclectic.
A building in the middle of the warehouse district. A building in
the middle of the warehouse district surrounded by a tall wrought-iron
fence with spikes on top. Welcome to Richmond, son.
One thing inside the masjid which stuck out was that they had El
CorĂ¡n on the shelves. No, not just one Quran in Spanish, but 12.
Surprisingly, however, I did not see any Hispanics in the crowd.
What's cool about the prayer space is that the mosque wasn't
leveled properly so everyone is praying uphill. It's a strange feeling
praying on a surface which is angling upwards. I really don't think I
could get used to it even if I came here every day.
Three messages lie behind these light-hearted thumbnail sketches, all
maddeningly simple: Muslims are human. Muslims differ from one another,
as do mosques. And many, many Muslims call the Bay Area home.
He throws his hands up at some of the attitudes he encounters, especially in regards to the role of women. If lots of women came to pray here in one mosque, men stare blankly at another: Women? What would women be doing here, there's no kitchen.
His journey to Mecca on the Hajj informed his feelings about gender: “In the
pilgrimage, men and women do pray next to each other,” he said in an
interview. “It’s not even logistically possible not to. So I don’t
understand why people get upset.”
Sometimes blog visitors take issue with his observations, like when
he despaired that a mosque sunk money into a new minaret instead of
something more practical, like a men’s room (the money had been
earmarked for a minaret, they argued). But mainly he gets thumbs-ups.
He said there's much more he could be doing to promote his blog, but
he's been cool to the idea. For one thing, he doesn't want to become
recognizable.
I'm meeting guys who are struggling to make ends meet because
they've been relegated to part-time jobs while supporting entire
families. There's plenty of cases like that in the South Bay too, but I
guess it took me relocating to a new neighborhood to become familiar
with them.
His varied mosque explorations beyond his home town mosque, "MCA"
(Muslim Community Association in Santa Clara), form the heart of his
blog, which he hopes will "educate the general populace about the number and diversity of Muslims in the San Francisco Bay Area."
The stark contrast between this mosque and the mosque in which I
was raised made me think I made a good decision wrapping up this project
here and not somewhere else. The whole point of me burning dozens of
gallons of gas this month was to see just how different the communities
of the Bay Area are. Well, it doesn't get much different from MCA than
this.
Thursday, May 10, 2012
The Greening of Richmond
EAST BAY EXPRESS
March
09, 2011 News » News
By
Rebecca Rosen Lum
Roses
once grew in vibrant profusion in Richmond, the products of Japanese-American nurseries
that thrived from the turn of the 20th century until World War II.
Later, the remaining greenhouse growers were put out of business by the soaring costs of diesel fuel, and by NAFTA, which rewarded their competitors in Latin America.
Later, the remaining greenhouse growers were put out of business by the soaring costs of diesel fuel, and by NAFTA, which rewarded their competitors in Latin America.
Weeds and wildflowers now blanket
the abandoned greenhouses, and shards of glass litter the ground. But Richmond, long
known for its hardscrabble image, may bloom once again thanks largely to the
efforts of
City Councilman Tom Butt.
The
struggles that urban farms face in the East Bay have been well documented over
the years,
but Richmond's experience could prove to be different. Butt, an avid gardener,
will soon
host an urban farming summit, and his efforts to help urban farmers thrive have
the backing
of a majority of the Richmond City Council. It's also somewhat unusual for an elected
official to take the lead in shepherding urban agriculture projects through the
maze of
local government.
"In general, it's a group of citizens or one
farmer" who presses for, and wins,
the changes needed to help urban farmers survive, said Janelle Orsi, an Oakland lawyer
who pilots the Sustainable Economies Law Center.
At
home, Butt tends his own herd of three goats and two sheep, and keeps
honeybees, and grows
fruit and vegetables. The career architect describes it as "a large piece
of property that's
virtually useless because it's essentially vertical." His yard,
nonetheless, is a can't-miss stop
each year on the local Bringing Back the Natives garden tour.
After
a visit to the seven-acre Sunnyside Organic Seedlings, which operates in
several of the old
Richmond greenhouses, Butt came back to his office and fired off a missive
announcing the
urban farming summit, a brainstorming session that would explore how small
farming enterprises
could thrive with better access to credit and capital, available land, and markets
— plus more cooperation from regulatory agencies. Butt is inviting lawmakers, growers,
and urban farming nonprofits to the summit, along with people in the food business,
including chefs and restaurateurs.
After
contacting Annie's Annuals, EcoVillage Farm, The Watershed Nursery, Urban
Tilth, Richmond
Library Seed Bank, Richmond Garden Club, and The Watershed Project, Butt concluded
that they face common challenges. His agenda: Identify every urban agriculture
operation in West Contra Costa County and create a list of contacts; find potential
areas of collaboration among existing organizations that can strengthen the movement;
identify regulatory constraints throughout the county that can be modified to benefit
urban agriculture; and identify potential markets.
"I wasn't raised on a
farm, but you know
something about fresh fruit and vegetables when you grow up in Arkansas,"
he said.
An
affable man, Butt is plain-spoken and has won over voters with his tough
political stances.
For years, he was one of the few Richmond city leaders with the courage to
stand up
to Chevron while the oil giant dominated city politics. Butt also has a vision
for Richmond, and
was talking about smart growth, green energy, and sustainability years before
they became
part of the modern lexicon.
"It frustrates me to no end that most of the
food we buy
in this country is brought here from someplace else," he said. "Pick
a vegetable — let's say
broccoli. Guaranteed, somebody is growing broccoli within twenty miles of where
you live,
but when you go to the store, what you'll buy is broccoli that was grown 1,800
miles away.
There's something wrong with this picture here."
People
in the urban farming movement say not only is it unusual for an elected
official to take
the lead in advocating for growing policies, but that local legislators and
staff often stymie
plans to green urban areas and plow under lawns in favor of food-bearing
plants.
"A common
wish of urban agriculture supporters is for local government officials to be
less skeptical
about their work," wrote Jerry Kaufman and Martin Bailkey in a working
paper on land
policy for the Lincoln Institute, a Massachusetts think tank. Residents
who wish to grow food face constraints as well. Orsi said local laws often
require uniformity,
especially in the front yards of residences. Green lawns and landscaping are believed
to promote property values. The City of Berkeley fined a resident in 2009 for growing
fruit and vegetables in his front yard, which violated zoning law, she said.
But
urban farming proponents say Butt and Richmond enjoy an advantage. A majority
of the
council shares his vision, including retired cardiologist Jeff Ritterman, who
sits on the board
of Richmond Ecovillage, a five-acre teaching farm, and Jovanka Beckles, who put urban
farming in her campaign platform. Mayor Gayle McLaughlin also is applauding the summit.
The city, she said, can help provide matching funds, which attract private
funders, and
can write grants.
Butt
also is making his push at a propitious time, growers say. The annual Scion
Exchange by the
California Rare Fruit Growers, held recently in El Sobrante, "was really
swamped with people
this year — lots of new people, lots of people from these various other groups,
with a lot
of cross-fertilization going on," said member Gail Morrison. "This
frenzy of activity is new in the
last year or two."
At
Sunnyside Organic Seedlings, Pilar Reber sells young plants to large farmers'
markets and retailers.
She fills trays with her own soil recipe, seeds them using an electric seeder,
then wraps
stacked trays until they sprout. The company's profits increased by 14 percent
last year
and are likely to increase by as much again in the coming year.
"People
are always looking
for an emerging market," Reber said. "Here it is."
But
Reber was nearly a casualty of the bureaucratic resistance to urban farming. At
one point,
a local redevelopment official insisted that she obtain a use permit that
required a costly
consultation with an architect. But $2,000 and one laid-off employee later,
another county
staffer told her the use permit was unnecessary.
"The county really jerked
me around,"
she said. "We want to make sure people going down this road don't have to
deal with
this. There are government constraints on this at every level."
Butt
also is reaching beyond the city to county lawmakers to help farms in unincorporated areas
— like North Richmond, where Sunnyside grows lettuce in an aquaponic garden.
"We want
to make sure in the county general plan, we support that purpose," said
county Supervisor
John Gioia, who will also participate in the summit. "This is an issue for
the greater Richmond
area."
Park
Guthrie, former director of the nonprofit Urban Tilth, also cheers the idea of
a summit that
"will get everyone in the same room, talking." The challenges facing
urban farmers are considerable,
he said. "People don't have any idea how hard it is to make it
profitable," he said.
"With more space you can be more efficient. In urban areas, the biggest
cost is land."
On
a recent Sunday, volunteers joined staff from Urban Tilth for a workday in a
flat, lush meadow,
with volunteers preparing the soil for early spring crops: potatoes, mustard
greens, spinach,
carrots, beets, radishes, chard, arugula, lettuces, and fava beans for the
nitrogen they
contribute to the soil. Surrounded by a terraced suburb, the property is owned
by Adams
School. Urban Tilth also has a teaching garden at Richmond High School that yielded
6,000 pounds of food in just one semester. Its other projects include a
medicine garden,
watershed, school gardens, and plots along the Richmond Greenway.
Butt
said the first summit, scheduled for May, will look at what farmers have done
to succeed,
and then start crafting policy. Eventually, grocers in the Richmond flatlands
could be
required to carry produce along with chips and pork rinds, he said.
"I dream of the day when there is no such thing as a vacant lot," he said. "You either have a building that's fulfilling some important function, or growing food for the community. What an asset."
"I dream of the day when there is no such thing as a vacant lot," he said. "You either have a building that's fulfilling some important function, or growing food for the community. What an asset."
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