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The First Somali-Owned Farm Stand Opens In Lewiston

 PATTY WIGHT, Main Public

Seynab Ali, Batula Ismail, Jabril Abdi, Mohamed Abukar PATTY WIGHT / MAINE PUBLIC

Two cooperative farms joined together to open the produce stand, which will also feature a food truck that serves Somali cuisine. The hope is that the new business at 996 Sabattus Street will help the farmers build capital and foster connection with the wider community.

Standing in front of crates filled with ruby red radishes and golden squash, owners and supporters of the New Roots Cooperative Farm Stand took a moment to bless the new business with a prayer. Then, scissors sliced through a thin green ribbon to officially open it.

Ten Somali Bantu farmers — four from New Roots farm in Lewiston and six from Isukan farm in Lisbon — banded together to open the produce stand formerly owned by an area farmer who passed away last winter.

“So this farm stand was owned by Blackies,” says Jonah Fertig-Burd, from the Cooperative Development Institute in Massachusetts. “It was for many years owned by them, and now it’s really significant that it’s being taken over by Somali Bantu farmers, who are really emerging farmers in this area.”

The Cooperative Development Institute has helped the co-ops form and grow over the past few years. Until now, farmers like Seynab Ali of New Roots sold produce largely through farmers markets or wholesale accounts to restaurants, food pantries and schools.

Speaking through an interpreter, Ali says she’s eager to share her crops more widely.

“All of our produce has no chemicals and pesticides on it,” says Ali. “We use our own strength to cultivate the land with our hands, and it’s fresh.”

CREDIT PATTY WIGHT / MAINE PUBLIC

That fresh produce will also make its way into a food truck that will have its home base at the farm stand. The truck was purchased just this week, but it will soon serve up classic Somali dishes like sambusas: fried triangles of dough stuffed with meat and vegetables.

“This is a message we wanted to reach across the United States and all immigrants – we’re telling them, you can do something,” says Mohamed Dekow, the executive director of the Lewiston-based Sustainable Livelihoods Relief Organization.

The Sustainable Livelihoods Relief Organization helps Somalis use their farming skills to integrate into the local economy. Dekow says the launch of both the food truck and the farm stand were possible because the two co-op farms partnered together.

“This is kind of things you can do,” he says, “Not only a food truck. You can own a shop as a co-op. Not individually. If you put your literal knowledge and your literal efforts together with someone else, this is what can come.

Read more: The First Somali-Owned Farm Stand Opens In Lewiston

Source: Main Public

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