Farmer-May31-2002





Volume 5

Volume 5, Number 21                                                   
May 31, 2002

The Farmer

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"Fighting the Hidden Agenda": Agriculture &
Black Survival Conference

By Lawrence A. Muhammad

 

The first annual Agriculture & Black Survival Conference was attended by over
30 brothers and sisters from: Georgia,
Ohio, Michigan, Maryland,
Missouri, Illinois and the Carolinas; and,
local farmers of the
Black Farmers and Agriculturists Association
(BFAA).

Each day contained valuable information and practical demonstrations to help
understand the need to produce and distribute
food to the 40
million people of our community, people we have been
instructed
to feed by the Honorable Elijah Muhammad,
our Messenger. The
conference was facilitated by Muhammad Farms’ manager, Ridgely A. Mu’min Muhammad and his wife,

Sister Anne Muhammad on the campus of Mercer University in Macon, GA.

Much of the conference occurred away from Mercer University. We visited a
Farmer’s Market in Macon and received sound
advice, from local
business persons, about the how-to’s of buying
produce/fruit and
the factors to consider in those decisions.
Facilities for
getting wheat, produce, and watermelons to market were
included
in our tours. One of our major goals is to go
back to our
respective cities and figure out ways to distribute
foodstuff in
our communities, especially Black farmer’s products.
Cooperatives
are a way for this to be accomplished. Working with
existing
food cooperatives, in your community, or
establishing new ones
would be a local decision. Muhammad Farms and the
BFAA are
available for technical assistance.

Local farmers, from the Black Farmers Agricultural Association (BFAA) met
with us Saturday. The Georgia Chapter of BFAA’s President, Eddie
Slaughter,
conducted their regularly scheduled meeting at Mercer
University,
allowing us to get updated on their plight and fight against
the
USDA, Black politicians, and others who are consciously and in some
cases
unconsciously part of the effort to prevent Black Farmers from
recovering
their lost land. Land lost as a result of programmatic
deception
and political
gobbledygook. The recently passed Farm Bill,
states Mr. Slaughter, "was
$190 billion dollars… 90% of
all that money and
subsidies will go to your largest corporate
farmers in this country.

The Cargills, Continental Grain, Tyson Poultry and all these other
people." Mr. Slaughter further states, "…what you have to realize
is
that 60% of Black farmers will not even get or
receive one penny
of that money and the few of them that do will have
less than
one percent of everything that white farmers
receive."

On the subject of the Consent Decree, to accept the terms of the out of court
settlement, Mr. Slaughter told us that, "Joseph Lowery was
brought
out of retirement to sell Black farmers on Consent Decree. They
gave
him thousands, and thousands, and thousands of
dollars to do it…
after they did this; everybody was calling in,
praising Joseph
Lowery for brokering a $2.5 billion dollar
settlement for Black
farmers in America. ‘That’s the biggest lie that
was ever
told! … They named a street after Joseph
Lowery in Atlanta
somewhere". Mr. Slaughter went on to say, "Joseph
Lowery,
I can forgive him because he’s not going to
prosper because of
it. He is only just one in a whole slew of them
[Black leaders]
that did us all these years". Mr.
Slaughter believes that
although their numbers are small, " BFAA is not
going to
give up because one, with God, is a
majority".

The BFAA has filed a lawsuit against the USDA, and others, but
not to get money. They filed a lawsuit to get
their land
returned to them not $50,000. The important matter is that
the
land must be secured because the 40 million strong in this country
is
getting ready to
lose the ability to feed themselves. Mr.
Slaughter states, "To lose the ability to feed ourselves is
unconscionable
for a people
this big and this strong… there is something
seriously wrong us as a
people. Our (BFAA) slogan is ‘A
landless people is a
helpless people’. And for us to turn
Black farmers into refugees in
this country… everybody should
be crying out from every
pulpit in this country, across this
land, about this kind of injustice!"

The highlight of the conference was the "Footsteps Of The Messenger" tour.
We visited the cities of Sandersville, Deepstep,
Wenona, Arabi,
Macon and Cordele in Georgia, all of the places where The
Messenger
walked: the church where his father preached and he met Sister
Clara,
Poole Road, the train stations he surely used, the site of a
lynching
he observed, the places he lived and worked. What a way to
get
‘high’.

No one gets tour would be complete without putting some time in at Muhammad
Farms. We had the privilege of helping to get rid of
some weeds
that were growing around the organic Black Diamond
watermelons
that will be ready for harvest starting at the end of
June. We
also picked several bushels of squash that were ripe for
picking
– some of which we brought home. If you want to
be a part of
the success of the Three-Year Economic Program, by
participating
in Muhammad Farms activities, then use the
following means for
contact. Email: drrridgely@muhammadfarms.com; go on
the website
www.muhammadfarms.com; call Dr.
Ridgely or Sis. Anne Muhammad at
(888) 995-8119, or fax (229) 995-6771.
Reserve your weekend or
week day.
There is always something to do and see. Public and
private schools are
also encouraged to visit Muhammad Farms so
our
children can see what a real farm is.

The contact information can also be used to place orders for upcoming crops,
delivered to your city. The Muhammad Farms
website has a
calendar of crop production for you to view. Your local
Farm
Marketing Coordinator is your best contact for
arranging crop
deliveries to your community.

 

 

 

 

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