
...are the ones that grow food and cultivate love. No need at all for those nuclear types, which I learned a bit more about today at an event called Survival: Conversion to a Nuclear Free World. Perhaps you've seen the posters around town, there's a big ol' sunflower on top that provides an interesting caption for an anti-nuclear workshop. Fitting enough, however, when you consider that through a process called phytoextraction sunflowers have been known to clean up environmental toxins. Pretty and functional, you just don't want to go and eat those seeds.
Let me tell you about something you do want to eat: wholesome goodness that is prepared each week by a dedicated group of local activists.
Tacoma Food Not Bombs started working at 9 am in order to prepare a meal splendid enough to serve. Corn muffins with currants, two lentil soups packed full of the veggies, a blue potato and beet salad, and some sliced fruit were the menu items. Not bad.
Howard Zinn said, "No one should be without food in a world so richly provided with land, sun, and human ingenuity." This is the core belief of Food Not Bombs, an international organization of autonomous groups that make decisions through consensus and reclaim food for all of us to enjoy.
And around this time of year the abundance is becoming more evident, we should all feel so blessed that there is so much to share. But in a culture that is fueled by feelings of guilt and lack we are often fooled to believe we have very little to share. FNB is therefore not just trying to reclaim food, but also trying to reclaim a confidence in ourselves as self-sufficient, strong, and capable inhabitants of the earth through the sharing of vegetarian meals.
So in the struggle for peace and prosperity for all people, I began my work today with the sharing of muffins and soup. The meal was definitely hearty enough to keep the conversation flowing and the fight going strong. For more information on the peace movement here in the South Sound area please check out United for Peace of Pierce County and of course its rich relation to food at Tacoma Food Not Bombs.