Episode 7: Rats to Roses
Produced by Brave New Films in association with Sierra Club Productions.
Watch the full 30-minute episode here, or scroll down for more information about the film, clips, and more.
This multi-year time arc witnesses the threat and loss of the community
gardens in New York - but also the commitment and resilience of community
organizers. Charles Louis founder of the Euclid 500 Gardens, says "these
gardens have become community centers for people with nowhere else to go."
Since the mid-1970s through the present day, citizens in the most diverse
and economically challenged parts of New York City have created small oases
of hope and safety through some 800 "community gardens." In most cases, the
gardens were once empty lots full of weeds, trash and graffiti, but local
residents got together to plant flowers, foliage, and, in many cases, to
grow vegetables and fruits used to feed the needy.
But problems began when then-Mayor Rudy Giuliani, in an attempt to bring in
additional revenue for the city, began to offer up the lots - now gardens -
to housing developers. Community members and activists kicked into gear,
and NY Attorney General Eliot Spitzer filed a lawsuit in 1999 on behalf of
community activists arguing that the years of garden development should
confer special status as "protected parks."
We follow two main gardens at the heart of this story, the Esperanza Garden
and the Euclid 500 Garden. The Esperanza Garden, created in the mid-1970s,
has become a center of the community, where both older people and young
maintain it as a community space. The Euclid 500 Garden, operated by
Charles Louis, serves a special purpose in the community - the many fruits
and vegetables grown there by volunteers are used to supply food pantries
for the most needy in the area.
It seemed like Attorney General Eliot Spitzer's lawsuit would save the day
for Esperanza - the court would soon order the city to hold bulldozers away
from all gardens until further review. But activists and neighbors knew
that the threat was imminent. Fearing the worst, a group of local activists
and neighbors began a 24-hour vigil in the garden in case bulldozers showed
up - and they did. More police arrived and began to order the protestors
away from the garden. Alicia Torres, founder of the garden, says "it was
like one of my children dying when the bulldozers came." One by one, the
remaining activists were carted away by police. In just a few hours, the
bulldozers completely destroyed 25 years of work, just hours ahead of the
court ruling.
Eliot Spitzer's office reports the current situation with the lawsuit
settlement means that developers are now required to complete environmental
impact studies and to seek public comment before bulldozing new gardens.
With the settlement of the Spitzer lawsuit, over 200 community gardens are
considered protected parks.

Preview clip (coming soon)
iPod download (170mb)
Watch the full episode: see top of this page.

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Visit the Rats to Roses director's website
Check out our Green Life feature in Sierra Magazine
Check out the fascinating book: "Paper or Plastic"
Read about conservation-based agriculture
Read about the Green Guerillas
About Community gardens
Read about LA’s urban garden fight
Watch the video True Cost of Food
Learn about protecting urban environments
Find a farmer’s market near you

Daryl Hannah speaks out about protecting the South Central LA Farm Co-op
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