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Greenhouse Technician Hillary Pitoniak with refugee gardener
Greenhouse Technician Hillary Pitoniak with refugee gardener
A group of refugees from Russia, Bosnia, Somalia and Belarus will travel to Hamilton's greenhouse on Saturday, April 5, to plant seedlings for their gardens located at the F.X. Matt Apartments. Senior Jenney Stringer, who organized the community effort that resulted in the creation of a community garden at the apartments last summer, planned Saturday's event as a way for residents to start the gardening process in advance of the outdoor growing season.

The gardeners will arrive at the Science Building at approximately 11 a.m. and will work in the greenhouse for a couple hours with student volunteers. Many of the participants will also bring their families to join in the work. The group will have lunch at Hamilton before returning to their apartments.

Although most of the seeds and potting materials have been funded by Home Depot, some of the seeds that will be planted are heirloom seeds brought by the refugees from their home countries. Plants will include tomato, pepper, cucumber, green beans and onion. Hamilton's greenhouse manager will care for the plants for eight weeks before the plants are brought to the F.X. Matt gardens for planting.

The Arthur Levitt Center is funding the transportation to and from the campus. The Community Foundation of Herkimer & Oneida Counties, Inc. provided a $5,000 grant to the College to support the creation of the 30 raised-bed garden plots, each 12 ft. by 16 ft. x\by 20 ft. in dimension. Each plot is registered to a specific family living within the housing complex. The Utica Municipal Housing Authority will build a fence around the gardens this spring.

Stringer began this project after touring the F.X. Matt Apartments, one of the refugee housing units in Utica, last year. Many of the residents come from regions of the world where gardening is a significant part of their culture. Stringer began considering how to create a community garden on the Matt property. Farming, she explained, is very important to the refugees. "It's a part of their identity."

The garden, Stringer hopes, will function as a communal project and as a social place, a common experience and responsibility founded in spite of linguistic and cultural differences. As she put it, this is "bringing people together through gardening."

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