Abstract
The Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma’s Historic Preservation Department (HPD) and the Center for Indigenous Health Equity (CIIHE) are partnering to implement and evaluate food sovereignty interventions to better understand the potential impact of such programs on individual and community health. The HPD’s Growing Hope Program is a food sovereignty initiative that aims to restore traditional Choctaw gardens, which were once a physical, social, and cultural center of Choctaw life. The program combines heirloom seeds and the stories of their origins, gardening education and technical assistance, cooking classes, and a Choctaw youth internship program to support intergenerational knowledge and the restoration of culture and food security. Since its inception the program has provided Choctaw families with ancestral Choctaw cultivar seeds and provided the technical assistance to support the growing of sustainable, healthy, traditional Choctaw foods. © 2023 Society for Public Health Education.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 1080-1082 |
Number of pages | 3 |
Journal | Health Promot. Pract. |
Volume | 24 |
Issue number | 6 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 2023 |
Keywords
- Choctaw Nation
- colonization
- community–academic partnership
- cultural revitalization
- food security
- food sovereignty
- health equity
- Indigenous communities
- Indigenous food practices
- Indigenous knowledge
- Trail of Tears
- Adolescent
- Food
- Gardening
- Gardens
- Humans
- Public Health
- The Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma
- article
- cooking
- cultivar
- education
- gardening
- human
- human experiment
- juvenile
- land use
- Oklahoma
- plant seed
- public health
- adolescent
- food