Seeds of Hope

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Seeds of Hope Page 14

by Jane Goodall


  The wonderful thing is that we still have The Birches and its garden. Of course there have been changes, but much is the same. It was my aunt Olly who introduced the idea of growing flowers in tubs. Today Judy has greatly increased their number, and some are used for apple, plum, and cherry trees. In the spring there are still the primroses and violets of childhood. And we still have the same three peony plants and the hydrangeas and some of Olly’s roses, though they are very old now, and dying. The pine trees and rhododendrons, and Beech and Nooky, along with most of the other childhood trees, are fine.

  A new addition to the garden, growing in the middle of the lawn by the birdbath that was installed by Uncle Eric and the stone frog “Jeremy Fisher,” who has been sitting there for more than eighty years, is a young Japanese maple, planted for my mother after she died because she had always loved their color. Some of her ashes were sprinkled among its roots when it was planted, and we added some of Olly’s when she died a year later. That tree has thrived. Something else new is a pond introduced by Judy, which grows water lilies and other water plants. She and her daughter, Pip, are planning to make a new rockery in memory of Danny.

  How lucky we are to have this place, so rich with the memories of childhoods long gone and now creating new memories for the two little boys—Judy’s grandsons—who in their turn play and dream in this magic garden.

  Gardens of the Ancient World

  Our human love of flowers and gardens goes way, way back in time. I remember reading, as a child, about the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, which were said to have been suspended from heaven on golden chains. According to one of the earliest accounts, these gardens were built on the bank of the Euphrates by King Nebuchadnezzar II, who ruled between 605 and 562 BC. He had them built for his wife, who was homesick for the trees and flowers of her native Persia. Water from the river was continuously driven up pipes laid beside stone steps that rose in tiers, as in a theater. The highest garden was one hundred feet square and seventy-five feet high, and huge trees grew up there. The gardens were an architectural miracle.

  Other historians believe that the gardens were built by King Sennacherib of Assyria (reigning 705–681 BC) in quite a different place, close to his palace on the Tigris. And there are those who think that the Hanging Gardens were merely poetic fantasy, that they never existed at all. If they did, then what happened to them? There is speculation that an earthquake destroyed them at the end of the second century BC. At any rate, I like to believe that they were real, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.

  Whatever we think about those particular gardens, we certainly can be sure that gardens and gardening have been part of human culture for thousands of years. Elaborate gardens were created in China and then in Persia (where the oldest archaeological proof of a garden layout has been discovered). In the Western Hemisphere, gardens—as opposed to fields for the cultivation of food crops—seem first to have proliferated in Italy around the temples and later within walled enclosures close to the houses of the wealthy. The ash that rained down during the eruption of Vesuvius in AD 79 has preserved not only temple gardens but also hundreds of these domestic gardens. I well remember learning about the horrifying event when I was at school, wondering what they went through, all those hundreds of doomed citizens—perhaps it was similar to the experience of those who lived in Nagasaki and Hiroshima when the atomic bombs were dropped. The difference, of course, was that one was an “act of God,” while the other was the result of humanity’s inhumanity.

  Different styles of gardens have developed in different countries, and styles change over time. The wealthy, with their large estates, have developed whole landscapes, with streams and woodlands in addition to the more formal flowerbeds, ponds, and fountains. The traditional English cottage garden displays a wealth of colorful flowers—hollyhocks and delphiniums and roses, cheerfully rubbing shoulders in tiny spaces. Formal Japanese gardens place rocks and water and plants to create an atmosphere of serenity, a place for meditation. I have been fortunate, for my travels around the world have enabled me to visit many extremely beautiful gardens of many types.

  One of these visits, on a cool but sunny May day in 2010, was to the Val de Marne Rose Garden. Situated about four miles south of Paris, it was created in 1894—the first public garden in the world to be dedicated entirely to roses. It is a magnificent place, with over thirteen thousand bushes representing some 3,200 varieties. Collected from around the world, they grow in the hundreds in the different flowerbeds, while others climb walls and arches, trellises and pergolas. The riot of colors, ranging from pure white to dark crimson, almost purple, set against the green of the spring leaves and grass borders, was truly a banquet for the eyes. And the fragrances… nothing heavy and cloying here, nothing like the overwhelming scent of frangipani and tiger lilies. No, a series of delicate scents, each one a delight.

  I was greeted by Christian Hanak, known as a rose author—or “poet,” as he calls himself—and Guillaume Didier, a rose breeder. The two had worked together, for the eight years that it takes, to produce a glorious new variety of rose, and I was invited to “baptize” it. A singular honor, for not only do I have a love of roses but this particular rose was named for me—the Jane Goodall rose.

  It is a climbing rose (Generosa) with delicate pink blooms, glossy dark-green leaves, and a strong stem—with very strong thorns. The young plant I met that day had six blooms, but when fully mature, Christian told me, it will flower abundantly and climb up to ten feet high, reaching toward the sky. I love what he says about it, this poet: “the ultimate romantic flower… it has the natural grace of simple beauty… a rose that knows not to reveal its heart until the end of flowering, when it can no longer hide its secret.” And a couple of the blooms had revealed their secrets—exquisite orange-pink colors right in their center. Best of all, this rose has the most exquisite fragrance, delicate yet strong, without being overpowering.

  A small group of people had been invited for the ceremony. Speeches were made, the Jane Goodall rose was planted in the garden, and we scattered handfuls of rose petals over her. And then I kissed a leaf, as I always do to mark ceremonial plantings. Corks popped, and soft-pink rose-flavored champagne was passed around. I poured a little for the rose, and the baptism was complete.

  We all left with light hearts and raised spirits. That is what time in a garden, among our favorite flowers, can do for us.

  Gardening to Heal Body and Soul

  It was soon after this that I learned how another rose tree had been planted to help a traumatized victim of war. There is, in London, a wonderful organization called Freedom from Torture. They treat survivors, and therapists have found that even the most severely traumatized victims can benefit from spending time in nature. A skilled and sensitive horticulturist has designed a peaceful and sheltered garden where therapists can spend time, one-on-one, with their patients. Slowly, gradually, the power of soil, flowers, and trees begins to work its healing magic.

  Precious, a young woman from a war-torn part of Africa, was one of the most severely traumatized patients. She had brought with her a dark burden of terrible memories—memories that could have destroyed her. Not only had she been gang-raped by soldiers but, worse still, she was forced to watch as they slashed off the head of her six-month-old baby. She had somehow managed to escape and was helped, by friends, to get to England. When she reached Freedom from Torture, she was on the brink of mental disintegration.

  Each day she spent time in the garden alone with her therapist and nature. Gradually she was able to tell her story. And one day she planted a rosebush—in memory of her son. That was the start of her long, hard journey back into the world through the dark memories of her terrible ordeal.

  There is now scientific research that proves that gardening promotes well-being in people experiencing depression or distress, including those who are elderly, homeless, or mentally ill. Indeed, putting one’s hands in the soil, feeling the texture of plants, smelling their sce
nts, and looking at their calming colors can relax the mind and uplift the spirits. Just half an hour of gardening can help to raise morale and help us to face the problems thrown at us by life. And although an actual garden is best, even tending a few potted plants can have a remarkably beneficial effect.

  Gardening for Prisoners

  Probably because of the calming effect on the psyche, more and more prisons are sponsoring onsite gardening programs. Typically food is grown in these gardens, which is then used for prison meals, thus improving the inmates’ nutrition. Sometimes there’s even surplus food, which is donated to food banks or other community outreach programs. But the act of gardening also seems to enhance the participants’ mental health, leading to more well-being and less violence in the prisons. Recidivism rates can even be lowered with onsite gardening programs as inmates learn marketable horticulture skills that they can use upon release.

  In October 2011, I had an opportunity to visit such a program when Drew Reynolds, one of the teachers at the Oak Creek Youth Correctional Facility in Albany, Oregon, asked if I could possibly squeeze in a visit with the girls during my packed schedule. That is how I heard about a garden that seven of the teenage girls had created. It all started when they learned that the state’s “Oregon Youth in Action” program was offering cash awards to worthy school projects that supported healthy living.

  They had already been inspired by Michelle Obama’s mission to improve nutrition and fight obesity. And they knew that she had an organic kitchen garden at the White House. With the help of Drew, the girls applied for the award, proposing that they start an organic vegetable garden so they could learn about plants and gardening and incorporate better food into the correctional facility’s kitchen. The award required the girls to testify about their plans in front of the state legislature and speak about the value of their project. Because they were confined to the facility, they had to testify by phone. They were very nervous, but together they wrote a speech and read it over the phone.

  After they heard that they had won the award, the First Lady of Oregon drove out to the facility to hand deliver a $2,000 check and a certificate. The girls were given a small piece of ground tucked behind one of the facility’s buildings, and they used the money to pay for compost so that they could create a nourishing soil bed for plants and seeds. The novice gardeners had a lot to learn—many of them had never done any hands-on work with plants or gardening. Some were only just beginning to learn where food came from or how it was grown. One girl asked if you could grow candy corn there!

  The girls chose what they would plant, and they tended and harvested the vegetables. Some of them worked in the kitchen, learning how to prepare and cook what they had grown. They told me proudly that they had been able to produce 219 pounds of food that summer out of their small “test garden” and that almost all of it was used in the kitchen for meals at the facility. I later learned from Drew that because their garden was so successful, the facility has now committed to giving them additional space as well as providing them with a thirty-by-forty-eight-foot greenhouse.

  The original group of girls who won the award received a lot of positive attention and felt incredibly proud. Because girls come and go, others have taken over the gardening, and it has become a very popular activity. If they could, Drew says, many of them would spend all their days gardening during the warmer months.

  If only every child could know the joy of a garden, there would, I am sure, be less violence in the streets. Remember how that intrepid plant hunter David Douglas abandoned his unruly behavior when he began to work, as a child, in a garden? It has been found that areas in a city that are enhanced with green places and window boxes see a drop in crime rates. Enlightened inner-city schools realize this and make an effort to give the children at least some experience with planting things, watching flowers bloom, growing something they can eat—even if it is only in pots in the schoolroom. But that is a lot better than nothing.

  Perhaps the best endorsement of the effect of a garden on the well-being of the gardener comes from that most inspirational of people, Nelson Mandela. He survived twenty-seven years in Robben Island Prison in South Africa, and this is something he wrote in his autobiography:

  “A garden is one of the few things in prison that one could control. Being a custodian of this patch of earth offered a small taste of freedom.”

  Renewal on the Reservation

  Nowhere is the power of gardens and gardening more apparent than in Pine Ridge, an Oglala Lakota (Sioux) Native American reservation located in South Dakota. When I first went to the “Rez,” it was a place that offered almost no hope to the people living there, displaced from their traditional hunting grounds by the white man. Unemployment was over 80 percent—and everywhere I went, I met families struggling in all arenas of survival. There was lots of trash; mangy dogs whelped under trailers; many of the adults were either alcoholics or on drugs; and suicides (especially among the youth) were all too common, much above the national average for the United States.

  Patricia Hammond is a Lakota living near the reservation, where she works every single day. Jason Schoch was originally from a small rural North Dakota town and a farming family who, when I met him, was keen to do something for the Native Americans and the small towns of the Dakotas. Soon after that, he and Patricia met, they fell in love, and he moved to join her in Pine Ridge.

  We all recognized the potential benefit of establishing a Roots & Shoots program on the reservation as a way to engage and empower youth. We hoped it would help not only to reconnect the Native children to the animal and plant world around them but also to foster respect for their own cultural traditions. Patricia and Jason started by working with some of the children to prepare the soil and plant a vegetable garden, working with as many of the young people as they could persuade to join them.

  “We chose a garden,” Jason told me, “because it was relatively simple and could lead to immediate change right in their backyards.” They both told me that knowledge of plants has always been important in the indigenous community. Patricia said, “So we both knew we needed to connect these vegetables growing in the garden with the native plants and the natural world and their own culture, as well as their physical health. But we knew the garden was key—just talking about these things would not have helped.”

  At first it was an uphill battle. The garden was trashed time and again. But something magic happened: a few of the older boys, including gang members, seeing how upset their younger brothers and sisters were when their hard work was destroyed, began to protect their garden.

  The tribal elders, having been let down so many times by the white man and his broken promises, were initially mistrustful of this new program that came from outside the Lakota culture. For months they watched and waited. And then, finally, they gave the Roots & Shoots program their support. That was the breakthrough that Patricia and Jason had so desperately needed. From then on, the garden became a gathering place where the grandparents joined in, teaching the children about the importance of bees as pollinators, and worms for aerating the soil. The garden was a stepping-stone toward teaching them about the native plants that had always played such an important role in their culture. It was the start of repairing the growing disconnect between youth and the natural world that has always been at the heart of Lakota culture. And it also began to re-bridge the disconnect between youth and the elders.

  The Roots & Shoots group started hiking out to the prairie to learn about indigenous wild food and medicinal plants. They collected seeds and started a native-plant garden. With a garden nearby, one of the elders, who said it was too hard for him to travel out to the prairie, could then finally begin to pass on his knowledge to the young people.

  Lakota Native American Patricia Hammond helped start a Roots & Shoots gardening program on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. One of the goals of the program is to teach children about indigenous plant food and medicine. Through gardening, native wisdom
is once again being passed down through the generations. (CREDIT: JASON T. SCHOCH)

  Since the first garden was planted in 2006, sixteen more have been created, and all have a section for native plants. Indigenous knowledge, once again, is being passed down from the wise elder medicine men and women, who still remember their old culture, to the next generation. There is a new feeling of hope now—at least among some people in Pine Ridge Reservation.

  Guerrilla Gardeners

  Now that we understand how gardens and plants can raise our spirits, we should be really grateful to the people who are defying the law to become “guerrilla gardeners.” A few months ago I was on a bus heading toward London’s Victoria Station. As we drove through a particularly dreary neighborhood of faded office blocks, I suddenly noticed one roundabout that was bright with assorted flowers. It was in stark contrast to the other roundabouts, and I was curious.

  That was my introduction to guerrilla gardening in London. A growing number of middle-class, well-dressed, well-spoken, “respectable” people, frustrated by the dreary appearance of the neighborhoods where they live or work, are growing flowers on any unused land they can find—along the edges of the roads, on patches of earth around the base of trees—and on roundabouts. It is, apparently, illegal to do this, so even though the police usually ignore them, these visionary gardeners do their work at night.

  As a matter of principle, surely if people want to create beauty in shabby places, they should not be prevented? This is certainly the view of Richard Reynolds, the unofficial leader of what is known as the “Growing Movement” in London. He began brightening roundabouts in the drab concrete area of the intersection of Elephant and Castle in central London in 2004 and immediately captured the media’s attention. He has even written a book for those interested in joining him—Guerrilla Gardening: A Handbook for Gardening without Boundaries. “Going out there and taking responsibility for a shared space, along with other people can warm the soul,” he says.

 

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