NAMED NATIONAL FOUR-YEAR DAILY NEWSPAPER OF THE YEAR FOR 2020-21 IN THE COLLEGE MEDIA ASSOCIATIONâS PINNACLE AWARDS
Tuesday, April 19, 2022
Volume 158 No. 32
SJSU garden transcends barriers By Royvi Hernandez SCIENCE & TECH EDITOR
The San Jose State Black Womenâs Collective (BWC) and Campus Community Garden hosted an event Monday night about the importance of nature and the influence it has on the community. The Campus Community Garden was created to provide students a space to gain access to healthy food, learn about sustainable organic garden practices and earn service learning hours, according to its webpage. Aisha Williams, environmental studies senior and president of BWC, said the purpose of the collaboration was to create a program centered around âBlack culture and connect it with nature.â âI want to be able to cultivate that atmosphere for others and myself,â Williams said. âThis is my first time doing something like this and as a Black student at SJSU we donât get a lot of programs like this, so being able to actually do it myself is different from being able to attend it.â She said as Earth Day approaches on Sunday, this week is âa chance to highlight environmentalism.â âI think Earth Day is important to spread awareness about our habits with environments, and [people] donât really think about that on a daily basis,â Williams said. She said she believes the brown and Black community are mostly affected by environmental damages and there needs to be more education on environmental sustainability. Aurion Wiley-Green, social justice senior and BWC treasurer, said she helped Williams create the project. âI want people to learn, no matter what you do, every day you impact the environment, make sure you take one step to better the environment,â Wiley-Green said. âEven if thatâs carpooling, buying less plastic, whatever you can, one step a day is 365 steps, it will impact in
BRYANNA BARTLETT | SPARTAN DAILY
SJSU environmental studies senior Aisha Williams (left) and Aurion Wiley-Green, African American studies and social justice senior, open a discussion with attendees about personal experiences with nature at the Community Garden on Monday.
one shape or form.â Other attendees also discussed their personal connections to nature. âNature is everything to me, the way I look at life is 360Âș, everything has a full cycle,â Wiley-Green said. âNature symbolizes more than just existing, when I look at a tree it symbolizes strength, resilience, growth.â She said she believes everyone should appreciate nature and its role in âthe circle of life.â âLife is about appreciating nature, looking up at the sky and just appreciating how blue it is or the sun or even the rain and how it helped me be here today,â she said. Sociology senior Kenny Jackson attended the event and said itâs great to see
the community learn how to appreciate nature and learn new skills, including potting plants. âNature to me is beauty, itâs life, itâs regenerative. Itâs important to connect with nature because a lot of our leaders donât and [people] should learn skills to help combat that and be beneficial to saving the Earth or simply how to take care of yourself,â Jackson said. âPlanting and working with your hands can be very therapeutic.â Campus Community Garden coordinator Matthew Spadoni said there needs to be more conversations about colorism and its connection to nature. âThere should be an Earth Day every month,â Spadoni said. âItâs nice to have some solidarity at least once a year and
have everyone focus on the environment and how we can all do better to rally around and fight against climate change, be more sustainable and have better food systems.â He said discussing climate change and how people eat is the first step to learn how to treat the environment better. Jackson said itâs important to share stories because âEarth gives people everything they need.â âEverything we have comes from the Earth and we must appreciate what we have here and the miracle that is mother Earth,â Jackson said. âNature is healing.â Follow Royvi on Twitter @lesroyvs
Campus Voices
Spartans react to United Nations climate report: Earth will be âunlivableâ in 18 years he United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change announced on April 4 in its quadrennial report that the world is firmly on track to becoming completely uninhabitable. According to the United Nations report, Earth faces âunavoidable,â âunprecedentedâ and âterrifyingâ weather hazards that will have severe effects, some
T
Steven Hong computer science junior
I think everyone as individuals can do more to reduce our carbon footprint, whether it be buying second-hand clothes, walking more and driving less, thereâs more everyone can do.
of which will be irreversible, over the next two decades. Climate scientists on the United Nations panel called out all global leaders in their report, saying they must reduce greenhouse gas emissions at much faster rates and reassess their energy policies. Some San Jose State students have thoughts on the recent report and human-induced climate change:
Phoebe Rapoza kinesiology and rehab sciences junior
I donât think a lot of younger people will take this seriously until itâs a reality.
Aj Johal computer science senior
Erika Snyder biology and systems physiology junior
For people who really do understand the state of reality, theyâre angrier than theyâve ever been . . . the lie that we are ïŹne the way we are is only serving the 1%. It doesnât serve the rest of the world, who are going to suïŹer.
Save the planet. It feeds you. Letâs go.
REPORTING BY BRYANNA BARTLETT; GRAPHIC FROM CANVA