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Agrarian Trust

Press Release: Local Agrarian Commons Co-founders Honored with Food Sovereignty Prize

Please join us in congratulating the Somali Bantu Community Association of Maine (SBCA), co-founders of the Little Jubba Maine Agrarian Commons, on being honored by the US Food Sovereignty Alliance’s annual Food Sovereignty Prize. Read more about the prize on their blog and see the press release below. We look forward to the December ceremony and hats off to this year’s honorees!


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Contact: Andrew Kang Bartlett, Presbyterian Hunger Program (PCUSA)
Phone: (502) 608-5023
Email: [email protected]

As COVID unfolds into hunger crisis, prize recognizes transformative solutions

Twelfth Annual Food Sovereignty Prize honors the Somali Bantu Community Association of Maine and the All Nepal Peasants’ Federation


LOUISVILLE, KY, October 16, 2020 — As the COVID-19 pandemic adds 83–132 million people to the world’s hungry this year, the Food Sovereignty Prize highlights grassroots efforts meeting urgent needs while advancing transformative solutions. Organized by the US Food Sovereignty Alliance (USFSA), the Food Sovereignty Prize is announced on World Food Day. The Food Sovereignty Prize is recognized as a counterweight to the World Food Prize, which critics decry for its singular focus on food production based on Green Revolution approaches. 

As explained by Lisa Griffith of the National Family Farm Coalition, a USFSA member organization, “Even before the pandemic struck last winter, global hunger had risen by 60 million people over the past five years, with 750 million people experiencing severe food insecurity in 2019, while most commodity crops have reached record production levels. As COVID-19 spread around the globe, it was community efforts – not the industrialized food system – that distributed food and protected farm and food workers. The World Food Prize perpetuates the myth that an industrialized system can produce its way out of hunger when a just and sustainable food system is what is truly needed.”

The 2020 Food Sovereignty Prize awardees are the Somali Bantu Community Association (SBCA) of Maine and the All Nepal Peasants’ Federation (ANPFa). The Somali Bantu Community Association’s Liberation Farms have served as a lifeline of food and financial security to more than 200 refugee farmers whose communities are disproportionately hit by both COVID and hunger, while also serving the broader community, including provision of fresh, healthy foods to local schools.

According to Jennifer Taylor of Lola’s Organic Farm in Georgia, also of the USFSA, “While leading the way in food systems transformation in Maine, the Somali Bantu Community Association has confronted both the pervasive structural racism exposed by the Black Lives Matter movement as well as inhumane immigration policies coupled with anti-immigrant sentiment. Particularly inspiring is SBCA’s new Little Jubba Central Maine Agrarian Commons, an innovative model of collective land ownership and farming, inspired by the traditional Somali ishkashito model of cooperative sharing.”

Standing at over two million members, the All Nepal Peasants’ Federation is also on the cutting edge of food systems transformation. Just as SBCA is working to dismantle racism in the food system and beyond, ANFPa is working to dismantle casteism, as well as sexism and ageism, with special branches dedicated to the empowerment of Dalits (“untouchables” in the caste system), women and youth. Recognizing the realization of human rights as essential to ending hunger, ANFPa has played an active role in Nepal’s democratization process, achieving the enshrining of food sovereignty in the country’s new constitution. Nepal is now one of several countries in the world to have adopted food sovereignty into law, and ANPFa has been leading national efforts on implementation. ANFPa has also been active in COVID relief efforts, including distribution of relief materials, coordinating with local governments on managing food supplies, and policy advocacy work. 

The Food Sovereignty Prize’s focus on collective action and movement building stands in stark contrast to the World Food Prize, according to Chung-Wha Hong of USFSA member Grassroots International, who adds: “In the face of COVID, social movements have been the most effective first responders, especially among communities most overlooked by governments, while also making visionary demands to overcome the structural injustices driving hunger.”

The Somali Bantu Community Association and All Nepal Peasants’ Federation will be recognized at a virtual ceremony in early December, which will be open to the public.

Further information on the honorees and the award ceremony are forthcoming at www.usfoodsovereigntyalliance.org and www.facebook.com/USFoodSovAlliance

About the US Food Sovereignty Alliance

The US Food Sovereignty Alliance (USFSA) is a US-based alliance of food justice, anti-hunger, labor, environmental, faith-based and food producer groups that upholds the right to food as a basic human right and works to connect our local and national struggles to the international movement for food sovereignty. The Alliance works to end poverty, rebuild local food economies and assert democratic control over the food system, believing that all people have the right to healthy, culturally appropriate food produced in an ecologically sound manner. Learn more at usfoodsovereigntyalliance.org.

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