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August/September 2008 We're All in This Together Bridging the Green Divide A Generational Challenge to Repower America The Golden Voice of the Southwest The Traveling Peacemaker Non Violent Communication Basics Table for Six Billion Seasonal Detoxification for Year Round Health Top-Down or Upside-Down Living Deeply: The Art and Science of Transformation in Everyday Life Cosmic Calendar
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Table For Six Billion, Please Judy Wicks On Her Plan To Change The World, Interview by David Kupfer “I once had a dream of going into a restaurant and instead of asking for a table for two, I said, ‘Table for 5 billion, please.’ Now it’s six billion and growing. That dream was a vision of a world where everyone has a place at the table, politically and economically, and enough to eat. We can accomplish this not through economic and military domination, but by communication and understanding.” In 1983 Judy Wicks was living in a Philadelphia brownstone that she’d fought to save from mall developers in the 1970s. For ten years she’d been the manager and co-proprietor of Restaurant La Terrasse, but she wanted to own her own business, so she opened a neighborhood coffee-and-muffin shop on her brownstone’s first floor, which allowed her the added benefit of being closer to her young children. The business took off, and Wicks turned it into a full-fledged restaurant, expanding into the brownstone next door. She called it the White Dog Cafe. Since then, the White Dog Cafe has developed a national reputation for its award-winning fare and leadership in the local-food movement. Wicks buys all the restaurant’s produce in season from local organic family farms, all its meat and poultry from humane sources, and all its seafood from sustainable fisheries. When purchasing products that must be imported, such as coffee, she follows the principles of fair trade. The White Dog’s employees all earn a living wage (entry-level positions pay nine dollars an hour) and receive benefits such as health insurance, a matched retirement account, and paid holidays and vacations, a rare policy in the restaurant industry. A few years ago Inc. magazine named Wicks one of its favorite businesswomen because she put into place “more progressive business practices per square foot than any other entrepreneur.” Not satisfied with just running the restaurant according to her principles, Wicks has become a dedicated activist working to advance a greener, more sustainable economic system, with the ultimate goal of replacing corporate globalization with a worldwide network of local economies. She openly shares the secrets of the White Dog’s success with other restaurants that want to serve local cuisine, and the cafe doubles as a center for community activism, hosting speakers, storytelling sessions, and film series. She established an international “sister-restaurant” project in which the cafe nurtures relationships with restaurants around the globe. She also runs another sister-restaurant program that promotes minority-owned restaurants in Philadelphia. Wicks is the mother of two, and her daughter directs the cafe’s community programs. In addition to her for-profit endeavors, Wicks has founded two nonprofits—White Dog Community Enterprises, and the Sustainable Business Network of Greater Philadelphia—as well as cofounded the national Business Alliance for Local Living Economies (BALLE). Wicks defines a “living economy” as one that promotes healthy natural life and vibrant community life, while supporting long-term economic vitality. Community wealth and self-reliance are built, she says, by producing necessities—such as food, energy, and clothing—as locally as possible. Her integrity, articulateness, and vision have made her a leader, and she travels extensively to spread the gospel of localism. She is currently working on a book about the living-economy movement, Good Morning, Beautiful Business, to be published by Chelsea Green in 2009. David Kupfer: What challenges have you faced as a woman in business? I’ve been a businesswoman my whole adult life. I started my first business, a store, when I was twenty-three. The thing about business is that you have to make ends meet; you can’t just do whatever you want to do. So there’s a certain grounding to it that I like. I’ve dabbled in nonprofit work, but it doesn’t have the same energy. There’s something about being able to make money doing what you love. I never had any interest in money growing up, but after I started a business, I took an evening class in accounting at the Wharton business school. I enjoyed learning about the balance sheet and the income statement. Women of my generation weren’t encouraged to take business classes; they weren’t even offered at the women’s college I attended. Luckily for me, I had an instinct for how to come up with a product that people like. The goal of traditional investment strategy is to maximize profits. Why are you working to change that? The alternative to the stock market is investing your money in your own community so that you receive a modest financial return and also a “living return,” which is the benefit of living in a more sustainable local economy and a healthier community. I made the decision to take all my money out of the stock market and put it into Philadelphia’s Reinvestment Fund. I get a straight financial return of between 4.5 and 5.5 percent, and the money I invest also benefits my community. For instance, it helped to finance the wind turbines that produce the electricity the White Dog Cafe buys. Money invested in the stock market, on the other hand, is just taken out of the community. We’re taught that we’re suckers if we don’t make the highest profit or pay the lowest price. If you invest where you don’t make as much money, then you’re a loser. There’s no thought given to the effect our financial decisions have on the long-term well-being of our communities. Has the notion of a living return caught on? So far community reinvestment does mean lower returns. How do you convince people that it’s in their best interest to accept less financial gain in exchange for this living return? Also we should invest in enterprises we want to see grow. Do we want businesses that are beneficial to life, or ones that are harmful? If your community does not have a reinvestment fund, you can put your money into a credit union or local bank, or invest in funds that benefit other communities around the world; they often let you earmark your investment for a particular region. Is the movement for local economies connected to the antiwar movement? I once had a dream of going into a restaurant and instead of asking for a table for two, I said, “Table for 5 billion, please.” Now it’s 6 billion and growing. That dream was a vision of a world where everyone has a place at the table, politically and economically, and enough to eat. We can accomplish this not through economic and military domination, but by communication and understanding. My dream was the inspiration for our sister-restaurant program, which I started in the 1980s with a trip to Nicaragua. The United States was fueling the civil war there by arming the Contra rebels against the left-wing Sandinista government. I wasn’t sure how I felt about what was going on. President Reagan was calling the Contras “freedom fighters” and the Sandinistas “communists.” I was very anticommunist. I come from a small town Republican family and grew up thinking that we are the good guys and the communists are the bad guys. The Vietnam War had caused me to question that, but I had faith that Vietnam was just an aberration. When I went down to Nicaragua with a group of my customers and saw what the Contras were up to, I was heartbroken. I met a woman whose nine year old son had been killed when his school was hit with a US-made rocket, and another whose daughter had been kidnapped by the Contras to work as a slave. On the way home, I was switching planes in Miami, Florida, and I saw headlines about people wanting Ollie North to run for president. This was during the Iran-Contra scandal, and North, a marine lieutenant colonel and Reagan administration official, was accused of selling arms illegally to Iranians and using the proceeds to help fund the Contras. I just couldn’t believe it. I sat down and cried. I wasn’t crying for the Nicaraguans—I was crying for the United States. I was crying for the loss of the country I’d loved. I realized then that the US government was in Central America for the same reason we’d been in Southeast Asia: to protect corporate access to cheap labor and natural resources. We say we’re spreading democracy and freedom, but it’s just the opposite. At that point I committed myself to helping other Americans understand the motives behind our country’s foreign policy. We have brought the White Dog’s customers to Vietnam, Cuba, the Soviet Union, El Salvador, and Mexico. Our nickname for the program is “Eating with the Enemy.” We’ve dined with the Viet Cong and the Sandinistas and the Zapatistas and the Palestinians. When you sit down at the table together and recognize the other’s humanity, it makes you wonder why you ever saw them as an enemy. What exactly is a “local living economy”? In local living economies, goods we can’t produce at home, such as coffee or sugar or bananas, are traded for fairly, so that the exchange benefits both our community and the community where those products originate. We can still have a global economy, but it will be a network of thousands of sustainable local economies that trade in products that improve our quality of life. If we create products that are unique to our region—whether it’s a style of clothing, a type of cheese or wine, or a unique invention—they’ll be sought after in the global marketplace. So this movement is not anti-trade or anti-globalization; it’s about creating security at home and not depending on foreign trade for our basic needs. Your work seems centered around community development. What did you learn from living with Eskimo villagers as a Vista volunteer back in 1969? I was also impressed with the natives’ resourcefulness and ingenuity, how every little scrap was saved and used in some way. The other thing that struck me was the impact of our culture on the indigenous people who had never been out of the area. Watching Hollywood movies had caused many to feel ashamed of their own way of life. It’s hard to convince people who haven’t had luxuries that they’re better off without them. While I was there, I saw a materialistic way of life coming to the village, and there was nothing I could do to stop it, because it was so seductive. I saw the same thing years later when I traveled to the Soviet Union for the first time. The Soviets would display the wrappers from store-bought goods in their china cupboards; they had so little that they even adored the packaging. Many of the changes that occurred in the Soviet Union came from their desire to have not our freedoms but our stuff. The question is: Can we warn people in developing countries, or do they have the right to spend and accumulate and waste as we have until they (and we ) have an awakening about how consumerism hurts the earth? How has that experience in Alaska affected your work today as an activist and businesswoman? It also made me realize how seductive consumerism is. The lifestyle of the young people in the Eskimo village, particularly the girls, was changing before my eyes from a sustainable one to a wasteful, consumer-based one. Living in their village made me realize how much women in our society—including me—are affected by advertisements and TV; how we’re made to feel we’re not good enough, not feminine enough. We all buy things to make us feel more beautiful, if we’re women, or more handsome and powerful, if we’re men. I ’m trying to change my own consumer behavior. Just today I was at a conference, and there was a woman selling beautiful silk tops. I thought, “I bet I’d look really good in this.” In my mind the old argument played out: “I would look great in this” versus “I don’t even need it. My closet is full.” I realized that I’m still conditioned to consume—it’s a struggle for me to act mindfully and not compulsively in areas like eating, drinking, and shopping. For all my social organizing and trying to bring about change in the business world, it’s easy to forget that real change begins with changing oneself. Your restaurant has become quite an educational force. What inspires this? We also travel to other parts of the country, or the world. After Hurricane Katrina, we took a group of customers down to New Orleans to help rebuild, and some of them have stayed in touch with families there. It’s hard for people to break out of their own neighborhoods, where they feel safe. We have a program in which we establish sister relationships with minority-owned restaurants in low-income areas of Philadelphia. We take our customers, who are mostly suburbanites and center-city people, to those neighborhoods for a meal and a cultural event. The first time we did it, we planned to go to an art opening at a Puerto Rican art center and then to dinner at a Puerto Rican–owned restaurant, followed by dancing at a Latino nightclub. Right before we went, the newspaper published a city map with black dots on high-crime neighborhoods, and there was a dot right on the corner where our sister restaurant was. The paper called the area the “Badlands” and said it had the worst drug trafficking in the whole city. Worried that no one would come to the “Badlands” for dinner, we held a program at the White Dog called “The Good People of the Badlands,” and we invited community leaders from that neighborhood to come and talk about all the positive things that were happening there. Our dinner in the Badlands was sold out, and we went back every year for three years. Once my customers found out that they could go there and not get shot, they were more likely to go back for dinner on their own. It’s about breaking down barriers and stereotypes. You’ve been a part of the socially responsible business movement almost from the beginning. Did alarm bells go off for you after Ben & Jerry’s ice cream was bought out by the Unilever Corporation? When Ben & Jerry’s was bought by a multinational, it was a wake-up call for me. Of course, Jerry and Ben did not want to see their business compromised this way. It was a forced buyout. They were heartbroken to lose the company. How was it forced? The buyout showed the dangers of defining success as continual growth. Ben & Jerry’s grew so big it became a target for corporate raiders. We have to change our definition of success and show that we don’t have to grow in size to be successful. We can grow deeper roots in our community. We can grow by expanding our knowledge and consciousness, developing our creativity, deepening relationships, and having more fun. Rather than starting a chain of White Dogs, I’ve tried to make our one restaurant a special place. Rather than spreading my brand, I’ve tried to teach my business model to others. It used to be that I saw Ben & Jerry’s as a little oasis of hope and goodness. Now I feel almost the same way I do about any chain, I’d rather see a locally owned ice-cream store, especially if they are using local milk from grass-fed cows. When we talk about local economies, it’s important to recognize the co-optation of the word local. Wal-Mart is threatened enough by the buy-local movement that its ads now say, “Shop at your local Wal-Mart,” and they refer to themselves as “your town’s Wal-Mart.” After your restaurant became such a success by offering fresh, locally produced food, you decided to share the lessons you’d learned with your competition, to encourage them to buy local too. What was the reaction? When Mahatma Gandhi fought British tyranny in India in the 1940s, he emphasized the need for Indians to produce food and other products locally. The US did the same thing to Cuba: turned the whole island into farms producing sugar and beef and tobacco for export, so that there were no community farms left. In India millions died of starvation, and Cuba almost experienced famine when the Soviet Union collapsed. To survive they beat their swords into plowshares, training soldiers to become farmers. In fact, everyone became a farmer at least part time, even doctors, and they turned every inch of available land into gardens. I went to Cuba five times during that period, and it was amazing to see the community gardens. One time I brought along an organic farmer from Pennsylvania, and he told me how amazed he was that the Cubans had such advanced organic-farming methods. They were organic by accident, because they couldn’t afford petroleum-based fertilizers and chemicals, or even gasoline to run tractors. But now they’re ahead of the curve when it comes to reducing dependency on oil and building a healthy, self-reliant food system. Is there a danger of isolationism if too much emphasis is placed on self-supporting localities? Could self-sufficiency undermine feelings of interconnectedness? There are many goods the people of the world can trade in besides crops that can be grown most anywhere. We can develop a feeling of interconnectedness through exchanging art and music, ideas and culture, and by getting to know each other as human beings rather than as producers and consumers. We can trade in what is culturally unique to our region. These products bring a greater sense of interconnection than beans and potatoes. Where are we today in the history of the local economy movement? Given that the US economy could be upset even more at any moment, isn’t local self-sufficiency paramount to our survival? Most crises push people to find security in community. There’s a “we’re all in this together” spirit during hard times, and the instinct is to shore up the home base and seek control over basic needs. The recent food scares—such as tainted spinach, meat, tomatoes—are causing people to want more transparency in food production, which is possible only when food is produced locally. Industrialization has led us far from community self-reliance, but I think we have enough sense left to embrace the concept in the face of adversity. When times get tough, some people will panic and compete and hoard resources, but hopefully the crisis will bring out the better angels in most, and we’ll recognize that our survival depends on cooperation. Is there any way to build the movement without cynically hoping for a disaster that forces people to change their ways? David Kupfer is a free lance journalist who lives in northern California. He is an avid artist, mountain biker and gardener and his writing has appeared in The Sun, The Progressive, Earth Island Journal, and Whole Earth and he produced the San Francisco Green Map, a map of environmental and educational resources (www.sfgreenmap.org.) "This interview first appeared in The Sun (www.thesunmagazine. org) an independent, ad-free monthly magazine that for more than thirty years has used words and photographs to invoke the splendor and heartache of being human." |
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