Hope Blooms shares garden plots with new neighbours from Syria - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Hope Blooms shares garden plots with new neighbours from Syria

Syrian families forced by war to abandon their farms are finding comfort working in community garden plots run by Hope Blooms of north-end Halifax.

'We believe gardening is a universal language,' says Hope Blooms youth leader

Syrians invited to help tend Halifax community garden

8 years ago
Duration 0:46
A youth-led Halifax initiative called Hope Blooms is living up to its name, giving its Syrian neighbours a stake in their new homeland.

Hope Blooms is living up to its name, giving its Syrian neighbours a stake in their new homeland.

The north-endcommunity garden and salad dressing business, conceived and run by youth from theGottingen Street area of Halifax, has drawn refugee families into its fold.

When members noticed that Syrians who live in a building across from the garden plots seemed interested in their work, they reached out to the newcomers.

"Hope Bloomsis a communitythat's perceived to be impoverished [but] thewill to give, thegenerosityis still there," saidAlveroWiggins, a youth leader with Hope Blooms.

Left a 40-hectare farm in Syria

Majed Al Zamer,whomoved to Halifax in February, misses his farm in Syria.

Majed Al Zamel is a farmer from Syria who's happy that he can grow vegetables in his new neighbourhood with the help of Hope Blooms. (CBC)

"I had a farm of 40 hectares.And I would plant all kinds of vegetables and fruit," he said through a translator.

This spring he noticed the garden plots along Brunswick Street acrossthe street from where he and his family now live.

The Hope Blooms fund buys seeds and tools so people inthe neighbourhood can also grow food. When some people in thecommunity heard about theirnew neighbours' interest in the gardens, they volunteered to give up their own plots to allow the Syrians to work the earth.

"I was very happy that I found something I did in the past. Although it's small, it remindsme of my big farm," Al Zamel says.

New evolution for garden

It's all about spreading hope, Wiggins says and"what isawesome about this new evolution of the garden."

Now theSyrians come every day for two to threehours to water, weedor just sit in the gardens, most of the time with their children.

Alvero Wiggins and Bocar Wade are youth leaders with Hope Blooms, which is sharing its garden plots in north-end Halifax with Syrian refugee families. (CBC)

"Since I was very small, I would go with my father to work,"said14-year-old Mohammed Al Zamel. "We grew up like this."

The Syrians still have limited English and the services of a translator are limited as well.

Both sides usesign language andlanguage apps on cell phones to communicate and that seems to be working pretty well, saysBocarWade, another Hope Blooms youth leader.

Language of the earth

"We believe gardening is a universal language," he said."A translator would be a lot better,but we do a lot with what we have."

The Syrians have even asked if winter gardening would be possible. That would involve creating some temporary greenhouses and some extra fundraising, something that is being considered.

The Hope Blooms gardens are being shared with newcomers from Syria. (CBC)

Hope Blooms, which started in 2007,planned to build its original greenhousewith a $40,000 investment from the CBC reality show Dragons' Den. In the end, Build Right Nova Scotia constructed a new, state-of-the-art greenhouse for the youth-run company.

Profits from the group'ssalad dressingsales go towardscholarships for young people.