SERVING MINNEAPOLIS / ST. PAUL / MINNESOTA

MinnPost thanks these major sponsors:


Sponsor of
Second Opinion



MinnPost thanks these generous donors of $25,000 or more:

MAJOR FOUNDATIONS

John S. and James L.
Knight Foundation
Blandin Foundation
McKnight Foundation
Minneapolis Foundation
Otto Bremer Foundation

INDIVIDUALS & FAMILY FOUNDATIONS
Sage & John Cowles
David & Vicki Cox
Toby & Mae Dayton
Sam & Stacey Heins
Joel & Laurie Kramer
Lee Lynch & Terry Saario
Martin & Brown
Foundation
(See all donors here.)

MinnPost.com Job Listing of the Day!
MinnPost.com Job Listing of the Day!

Browse
Minnesota Jobs
Direct from Company Websites!

Unadvertised,
Current,
Highest-quality

Start Searching Now!

KATHERINE GLOVER

  • Switch to Small Text Size
  • Switch to Medium Text Size
  • Switch to Large Text Size
Recommend to a friend Print Submit a Comment

    Religious forum explores justice issues linking immigration and food supplies

    When Rabbi Morris Allen visited the Agriprocessors meatpacking plant in Postville, Iowa, in March 2006, he knew nothing about the plant's immigrant employees or their working conditions. He was simply looking for a new source to supply the Twin Cities with kosher meat.

    What he saw at the plant, however, led him to reconsider what it meant to be kosher.

    "We didn't think as Jews we could accept getting food that was technically kosher but did not meet the ethical standards that we as Jews hold as well," he said Sunday to a group of about a hundred people at Faith Mennonite Church in Minneapolis.

     

     

    After his visit to Postville, he began working on Hekhsher Tzedek, a campaign to address employee working conditions and other ethical issues within the kosher meat industry — well before U.S. immigration authorities raided that same plant, arrested hundreds of undocumented workers and put Postville in the national spotlight on the immigration debate.

    Rabbi Allen was the first of four speakers at the forum "Immigration and Food Justice: A Multi-Faith Dialog." Last year, Faith Mennonite Church held a dialogue on the Michael Pollan book "In Defense of Food," which addresses food sustainability issues. The church wanted to continue that discussion, and others at the congregation were interested in immigration issues, so they decided to look at how the two topics might intersect.

    "We personally don't have the answers to these questions," said Michael Bischoff, one of the event's organizers, "but I think it's important to have a dialogue." Four speakers from different faiths were invited to provide their perspective.

    Reginaldo Haslett-Marroquin spoke after Rabbi Allen. Haslett-Marroquin runs the Rural Enterprise Center, which helps Latinos in rural Minnesota through various initiatives, including a free-range poultry cooperative.

    "We're not growing chickens; we're growing ideas," Haslett-Marroquin said. "We're growing infrastructure."

    The project attempts to harness the small-scale, sustainable farming skills that many Latino immigrants already have. "We're getting people out of the job force and into the entrepreneurial practices so the resources stay in those families."

    University of St. Thomas theology professor Tisha M. Rajendra then addressed immigration and food sustainability from a Christian perspective. "We are dependent on those who pick our vegetables, who till the soil," she said, but added that our current system "hides the people from us and obscures our relationship with them," which is "contrary to how God wants us to live."

    The crowd then heard from Owais Bayunus, president of the Islamic Center of Minnesota. Bayunus talked about raising awareness of Muslim dietary restrictions and touched on such recent controversies as the group of Somali airport taxi drivers who didn't want to transport passengers carrying alcohol.

    The forum did not lead to any concrete solutions or conclusions, but it did meet Bischoff's goal of "having a community dialogue about sustainable food in a fresh way." Furthermore, it highlighted links between people of different faiths on these issues.

    After the initial round of introductory speeches, Rabbi Allen and Bayunus got into a discussion on the connections between Jewish and Muslim dietary laws, and how some college cafeterias are even offering food that is both kosher and Halal, that is, permissible according to Islam.

    Haslett-Marroquin perked up, thinking of his own poultry project, and said, to laughter, "I think I just hit a business opportunity!"

    Like what you just read? Support high-quality journalism in Minnesota by becoming a member of MinnPost.

    0 Comments: Hide/Show Comments

    0 Comment: Hide/Show Comment

    0 Comments:

    E-mail address

    Password

     

    Forgot Password? | Register to Comment

    MinnPost does not permit the use of foul language, personal attacks or the use of language that may be libelous or interpreted as inciting hate or sexual harassment. User comments are reviewed by moderators to ensure that comments meet these standards and adhere to MinnPost's terms of use and privacy policy.

    We intend for this area to be used by our readers as a place for civil, thought-provoking and high-quality public discussion. In order to achieve this, MinnPost requires that all commenters register and post comments with their actual names and place of residence. Register here to comment.


    Illustration by Hugh Bennewitz

    minnpost.com/katherineglover


    Katherine Glover is a freelance print, radio and online journalist based in the Twin Cities. She'll be focusing on immigration issues and
    immigrant communities. For more info, visit her website, katherineglover.net.

    Recent posts by Katherine Glover