Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Refugees in New Hampshire Turn to Farming for an Income and a Taste of Home
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 3 months ago on
September 19, 2024

Refugee farmers in New Hampshire find purpose and community through growing traditional crops, creating a taste of home. (AP/Charles Krupa)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

DUNBARTON, N.H. — It’s harvest time in central New Hampshire, and one farm there appears to have been transplanted from a distant continent.

Farmers balance large crates laden with vegetables on their heads while chatting in Somali and other languages. As the sun burns away the early morning mist, the farmers pick American staples like corn and tomatoes as well as crops they grew up with, like okra and sorrel. Many of the women wear vibrant orange, red and blue fabrics.

Refugees Find Purpose and Community Through Farming

Most workers at this Dunbarton farm are refugees who have escaped harrowing wars and persecution. They come from the African nations of Burundi, Rwanda, Somalia and Congo, and they now run their own small businesses, selling their crops to local markets as well as to friends and connections in their ethnic communities. Farming provides them with both an income and a taste of home.

“I like it in the USA. I have my own job,” says Somali refugee and farmer Khadija Aliow as she hams it up by sashaying past a reporter, using one hand to steady the crate of crops on her head and the other to give a thumbs-up. “Happy. I’m so happy.”

The farm is owned by a New Hampshire-based nonprofit, the Organization for Refugee and Immigrant Success, which lets the farmers use plots of land and provides them with training and support. The organization runs similar farms in Concord and the nearby town of Boscawen.

In all, 36 people from five African countries, including South Sudan, and the Asian nation of Nepal work on the farms. Many were farmers in their home countries before coming to the U.S. or had previous experience with agriculture, said Tom McGee, a program director with the nonprofit.

“These are farmers who are basically independent business owners, who are working in partnership with our organization to be able to bring this produce to life in this country,” he said. “And to have another sense of purpose, and a way that they can bring themselves into the community, and belong. And really participate in the American dream.”

Nonprofit Supports Refugee Farmers’ Entrepreneurial Spirit

The nonprofit runs a food market in Manchester, where people can buy fresh produce or sign up to have boxes delivered. McGee said there are a few other programs with similar aims scattered throughout the U.S. but that the model remains relatively rare. He said his organization relies on state and federal funding, as well as private donations.

Farmer Sylvain Bukasa said he escaped in 2000 from the decades-long conflict in Congo that has resulted in millions of deaths. He spent six years with his wife and son in a refugee camp in Tanzania before being accepted into the U.S. in 2006.

“I was worried for my safety,” he said. “I decided to just go somewhere where it’s a little bit safer.”

Bukasa said he has worked hard since arriving in the U.S. and relishes his new life. But at first he missed the foods he grew up with. He could only find them in specialized markets, where they tended to be expensive and of poor quality.

“Back home we ate more vegetables and less meat,” he said. “When we came here it’s more chicken, more pizza, things like that. They taste good, but it’s not good for you.”

From Personal Gardens to Commercial Success

Bukasa started growing crops on the farm in 2011. The initial plan on the Dunbarton farm was to allow migrants like him to grow traditional crops for themselves and their families. But demand grew, particularly during the pandemic, prompting the farm’s evolution into a commercial operation.

For a few of the farmers, the harvest provides their primary income. For most, like Bukasa, it’s a side gig. He works fulltime as a service agent for a rental car company and travels whenever he can to tend his plot of just over an acre (0.4 hectares). The biggest challenges are making sure his crops are adequately watered and stopping the weeds from taking over, he said.

Mondays are harvest days, and on a recent Monday, Bukasa listed the crops he was picking: tomatoes, summer squash, zucchini, kale, corn, okra, and the leaves from pumpkins and sorrel — which he and the other migrants call sour-sour because of its taste.

He said there’s a surprisingly large Congolese community throughout New England, and they appreciate what he grows.

“It’s a hard job, but hard work is good work,” Bukasa said. “It’s fun and it helps people. I like when I satisfy people with the food that they eat.”

His dream is to one day buy his own farm with a couple of acres of land, so he can walk out his front door to tend to his crops rather than driving 20 minutes like he does now. A more immediate challenge, he said, is to work on the marketing side of his business.

He’s got to the point where he now grows more food than he’s able to sell, and he hates seeing any of it go to waste. One idea is to buy a van, so he can deliver more produce himself.

“You see the competition in there,” he says with a grin, motioning toward the tent where other refugee farmers wash and pack their crops. “See how many farmers are trying to sell their produce.”

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Chargers Focus on Higher Playoff Seed After Wrapping Up Berth

DON'T MISS

Winter Workout Tips, From Scientists Who Study Extreme Cold

DON'T MISS

Rams’ Offense Struggles, but Defense Has LA on Brink of NFC West Title

DON'T MISS

Jimmy Carter Deserved Our Thanks and Respect, Not Our Sneers

DON'T MISS

Clovis Man Arrested With Loaded Gun, Meth, and Children in Car

DON'T MISS

Brock Purdy’s Production Plummets. Is He Still the 49ers’ Franchise QB?

DON'T MISS

An Appeals Court Upholds a $5 Million Award in a Sexual Abuse Verdict Against Trump

DON'T MISS

Fresno Couple Arrested on Child Sex Abuse Charges

DON'T MISS

4 Killed in a Storm System That Spawned Tornadoes Across the Southern US

DON'T MISS

Biden Announces Nearly $2.5B More in Military Aid for Ukraine

UP NEXT

Winter Workout Tips, From Scientists Who Study Extreme Cold

UP NEXT

Rams’ Offense Struggles, but Defense Has LA on Brink of NFC West Title

UP NEXT

Jimmy Carter Deserved Our Thanks and Respect, Not Our Sneers

UP NEXT

Clovis Man Arrested With Loaded Gun, Meth, and Children in Car

UP NEXT

Brock Purdy’s Production Plummets. Is He Still the 49ers’ Franchise QB?

UP NEXT

An Appeals Court Upholds a $5 Million Award in a Sexual Abuse Verdict Against Trump

UP NEXT

Fresno Couple Arrested on Child Sex Abuse Charges

UP NEXT

4 Killed in a Storm System That Spawned Tornadoes Across the Southern US

UP NEXT

Biden Announces Nearly $2.5B More in Military Aid for Ukraine

UP NEXT

The World Population Will Be 8.09 Billion on New Year’s Day After a 71 Million Increase in 2024

Jimmy Carter Deserved Our Thanks and Respect, Not Our Sneers

14 minutes ago

Clovis Man Arrested With Loaded Gun, Meth, and Children in Car

26 minutes ago

Brock Purdy’s Production Plummets. Is He Still the 49ers’ Franchise QB?

33 minutes ago

An Appeals Court Upholds a $5 Million Award in a Sexual Abuse Verdict Against Trump

58 minutes ago

Fresno Couple Arrested on Child Sex Abuse Charges

1 hour ago

4 Killed in a Storm System That Spawned Tornadoes Across the Southern US

1 hour ago

Biden Announces Nearly $2.5B More in Military Aid for Ukraine

1 hour ago

The World Population Will Be 8.09 Billion on New Year’s Day After a 71 Million Increase in 2024

1 hour ago

Trump Endorses Mike Johnson To Stay On as House Speaker After Government Funding Turmoil

2 hours ago

U.S. Presidents Pay Tribute to Jimmy Carter

15 hours ago

Chargers Focus on Higher Playoff Seed After Wrapping Up Berth

LOS ANGELES – Jim Harbaugh, Justin Herbert and the Los Angeles Chargers celebrated in the locker room Saturday after they wrapped up a...

21 seconds ago

Justin Herbert celebrates with fans
21 seconds ago

Chargers Focus on Higher Playoff Seed After Wrapping Up Berth

Cyclists and runners in Prospect Park in Brooklyn, Dec. 5, 2024. A few tweaks to your routine can make getting outside more comfortable this season. (Bryan Banducci/The New York Times)
9 minutes ago

Winter Workout Tips, From Scientists Who Study Extreme Cold

11 minutes ago

Rams’ Offense Struggles, but Defense Has LA on Brink of NFC West Title

14 minutes ago

Jimmy Carter Deserved Our Thanks and Respect, Not Our Sneers

26 minutes ago

Clovis Man Arrested With Loaded Gun, Meth, and Children in Car

33 minutes ago

Brock Purdy’s Production Plummets. Is He Still the 49ers’ Franchise QB?

E. Jean Carroll exits the New York Federal Court after former President Donald Trump appeared in court, Sept. 6, 2024, in New York. (AP File)
58 minutes ago

An Appeals Court Upholds a $5 Million Award in a Sexual Abuse Verdict Against Trump

1 hour ago

Fresno Couple Arrested on Child Sex Abuse Charges

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend