A new revelation: broad-based Community Organizing!

by Cheryl Lohrmann, Leaven Board Co-Chair

This past May, I attended the weeklong Community Organizing training with the Industrial Areas Foundation (IAF) on behalf of Leaven with Jane Keating in Washington state. This was my second 5-day community organizing training in ten years. I left both of these training sessions with a renewed sense of awareness around my power, and with the question, “What have I been waiting for in being the change I wish to see in the world? Well, no more!” I felt levity after the first, a sense of a shift in paradigm in that I was going about change-making through guesswork and individualism rather than through relationships. 

The recent experience this past Spring was all of the above, but more refined and more dimensional, and with one key learning that I don’t think I ever truly grasped: Broad-based organizing!

Broad-based organizing is a structure for making the work of community organizing more directly responsible to and representative of its member institutions and members. This is key and inspiring, because it is bigger than me and bigger than any one organization. 

I came away from the IAF organizing training with this takeaway: Leaven needs to refocus its DNA on broad-based organizing so that there is a wider base for whom we can help to educate around it. We have been strong on teaching the organizing cycle/spiral, and we have gone deep with these practices inside our community. Now it is time to go wide so that we begin to see and value the interconnectedness of all issues and problems.

Since Leaven wants to reconnect to its organizing roots as part of our strategic plan, we can partner with other organizations through our local IAF affiliate, the Metropolitan Alliance for Common Good (MACG) for training, listening, and collaboration. Leaven is also offering our own community organizing training to Leaven members and the wider public. And of course, our relationship with other communities engaged in Sacred Organizing remain strong through our work in the Leaven Community Land and Housing Coalition.

Leaven could also innovate on ways to provide a weekly rhythm for the broad based community to engage in skill building, art making, artist nurturing, cooking and meal-sharing, all surrounded by kid centered activities. We can be building the community resilience hub through our various programs, building engagement through various channels, to support Alliance Assemblies once an issue is cut and the powers that be are aligned for a win. In this way, Leaven and others can continue our work. Leaven’s work of normalizing rest, shared meals, shared childcare and eldercare, to name a few, can go wider alongside our commitment to broaden our own organizing base, and to the people of the other MACG institutions and Leaven partner organizations as needed. 

Moving forward, I will be serving on the MACG Transformation Team to discern their next steps, and will be doing lots of one to ones in the community as a result! I would like to become a broad based organizing salesperson and reach out to my contacts in different issue-based non-profits to consider becoming a part of MACG so we can eventually cut those far reaching issues, work together for change, and win.

This Summer, Let the Light In

When my son woke me up this morning - well before 6am! - the sun streamed through the crack between the blinds and directly into my eyes. I groaned inwardly, cursing Portland’s blasted northerly latitude, but attempted a smile at the small person inviting me to play and roused my unwilling body for another round of early morning MagnaTiles. 

As we approach the summer solstice, the days can become almost unbearably bright. Our bodies are instinctively awakening and responding to the light, but as the school year comes to a close, we can be overstimulated with the pressures and endings that accompany it.

Meanwhile, the global violence, political strife, and existential crises in our wider world continue on. Even while the days are getting longer, there’s just not enough time in the day to do and finish and worry about all the things that need doing and finishing and worrying. 

But the setting sun approaches the horizon in a long and languid bow. The sun, it turns out, does not worry about what time she is going to set. She simply sets in her own good time, painting watercolor hues across the sky as she goes. 

 

A Community in Action

Lately, I’ve been reflecting on the pace that Leaven Community has been going this spring. We’ve been Organizing! Planting! Training! Grantwriting! Budgeting! Outreaching! Cooking! We’ve been working hard! 

And, as it turns out - and I’ve been hearing this from many of you - we’re tired!

We are doing all these things with a purpose, of course. We believe that building community grounded in justice, storytelling, diversity, and action is an antidote to the systems of oppression that dominate our lives. 

But what happens when we push ourselves so hard - even to organize a beautiful community - that we are denying our bodies’ and spirits’ needs for rest? Can it be that working so hard to dismantle systems of oppression in the world may actually reinforce the very systems we aim to resist?

The community organizing spiral has four (interdependent, nonlinear) stages: Sacred Encounter (Listening), Sacred Unveiling (Research), Sacred Action (Acting Together) and Sacred Pause (Celebration and Reflection). And I suspect it is time for our community to take a well-earned Sacred Pause.

Let the Light In

This summer at Leaven, it’s time to Let the Light In - time to welcome the joy, lean in to rest, and open up to love. Let’s take time to dream! Let’s make space for connection! And let’s allow what we’ve learned to settle into compost for the next season.

Check out our Events Calendar to learn about what’s happening this summer at Leaven. And in the meantime, let's allow the summer light to nourish our bodies and spirits - so that it can metabolize in our community to keep showing up for ourselves, for each other, and for the world.

Announcing: Now We're Cooking!

Potlucks, meetings, and holiday gatherings all are better with…FOOD! 

For our February board meeting, Leaven Board Member Meshal Alajmi made a delicious meal in the Leaven kitchen to share. The rest of us were inspired!

There are three events this month which are prompting us to think more systematically about food hospitality and mutual aid in our community: The March Board Meeting, a Garden Work Party, and the Salt & Light Easter Pancake Breakfast.

We’re going to cook together!

  • Thursday, March 14, 3-6 PM Make soup and prep salad ingredients food for the Leaven Board meeting (3/14) and Leaven Garden Work Party (3/16)

  • Thursday, March 28, 3-6 PM Preparations for Salt & Light Easter Pancake Breakfast 

Sign up for now we’re cooking!

Fill out the form below if you are interested in:

  • Contributing recipes/meal planning or signing up to bring ingredients

  • Cooking or doing meal prep on a regular basis with the community

  • Serving as one of a few Now We’re Cooking! Coordinators through August 2024

What comes next?

In the near future we hope to provide community members with meals who put a lot of time into the development of our community and could benefit from less time and energy spent on the dinner details every night.

We want to have frozen meals on hand for families in our community who are experiencing transitions such as births, hospitalizations, financial hardships, etc.

We’re exploring restarting a bulk food purchasing club, which Leaven members have organized in the past.

These efforts will strengthen the relationships we are developing as a Community Resilience Hub and unveil future opportunities for food justice in our community.