Eden's garden
Pisgah Village in Highland Park reenvisions low-income senior housing, reconnecting people to their food. And to one another.
http://articles.latimes.com/2010/aug/07/home/la-hm-pisgah-senior-housing-20100807

August 07, 2010|By Mary MacVean, Los Angeles Times
Ten women gathered around a few tables and at a sink one recent Friday afternoon to make soup, rice with vegetables and barbecued fish for a community potluck dinner.

That ordinary act - making a meal, repeated monthly - represents a profound plan to integrate food and shelter at Pisgah Village, a housing development in Highland Park for low-income senior citizens that aims to preserve the health and dignity of its residents.
Everywhere at Pisgah, named for the hill from which Moses saw the promised land, there are signs of that plan.
On Thursdays, there's a produce market, priced to accommodate people with modest means. Everyone seems conversant in notions such as pesticide-free and organic. There are classes in nutrition and cooking.
And there's Pisgah Village itself, a collection of rehabilitated bungalows and new Craftsman-style buildings, 47 homes in all in a compound full of gardens and a fountain. Once through the arched entrance, visitors see fruit trees and other food planted everywhere.
"Everything touches food, everything," said Alex Dorsey, the general manager of Equitableroots, the L.A.-based program that runs the market.
"We have a responsibility to help our communities be nourished," said Channa Grace, the executive director of Women Organizing Resources, Knowledge and Services, or WORKS. The independent nonprofit organization has developed more than 1,100 homes for people of modest means - those who earn $23,790 to $47,580 for a family of four in 2009, or 30% to 60% of the area's median income.
The food programs at Pisgah and at other WORKS projects are an effort to alleviate the problems of getting fresh, nutritious food, Grace said, along the lines of teaching people to fish rather than giving them one.
Finis Yoakum, a physician and faith healer who also became an early Pentecostal leader, founded a religious compound more than a century ago off what is now Avenue 60 in this northeast L.A. neighborhood. He called it Pisgah, and his vision led him to open the property to outcasts and the destitute. After his death in 1920, the houses and church on the site were used by successive Christian groups.

In 2002, Richard Kim, the son of a Pentecostal minister at the church, partnered with WORKS to renovate the property. The adjacent Christ Faith Mission church remains today.