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DESCRIPTION:STOCKTON, CA ~ Our Farm to Fork Friday, A Taste of Africa activities share 
 our deep Pan African connections with our Stockton - Asaba Sister City and 
 global opportunities linking our local food systems in a good way. \n\nThe 
 founder of the African Baptist Church of Stockton final resting place is 
 found within Block 27-Stockton Rural Cemetery along with many of the 
 earliest pioneers of Pan African ancestry, both those formally born 
 enslaved and freeborn.  Early California Pioneers of Pan African Heritage 
 endured separate and unequal treatment by law, for many, many generations 
 before and after the US Civil War. \n\nCurrent residents of Pan African 
 ancestry share local childhood memories of laboring in difficult 
 Agriculture conditions and most have no intention of allowing themselves or 
 their children to explore plentiful agriculture jobs, lucrative careers and 
 agribusiness opportunities.   \n\n2018 the City of Stockton, California, is 
 once again considered as a finalist to become an All-American City while 
 also considering putting positive inclusive fresh new face on a new City of 
 Stockton Food and Agriculture public policy platform. \n\nOur Stockton 
 -Asaba Sister City is poised to help share our amazing connected historical 
 legacy through our early mother's and father's of Pan African ancestry 
 throughout San Joaquin County in a way that honors and celebrates the 
 foundation of our culture long before the MAAFA or terrible occurrences 
 challenging systemic institutional racism in the aftermath of the Trans 
 Atlantic Slave Trade.  \n\nOur Farm to Fork Friday, A Taste of Africa will 
 share how local food systems can connect the distant past to a mutually 
 beneficial future, let the church say, Amen. \n\nAgritourism with the 
 California Pan African Heritage Trail is charged with identifying, 
 documenting and preserving the contributions by people of African Ancestry 
 while connecting with regional food systems in the State of 
 California.\n\nThe historical meaning and knowledge of California Slavery 
 and Jim Crow has changed over time yet, Etymology Studies of the origin of 
 words and how historical meanings change over time, is food for thought. 
 \n\nThe Germanic word frei, thought to mean outside of the fundal system, 
 “beloved, friend, to love, clear of obstruction; sense of unrestrained 
 movement” has a very different historical context from the unspoken and 
 taboo conversation about “Chattel Slavery in the State of California.” 
 \n\nWhat is freedom to someone not considered a human being? \n\nChattel 
 slavery, property, did not consider an “enslaved human being” thus this 
 salient distinction remains the unspoken value and belief often in question 
 today. \n\nIn 1803, Reverend Jeremiah King was reportedly born in the low 
 country of Georgia and his amazing life ended July 1, 1883 and his body was 
 laid to rest within Block 27~Stockton Rural Cemetery. \n\nGeorgia was 
 originally claimed as part of the Spanish Mission System, to include the 
 costal Port of Savannah, GA aligned with St. Augustine, FL and the southern 
 ports of Mobile, AL and New Orleans, LA with New Spain's headquarters now 
 in Havana, Cuba. \n\nThe economic bonanza of “free agriculture labor” 
 the original stock as “enslaved human beings” from West Africa, 
 today’s Gambia, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Ghana, Nigeria and other nation 
 states utilized human capital including specialized regional agriculture 
 skills to produce the highly profitable commodities of “indigo and 
 rice” along the low county of Georgia and the Carolinas, prior to the 
 invention of the cotton gin and King Cotton. \n\nUnique West African foods 
 and agricultural production methods helped facilitate retention of ancient 
 African cultural traditions that we see in our profound historical legacy 
 and contributions to the State of California. \n\nBy 1849, Jeremiah King 
 and his wife are given freedom papers, gold and passage to migrate from 
 bowels of “chattel slavery in the deep south” to join the California 
 Gold Rush at Monterey, California. \n\nJeremiah King struck it rich in the 
 southern gold mining district and settled in San Joaquin County by 
 purchasing over 100 acres of fertile agriculture land near today's City of 
 Lathrop and later a full square block in the Historic Stockton Waterfront 
 District. \n\nIt is recorded that “often” Rev. Jeremiah King and his 
 wife would travel 40 miles to Sacramento to worship in the basement of the 
 Chinese Baptist Church, which birthed today's Shiloh Baptist Church. 
 \n\nBeginning September 1854 the African Baptist Church of Stockton was 
 organized and began hosting weekly Church services.   In 1859, Rev. King 
 successfully petitioned the founding father of Stockton, Captain Weber, for 
 church property on W.Washington St., to facilitate plans to relocate the 
 purchased wooden church building from Rev. James Woods and the Presbyterian 
 Church of Stockton.   A historical marker marks the general location today. 
 \n\nDuring the US Civil War, Rev. Jeremiah King successfully petitioned the 
 Trustees of Stockton Rural Cemetery to establish Block 27, “a colored 
 section” as the final resting place for people of Pan African ancestry.  
 Today, the amazing historical contributions by people of Pan African 
 ancestry remains an open secret, hidden with the grave markers within Block 
 27 ~ Stockton Rural Cemetery. \n\nOur ongoing task will remove separate and 
 unequal care by establishing equity and equal opportunity within Block 
 27-Stockton Rural Cemetery while researching, documenting and preserving 
 the authentic Pan African Heritage for future generations is a serious 
 challenge. \n\nFarm to Fork Friday - A Taste of Africa helps build a 
 brighter future for the City of Stockton, California, connecting us to our 
 Pan African Heritage while continuing the journey to strengthen the 
 connection to Asaba, Delta State, Nigeria.  The Nigerian Trade Mission 
 shared Juneteenth 2017 was completed in December 2017 and follow up 
 conversation are essential.\n\nWhen we remember, share and celebrate Rev. 
 Jeremiah King by identifying, documenting and preserving his church and the 
 community contributions of those early Stockton Pan African Pioneers 
 interred within Block 27-Stockton Rural Cemetery, today’s obstacles are 
 put in proper perspective. \n\nMany of our friends in West Africa and 
 Governor of Delta State Dr. Arthur Ifeanyi Okowa will be delighted to find 
 distant relatives, here in Stockton, California and residents from 
 throughout Northern California sharing Egusi Soup and Pounded Yam looking 
 forward to returning home in a good way.\n\n###\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2018/03/22/18807660.php
SUMMARY:Farm to Fork Friday, A Taste of Africa in the Historic Stockton Waterfront District
LOCATION:Stockton Downtown Alliance ~ Board Room\n125 Bridge Place, 3rd Floor, 
 Stockton, CA 95202\n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2018/03/22/18807660.php
DTSTART:20180323T203000Z
DTEND:20180323T233000Z
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