It’s that time of the year again. Shorter days, colder nights and the realization that yet another year is slipping away.
For those of us who clutch to whatever hope we can find, it’s also the time to begin thinking about all the promises ahead for 2008. To help mark the months, calendars that inspire and move me are a basic necessity. How else to make the wall over my desk a place for change rather then an endless list of tasks?
For the third year in a row, I’m ordering a copy of Celia Roberts’ wonderful calendar celebrating farm workers across the country. Fully bilingual with Spanish and English text, this year’s calendar, Gracias por los Campesinos, describes the daily labor of immigrants with honesty, respect and quiet gratitude.
(Photo by Celia Roberts)
Next year’s calendar is especially close to my heart, for Celia came to the Ferry Plaza Farmers Market while I was still teaching in the kitchen there. She helped me welcome the women from Las Salsitas the day they demonstrated recipes from their cookbook, and while she was there, she snapped a photo of Carl Rosato from Woodleaf Farm. If you flip to December in the 2008 calendar, you’ll see him helping some customers as they pick out peaches at his booth.
(Photo by Celia Roberts)
Every year’s calendar has a different visual theme, but the feeling is always the same: thanking community members for their valuable contributions. One of my favorites was last year’s collection of photographs, Gracias por los Abuelos, when Celia honored grandparents.
I highly recommend this year’s calendar for offices or kitchens where eating and cooking has become the mere stuff of work. It’s a warm reminder of the faces and lives and stories that bring us our food.
(Photo by Celia Roberts)
Hi Thy,
I know I already posted on Bay Area Bites, but I want to thank you for the warm response. I will definitely contact you when I make it back to San Francisco.
Also, I love your site and blog. I went to college for creative writing and fell in love with creative nonfiction–wish I could’ve taken your course this October! I also just finished a commitment with Teach for America and the do-gooder in me hopes to get back to doing something for my community soon. For now, I’m trying to influence small things where I work.
I’m curious about your time with nonprofit community development. I realize you are probably very busy, but if you have time to drop me an email sometime with pearls of wisdom about how to get into that arena, I’d be forever thankful.
Well, have a great afternoon.
Tessa