Sacred Places Summer 2012 | Page 15

Broadway United Methodist Church: Community Organizing and Gardening There are many ways a congregation can mobilize a community for the common good. In some cases, it works for institutions to create ministries and programs that address social ills. But focusing on what the community lacks and importing solutions can sometimes be counterproductive. Instead, as the story of Broadway United Methodist Church (BUMC) in Indianapolis, IN, demonstrates, efforts to improve a community can harness the gifts that are already present. In 2005, BUMC initiated “Miracle on 29th Street: Realizing Dreams, Building Community,” a campaign to raise funds to maintain the church property, sustain its ministries, promote new ones, and engage in community development. To accomplish the latter goal, the church hired “roving listeners,” community organizers who would survey the Mapleton-Fall Creek neighborhood to find its strengths. Those assets, not social ills or economic hardships, would be the starting point of development. Community organizer De’Amon Harges started roving and listening in early 2007. By simply talking to local residents, he discovered the interests and talents of the community. But one discovery stood out in particular. “I found many gifts,” recounts Harges, “but the one that was most surprising to me was that there were over 75 gardeners.” This discovery made it clear why a community garden had shut down three years earlier: not only was it poorly maintained, but also it simply was not part of the pulse of the neighborhood. It had been created in a top-down fashion, ignoring the fact that the area was already filled with gardeners who worked in their backyards and front porches. It became clear that the way to build the neighborhood’s capacity would be bottom-up, by strengthening its existing structures. As opposed to focusing on what people are not doing, “we build on what people are actually doing,” says Harges. “We build on [their] gifts, talents, and dreams.” “We saw what had been around us all along. What previously had been invisible was made visible.” Reverend Mike Mather, Broadway United Methodist Church, IN BUMC’s model of community development is asset-based, meaning that organizers seek out pre-existing resources and build connections between those assets and institutions. In the case of food and sacred places, Reverend Mike Mather explains the two-step process, “One, talk to the gardeners, find out what they are growing, what they’d be willing to sell, what price they’d be willing to offer, and how they’d be willing to distribute, and then, two, talk to churches and businesses in this neighborhood and find out who would be willing to buy.” Thus, the congregation facilitated Community organizer De’Amon Harges (in striped hat) serves as a “roving listener” in the Mapleton-Fall Creek neighborhood of Indianapolis, IN. He surveys residents to learn about their interests, talents, and vision for their neighborhood. Photo courtesy of Broadway United Methodist Church. Sacred Places • Summer 2012 • 14