Leah Penniman (1980- )

August 12, 2024 
/ Contributed By: Samuel Momodu

Leah Penniman on The Laura Flanders Show in 2019

Leah Penniman on The Laura Flanders Show in 2019

Photo from the Laura Flanders Show (CC BY 3.0)

Leah Penniman is a farmer and food sovereignty activist who cofounded Soul Fire Farm near Grafton, New York, in 2010. Penniman was born in 1980 to Adele Smith, an African American woman and a White father in Central Massachusetts. Penniman’s parents divorced at an early age. At age 16, Penniman began farming, working with The Food Project in Boston, Massachusetts. The Food Project is a non-profit organization that focuses on education about health, leadership, charity, and sustainable agriculture. The organization is also known for employing urban teenagers on farms and for community building.

Penniman attended Clark University, a private research university in Worcester, Massachusetts. She received her BA in Environmental Science and International Development in 2002. She received her MA in Science Education at Clark University in 2003. After graduating, Penniman lived in a food desert in Albany, New York, and worked on the U.S. Government-sponsored Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC).

In 2006, 26-year-old Penniman purchased 72 acres of land in Grafton, New York, to cofounded what would become Soul Fire Farm in 2010. The Soul Fire Farm’s purpose was to end racism and injustice in the food system. The organization adopted its name from a song, Soulfire, by Jamaican musician Lee “Cratch” Perry.

Penniman worked at the Food Project, Farm School, and Many Hands Organic Farm before starting Soul Fire Farm. She also worked internationally with farmers in Ghana, Haiti, and Mexico. Penniman served as a science teacher at University Park Campus School in Worcester, Massachusetts, Tech Valley High School in Rensselaer, New York, and Darrow School in New Lebanon, New York. She was also a founding director of the Harriet Tubman Democratic High School in Albany, New York.

In 2018, Penniman published a book called Farming While Black, which was designed to create sustainable, equitable, profitable, and dignified relationships with food that historically disenfranchised communities, including especially African Americans, eat and the land that produces the food. The Soros Racial Justice Fellowship, Fullbright Program, the Presidential Award for Science Teaching, NYS Health Emerging Innovator Awards, and the Andrew Goodman Foundation have all recognized Penniman’s work with Soul Force Farm.

In 2019, Penniman was awarded the James Beard Foundation Leadership Award for facilitating food sovereignty programs. Penniman identifies her sexuality as being genderqueer. She is in a relationship with a partner, Jonah Vitale-Wolff, and they have two children, Neshima and Emet Vitale-Penniman.

About the Author

Author Profile

Samuel Momodu, a native of Nashville, Tennessee, received his Associate of Arts Degree in History from Nashville State Community College in December 2014 and a Bachelor of Arts Degree in History from Tennessee State University in May 2016. He received his Master of Arts Degree in history from Southern New Hampshire University in June 2019.

Momoduโ€™s main areas of research interest are African and African American History. His passion for learning Black history led him to contribute numerous entries to BlackPast.org for the last few years. Momodu has also worked as a history tour guide at President Andrew Jacksonโ€™s plantation home near Nashville, the Hermitage. He is currently an instructor at Tennessee State University. His passion for history has also helped him continue his education. In 2024, he received his Ph.D. in History from Liberty University, writing a dissertation titled The Protestant Vatican: Black Churches Involvement in the Nashville Civil Rights Movement 1865-1972. He hopes to use his Ph.D. degree to become a university professor or professional historian.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Momodu, S. (2024, August 12). Leah Penniman (1980- ). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/leah-penniman-1980/

Source of the Author's Information:

โ€œLeah Penniman,โ€ Soul Fire Farm, https://www.soulfirefarm.org/leah-penniman/; โ€œLeah Penniman,โ€ Farming While Black, https://www.farmingwhileblack.org/team; โ€œLeah Penniman,โ€ One Earth, https://www.oneearth.org/agricultural-hero-leah-penniman/.

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