• About MT
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • STORE
  • RSS Feeds

Get our issue, highlights, free stuff and more!

  • Blogs
  • News
  • Arts+Culture
  • Music
  • Screens
  • Food
  • Calendar
  • Best of Detroit
  • Classifieds
  • Slideshows
  • Free Stuff
  • Careers
  • Dating
  • Clubs
  • Archives
  • MMJ
  • Blowout
  • Adult Classifieds
  • Calendar

    • Latest Comments
    • Popular Threads
    • Most Read
    Most Read
    • They Don’t Care What You Think They don’t care what you want | 5/15/2013
    • Penrose Rising Changes are under way. | 5/15/2013
    • Short takes Dressing up as a woman, technical butt-plug question, steal some porn mags, drunk straight girls, spanking someone with consent is sexy, and more | 5/15/2013
    • Film Review: Upstream Color A brain-controlling parasite gives a man the locust-like ability to suck the will — and cash — from his unwitting victim. | 4/24/2013
    • Film Review: Star Trek into Darkness Abrams’ second reboot goes where we’ve all been before, but boldly. | 5/17/2013
    • Hipster Art House Lays Stakes in Eastern Market 1XRUN’s lowbrow cool is downtown at Eastern Market — art for the masses. | 5/15/2013
    • Why Brooks Patterson Was Right Coming Out and Courage | 5/8/2013

    Print Email

    Stir It Up

    Food for thought

    Hangin' with Harangua and finding good local food

    Photo: N/A, License: N/A


    By Larry Gabriel

    Published: February 6, 2013

     

    I met Mulenga Harangua on the corner of Cass and Forest in Detroit last Friday evening. He’d told me to meet him there so we could go to dinner. I figured we’d be dining at the Cass Cafe as we’ve enjoyed a few evenings there. He was waiting for me, with his bicycle, when I arrived.

    “Man, it’s cold as heck out here. How can you be riding that bicycle?”

    “It’ll be warm when we get inside,” Mulenga said with Buddhist matter-of-factness. He started walking toward the parking lot next to the Cass Corridor Commons building.

    “Do you ever think about getting a car?”

    “Man, I can pretty much live for a year on what it costs to drive a car around,” Mulenga said as he cut across the parking lot.

    “Where are we going?” I asked. “I thought we were going to eat. There aren’t any restaurants nearby in this direction.”

    “We’re going to have dinner right here. It’s Food Justice Friday. The first Friday of every month, the East Michigan Environmental Action Council (EMEAC) and the People’s Kitchen Detroit sponsor a meal here. It’s open to the public and you pay whatever you want between $5 and $15.” Mulenga chained his bicycle to the ramp leading up to the entrance and we went in.

    Lottie Spady, associate director of EMEAC, sat at a table near the door collecting names and contact numbers from attendees. We put our contributions in a container on her table and took seats over near the window. I surveyed the crowd. About 90 people were sitting at tables or milling around chatting. Folks called to each other across the room and others who obviously had not seen each other in a while embraced. More than half the crowd was made up of teens and young adults. A banner across one of the walls read “Environmental Justice Media & Food Justice.”

    Beneath the banner sat DJ Bryce surrounded by sound equipment and working the mic with announcements and music. He mentioned there was a sign-up for the open mic that would accompany the meal and called out to various folks in the crowd. Jaleel Muhammad from Earthworks Urban Farm wandered the room taking pictures.

    “See, we get dinner and entertainment here for a good price,” Mulenga said, puffing up in his seat like he owned the place.

    “I hope the food is good.”

    Mulenga went over to chat with someone. I wandered over to Spady and asked her what the purpose of Food Justice Friday was. “It’s to create an environment to meet people where they are so they can get involved in progressive activities,” said Spady. Indeed, there were announcements for various organizations and upcoming events steadily streaming from DJ Bryce.

    Just then the DJ introduced chef Angela Newsom, who talked about the evening’s menu. She mentioned the cold weather affected what they cooked and sort of apologized that, “Tonight’s meal is not as local as we would like it to be.”

    “Local food is where it’s at,” said Mulenga. “If it’s grown near where you live it’s better for you, and it’s better for the planet because you don’t have to drive it around in trucks. The carbon footprint is smaller.”

    Newsom went on to tell us the menu: roasted winter vegetable jambalaya (vegetarian and with chorizo), black-eyed peas, fried green tomatoes, kale salad, kimchi, sauerkraut, blackberry jam and bread donated by Avalon bakery. It sounded good to me. After coming in from the cold I was ready to eat anything.

    We filled our plates and sat down, dining while wordsmiths like Patuka, King Code and G Mack spit out their lines. “Living with a purpose, while roaming this earth’s surface,” rapped G Mack. He was all about family. In mentioning his daughter he said, “I know what a woman is like, so I’m a raise one.”

    During a break in the action Mulenga asked me, “So what do you think about this Belle Isle business?”

    “I think that anybody who considers it a jewel today wasn’t around when it was really glittery. The place is in terrible shape now. A few years ago I suggested that we hold our family reunion there. My family shouted that idea down. They took it to a park in the suburbs.”

    “So you think the City Council should have given it away to the state?”

    “It wasn’t a giveaway; it was a lease for 30 years. On the surface it seemed like a good move. We don’t give up ownership and the state takes over the cost of fixing the place up and maintaining it. However, it seems like the details of what the state was going to do were not nailed down. That’s just bad politics. I think Gov. Snyder and Mayor Bing are both businessmen who don’t know how to work things through politically. And City Council, they’re not much better. Good politicians get this stuff hammered out before they take it to a vote. When things come down to a vote there should be no surprises. There is a glitch somewhere in the system.”

    “Well, I don’t trust the state,” Mulenga said. “Once they get their hands on it they’d probably figure out some way to keep it. As they say, possession is nine-tenths of the law.”

    “So now you’re falling back on some schoolyard saying?”

    “Isn’t school where you are supposed to learn your lessons?”

    “So we’re just going to go to hell in a handbasket with all our stuff clutched tightly in our arms. I think if people really wanted to make things work out instead of clutching pathetically to power it would be like what Patuka said earlier, ‘The differences between us can be dissolved in a beat of a drum.’ I guess we get what we vote for.”

    “I vote for the sovereign state of Belle Isle,” said Mulenga. “I actually lived in the woods there for a couple of weeks. It wasn’t bad. I mostly lived on fish I caught in the river and stuff picnic people left behind.”

    “Well, that’s another idea making the rounds. One of these Ayn Rand conservatives wrote a book proposing that some corporate entity buy Belle Isle from Detroit for a billion dollars and turn it into a sovereign state. People would buy citizenship for $300,000 each, though the population would be limited to 35,000. Taxes would be limited. They would have businesses in Detroit, but all the management functions would be centered on Belle Isle.”

    1 2 Next Page

    > Email Larry Gabriel

    We welcome user discussion on our site, under the following guidelines:

    To comment you must first create a profile and sign-in with a verified DISQUS account or social network ID. Sign up here.

    Comments in violation of the rules will be denied, and repeat violators will be banned. Please help police the community by flagging offensive comments for our moderators to review. By posting a comment, you agree to our full terms and conditions. Click here to read terms and conditions.
    comments powered by Disqus


    Metro Times

    733 St Antoine

    Detroit, MI 48226

    Main: (313) 961-4060

    Advertising: (313) 961-4060

    Classified: (313) 962-5277

    Contact MT | Advertise | National Advertising | Work Here

    All parts of this site Copyright © 2013 Detroit Metro Times.

    News

    News+Views

    Politics & Prejudices

    News Hits

    Stir It Up

    Higher Ground

    Comics

    Blogs

    Music Blahg

    News Blawg

    Reckless Eyeballing

    The B-Roll

    Blowout Blog

    Best of Detroit

    Best of Detroit

    Best of Detroit 2010

    Best of Map

    Music

    Music Homepage

    Album Reviews

    Add Music Event

    Search Music Events

    Arts

    Arts Homepage

    Book Reviews

    Culture

    Culture Homepage

    Savage Love

    Motor City Cribs & Rides

    Screens

    Screens Homepage

    Film Reviews

    Idiot Boxing

    Events

    Calendar

    Search Calendar Events

    Enter Calendar Event

    Art

    Benefit

    Civics

    Comedy

    Dance

    Family

    Film

    Talks Plus

    LGBT

    Literary

    Music

    Special events

    Sports

    Theater

    Food

    Food Homepage

    Find a Restaurant

    Clubs

    Find a Club

    Classified

    Classified Home

    Place Ad

    Jobs

    Services

    Stuff For Sale

    Massage

    Personals

    Adult

    Automotive

    Cars, Trucks+More

    Services

    Real Estate

    Real Estate

    For Rent

    Roommates

    Archives

    Search Archives

    Search Authors

    Search Issues

    Latest Comments

    Get Our Newsletters

    Enter your email address to get our weekly emails.

     

    Metro Times Stuff

    Win Free Stuff

    Velvet Rope Photos

    Event Photos

    Social Media

    Facebook

    MySpace

    Flickr

    Twitter

    Youtube

    RSS Feed

     Full Feed