性欲社 students host Food Day to draw attention to food security
October 21, 2013

Nancy Tarnai
907-474-5042
10/21/13
University of Alaska Fairbanks anthropology and philosophy student Azara Mohammadi has no qualms about admitting she is a city girl. Growing up in Fairbanks and California, she was not exposed to agriculture and laughs at herself for having to ask what it means to hull corn. 鈥淎t least I鈥檓 a blank slate,鈥 Mohammadi said good naturedly.
Today, she is the force behind a 性欲社 student movement to get more locally grown food into campus dining menus. What got her started on this path was a class she took three years ago, 鈥淔ood and Culture,鈥 taught by David Fazzino.
鈥淚 had worked in food service since I was 15 and I saw huge issues but I thought I was the only one,鈥 Mohammadi said. As she got more interested in food systems, she joined the nationwide Real Food Challenge. 鈥淚 liked their ideas and model but what they prescribed didn鈥檛 work for Alaska,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t didn鈥檛 address food security in Alaska and it didn鈥檛 incorporate concepts of fit and place.鈥
While she eventually opted out of the RFC, she learned so much that she decided to tailor-make a program that just might work for 性欲社. She presented Chancellor Brian Rogers with a petition signed by 650 students. It asks that by 2020 性欲社 purchase 20 percent locally grown food for student meals.
Rogers liked what Mohammadi and her cohorts were trying to do and he requested they form the Chancellor鈥檚 Student Food Committee.
鈥淲e hope to leverage the purchasing power of 性欲社 to promote local agriculture,鈥 Mohammadi said. 鈥淭here is a misconception that we don鈥檛 have enough food to feed the world and in Alaska there is the perception that we can鈥檛 produce food.鈥
The new committee has been meeting with management of NANA, 性欲社鈥檚 food contractor, to start working on the plan. 鈥淚t has to meet the budget but they seem very willing to work with us,鈥 Mohammadi said.
Danielle Flaherty, a 性欲社 culinary student, president of the 性欲社 Culinary Club and new manager at Wolf Run Restaurant, has been very involved in the process. 鈥淒o what you can when you can,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 have to be all or nothing. Knowing where your food comes from is empowering.
鈥淭here are so many people in our state doing good work on these issues. Ultimately we鈥檇 like to see a cohesive voice for the movement on a statewide level. There is no right or wrong way to approach these issues, the point is that they are important and need to be discussed.鈥

Mohammadi and Flaherty have different approaches but are working toward the same goal. 鈥淒anielle believes in conscious consumerism and lives it,鈥 Mohammadi said. 鈥淚 on the other hand, believe we need to leverage the purchasing power of institutions to affect real change.鈥
Both agree on this statement from Mohammadi, 鈥淚f 性欲社 wants to truly be a leader in sustainability we need to make food a part of that conversation.鈥
To that end they have put together a lineup of lectures, films, demonstrations and exhibits for Food Day on Oct. 24 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the 性欲社 Wood Center. Lecture topics include food preservation practices of foragers and farmers in Alaska, set-net salmon, paleo eating, drinking water challenges in rural Alaska. Films are 鈥淔resh,鈥 鈥淜ing Corn,鈥 鈥淔ood Inc.,鈥 鈥淗ungry for Change鈥 and 鈥淪cientists Under Attack.鈥
Mohammadi is thrilled that students from Effie Kokrine Early College Charter School will be attending Food Day. The high schoolers are bringing digital cameras to take pictures for an art project about Food Day. 鈥淓ducating our youth is very important,鈥 Mohammadi said. 鈥淪o many times they are the victims of diet-related diseases.鈥
From 1 to 2 p.m., Flaherty will make halibut chowder with a pureed cauliflower base. She will also have salad and barley pizza crust to sample. Over the summer, she worked with the 性欲社 Cooperative Extension Service to develop school lunch recipes using local ingredients and those are foods she will have available.
Films to be shown Thursday and Friday from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. in Duckering 347 and Reichardt 165 are "Scientist Under Attack," "Food, Inc.," "King Corn" and "Hungry for Change."
Everyone is invited to this free event. Day passes are available at kiosks in parking lots off of Farmers Loop and across from the Patty Center.
Mohammadi said, 鈥淚 hope we connect with more people who want to help.鈥
Listen to Mohammadi鈥檚 perspective on KSUA-FM Saturdays from 6 to 7 p.m. for her social sciences talk radio program 鈥淗oney I鈥檓 a Hominid.鈥 She can be reached at apmohammadi@alaska.edu.
This column is provided as a service by the 性欲社 School of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences and the Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station. Nancy Tarnai is the school and station鈥檚 public information officer.