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Hello new faces 🙂

Hooray for the new Turkey Fryer!

Heats 15 gallons pot of water in 35 min

Costs ~$15 to refill propane tank @ Action Rental (Orange Building) 11th and Folsom

Safety Tips:

  • Keep fryer in full view while burner is on.
  • Be aware of stability – may easily tip over
  • Place fryer in an open area away from all walls, fences, or other structures including children and animals
  • Never use in, on, or under any structure that can catch fire.
  • Raise and lower food slowly to reduce splatter and avoid burns.
  • Cover bare skin when adding or removing food
  • Immediately turn gas off if fire occurs
  • Top oil residue can be flammable – take precautions
  • Never use water to extinguish a grease fire

For those interested in purchasing cookware:  save up to 50% @ instawares.com

Rainbow Grocery:

– Days that people picked up were talked about

-We agreed to keep the status quo Ask staff if they have any concerns, ideas

Alternative food sources:

-Farmer’s Markets (late afternoon) are usually generous about donating food

-Produce Alley (Jerrold Ave @ Bay Shore Blvd near Cesar Chavez)

Someone shared — 5-digit SKU identifier starting with numeric:

9 = organic

8 = genetically modified

4 = conventionally grown

Outreach:

-A specialized letter soliciting food/utensils, etc. should be readily accessible – refer to FNB book

-fliering/stickers  – Zach and Robert?

-$25 for 250 stickers from stickerguy.com; $10 printing fliers

Bikecart update:

-Bike cart confiscated, Cops claiming to know nothing about the bikecarts’ whereabouts

-We’ll have a new bikecart in 2-weeks

-Ray has offered his services/space to weld the current cart (and mentioned we could build future carts if we paid for welding supplies)

Celebrate the 30th Year Anniversary of FNB @ Soupstock 4/19:

-FNB Sponsor

-Convergence 4/18 discussing food justice, workshops, enigma of plastic spoons, community gardens, local + csa boxes, etc. Location TBA

-Diamond Dave said La Plebe has expressed interest in performing

-Upcoming bi-weekly committee meetings

Special opportunity to hear a presentation from  FNB Cofounder Keith McHenry discussing effective community organizing.  Contact Taos FNB Collective to schedule this valuable presentation.  Phone is 575-776-3880. You can also email Nyna at nyna@foodnotbombs.net

Starting FNB:

-Potential new alternate Sunday location TBA

Really Really Free Market:

-This Sat 1/31 @ El Balazo/Sub Mission

2187 Mission St 1-5pm

-Kitchen @ Zach’s place 10am

Russia FNB:

Thank you Daria for sharing your experiences in Russia!

(Read Daria’s article on SF FNB homepage)

-Tension still exists since St. Petersburg killing 2005

-Help support Russia by posting on their forum @ foodnotbombs.ru

fnbrussiaTwo bay area Food Not Bombs volunteers, Daria and Anya, traveled and met with food not bombs (“Еда Вместо Бомб”) collectives in Russia. These chapters face many obstacles including limited availability of  food and violence at the hands of police and fascist groups.

They are in need of support and we are encouraging community members and other FNB chapters to write letters and establish correspondence (contact information can be found at the end of this entry). Daria and Anya have written an account of their experiences  which you can read below. Some photos of a recent FNB convergence are available on this site.

Please share this information widely!

From Food Not Bombs Russia, With Love: Building Transnational Solidarity

Anya and Daria

When we traveled to Russia this January, we learned that nine Russian cities held FNB solidarity actions to protest the arrest of the RNC 8 at the Minneapolis Food Bombs house. Along with meals, Russian FNB groups protested with banners in front of US embassies and gave out literature denouncing the persecution of RNC 8 under the Patriot Act. “We say NO to the repression of Food Not Bombs groups in USA! Freedom to our comrades!” read the leaflets in Varonezh, a city in southwestern Russia. In Moscow, FNB activists were met with police violence and arrest

This is solidarity blurring transnational boundaries, and uniting a movement across the world. Today our Russian comrades face repression, let’s stand up to support them!

fnbrussia2On New Years, FNB Russia held regional meetings across the country. We traveled from Berkeley to Moscow to meet with members of FNB from five Russian cities. We passed along a lovely package of photos, videos, and zines from SF FNB and the Long Haul. Some activists asked us – When you return, tell all the activists you know about the repression we face. Stay in touch, help us form supportive relationships with FNB in the US. These are our observations about repression and resistance in Russia:

We noticed a growing nationalist sentiment in Russian daily life. There is a new metro station opening in Moscow, it’s called The Slavic Boulevard. The newly designed metro train is called The Russian. Within the Russian ultra right-wing circles, the line between nationalism and neo-fascism is barely discernible. The difference is especially blurry on days like November 4th, the Day of National Unity, when the right-wing citizens march through Russia’s main streets. They give nazi salutes and chant – Glory to Russia! Russia for Russians! This phenomenon is called the Russian March, and it began recently in 2005.

We learned a lot about neo-fascism and xenophobia from Lubava, an activist who helped organize the FNB regional meeting in Moscow. “Attacks on immigrants occur daily; we hear about several nationalism-motivated murders every day,” she said. The week before our arrival, the market where Lubava buys* produce for FNB was bombed. Lubava believes markets are targeted with violence because the vendors are primarily immigrants and Russian people of color. [*It is common for Russian FNB groups to buy food out of their own pockets or to steal it; there is so little surplus food that donations and dumpster diving yield no results].

Each FNB activist we met cited the neo-fascist movement as a major threat to thefnbrussia3 radical left in their city. FNB in St. Petersburg has been attacked after serving meals. FNB Chelyabinsk explained that FNB groups cannot freely use the internet to share information about cookhouses or meals. If they post information about locations, they risk being targeted by fascist groups in their homes or being met by a gang of fascists at their servings: “In Yekaterinburg, there have been instances where neo-nazis have threatened to disrupt FNB meals. Additional activists had to accompany FNB meals so that nothing went down.”  Groups of fascists are known for organized attacks on people of non-Slavic appearance, the poor, and the radical left.

In 2008, FNB Russia organized a safe and solid communication strategy – the publication of a monthly zine. Each issue publishes reports on meals and radical actions from FNB groups across Russia. The zine supports the growth of FNB in smaller Russian cities by creating a sense of connection to the greater movement. Fourteen cities submitted material for the last issue, which came out in time for the regional meetings. It can be found at hippy.ru/print/fnbgaz7.pdf.

In addition to the constant threat of fascist violence, radical left groups struggle against state repression: “The Russian government supports the ultra-right, while antifascist views are violently repressed,” Lubava explains. “In many cities across Russia the law enforcement and neo-nazis work together.” FNB Saratov says “… the local police force is closely tied to fascist groups… when antifascists are detained by the police, the kids have it really bad. They’re beaten, questioned, and tortured.” Antifascists in Minsk, Belarus write about repression in Russia: “The governing bodies interfere with anarchist and antifascist actions and concerts, detain and beat up activists, but when it comes to the neo-nazis… the police either let them go without serious consequences or don’t pursue them at all. In Russia, the government and neo-nazism are one in the same. This promotes the continuation of attacks and murders. In October, Feodor Filatov was murdered on the doorstep of his own apartment; he was one of the founders of the skinhead-antifascist movement in Moscow.”

On the 20th of December, Saratov held a solidarity action against police violence: “… we hung a six meter banner across our bridge that read ‘POLICE MURDER, NOT ONLY IN GREECE.’ We gave out leaflets. One side talked about the murder of Alexander Grigoropoulos We won’t forget him. The other side talked about the murder of Armen Gasparan [an Armenian man], in Saratov, on the 20th of October. Drunk police officers detained him for stealing. First they beat him, and then they poured kerosene all over him, and set him on fire. They kicked his body until he died.” When we returned to the bay, we were horrified to learn about the murder of Oscar Grant by the BART police. Police violence is a transnational phenomenon, something we can stand against together.

fnbrussia4Oppression is always met with resistance. Russia’s growing Antifascist movement challenges neo-fascist and state violence. Antifascism unites many groups in Russia’s radical left – anarchists, punks, skinheads, hippies, vegans/animal rights activists, sXe – straightedge, hardcore, and others. Antifascists use diverse strategies to propagate anti-racist views: zine publications, independent media sources, art, theater performances, graffiti, direct action, and community organizing. There is a movement for militant resistance within antifascism, called Antifa. Members of the Antifa organize non-hierarchal groups that practice street fighting, as a self-defense strategy against fascist attack.

We learned of other forms of resistance. One of the Moscow FNB activists we met works with the direct action art group Voina (War). Voina commemorated the last anniversary of the October Revolution (Nov 7th) by scaling the famous Hotel Ukraina with a green laser, and projecting a 12 story skull and crossbones across the Moscow River and on to the Russian parliament building. We think they chose the jolly roger to symbolize anarchy and piracy, as well as the toxic government located inside.

Activists from FNB Archangelsk work closely with the animal rights movement. Archangelsk is a northern city on the coast of the White Sea, where baby seals are culled for their fur. Tasya of FNB Archangelsk told us about their anti-fur actions: “In February, radical activists blocked the entrance to the regional administration building, by chaining themselves to the doors. Others unfurled a banner that read ‘Kiselev, Save the Lives of the Seals.’ Kiselev was our regional governor at the time… We held a contest in our city’s grade schools for the best drawing on the theme of defending baby seals. In April 2008 we held a protest [against seal culling where] … we handed out the children’s drawings of seals.” This year, the Archangelsk animal rights activists achieved a temporary national ban on the culling of white baby seals.

We noticed that sexism and homophobia are rampant in Russia. When we asked FNB activists about movements for LGBT and women’s rights in their cities, the standard reply was “we don’t have any of that, there isn’t anything to tell, we don’t have any activists of that kind, no one is really interested.” We did meet one active feminist, Natasha from FNB Saratov. Natasha is part of an anarcho-feminist art collective called VolgaGirrlz. They use mixed media to promote feminist ideas and issues. VolgaGirrlz shot a short film about housewives leaving the boundaries of their kitchen, becoming cosmonauts, and exploring the far reaches of the universe. You can watch it at volga-girrlz.livejournal.com. Other women we met were not in organized feminist groups, but they were vocal about feminism and women’s rights within their own lives.

Attempts to organize for LGBT rights in Moscow have been met with institutional and civil disapproval and violence. Lubava participated in Pride- Moscow 2006 : “150 LGBT people gathered in front of Moscow City Hall. Police officers, fascists, and Orthodox Christian extremists violently beat not only the Russian LGBT, but the attending deputies of the Euro Parliament as well… Slogans like ‘NO to LGBT Discrimination’ were labeled as homosexual propaganda in all mass media resources.” Today, all gay pride parades are prohibited by the Moscow mayor. Despite the violence and the bans, those that are active in the decidedly underground LGBT movement continue to organize. They find that ties with international LGBT organizations are very supportive.

Please support FNB in Russia. Form a relationship of mutual aid with a FNB chapter in a Russian city! Start up regular contact, exchange photos, videos, news. Plan solidarity actions! Share your political strategies, and struggles, and learn from theirs. Help translate radical left literature into Russian (especially about women’s and LGBT rights, fair trade and organic food). And if you ever get a chance to visit Russia, get in touch with the local chapter of Food Not Bombs.

Russian FNB Forum – foodnotbombs.ru

Contacts of groups we meet with:

FNB Saratov – fnbsaratov@gmail.com

FNB Kirov – xjdeepx@yandex.ru

FNB Chelyabinsk – fnb-chel@mail.ru

FNB Archangelsk – fnb-arh@mail.ru

FNB Moscow – edavmestobomb@riseup.net

Additional contacts for FNB Russia can be found at http://foodnotbombs.net/RUSSIA.html

Photos from the actions mentioned in this article and translated texts from our interviews will be posted at hippy.ru/fnbzima.html

Contact Daria at daria33@gmail.com and Anya at sloshie@gmail.com

Sunday, January 25th
Station 40 (3030b 16th st, SF, CA)
5PM.

We’ll start the evening off with dinner, have our meeting and a banner making party! Please bring vegan dishes to share and art supplies.

Some of what we will probably talk about:

  • checkins and news
  • soupstock
  • turkey fryer + “safety training”
  • presentation about FNB in Russia
  • finding a new cook house for saturday
  • upcoming events.

the agenda is open so bring your ideas and concerns, add to the discussion. we may even have a fnb movie to play & screen-printing!

if you’re bottom-lining a day or would like to start one, bring some bags & containers to carry stuff — we’ve amassed rice, beans, cups and utensils galore!

The next FNB Meeting will be: Sunday, January 25th at Station 40 (3030b 16th st) @ 5PM. We’ll start the evening with dinner and our meeting, followed by a banner making party! Bring vegan dishes to share and art supplies.

An outline of our december meeting:

  • Announcements
  • Soupstock Music Festival – Tentatively 4/19
  • Turkey Fryer – approved $100 to purchase burner for outdoor servings
  • FNB and Events – upcoming events: anti-choice counter protest, anarchist bookfair, etc
  • FNB and Disasters / Depression – agreed to meet in UN Plaza in event of disaster
  • Outreach
  • Future Meetings – last sunday of every month, location: TBA

lFor full notes, please read below the cut!

Read the rest of this entry »

Servings

Note: Servings may cancel in the event of rain

WED: 16th & Mission – 6:30 PM.

FRI: 65 9th St. – 6:45 PM.

Contact Us


Join our fantastic Email List!

WEDNESDAYS:

Email:
sffnbvolunteers@riseup.net
Call/Text:
415-484-3288

FRIDAYS:

Email:
fnbsanfrancisco@gmail.com

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