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Community Kitchen on Accessibility, Food Justice and Disability Justice
Mar
13
Community Kitchen on Accessibility, Food Justice and Disability Justice
Tuesday, March 13, 2018 at 6 PM - 9 PM EDT

Access to affordable, sustainable, historically and culturally relevant, and healthy food are considered essential for Food Justice. At the same time, Disability Justice challenges us to re-conceptualize how health and healthy eating are framed, as well as our relationships to cooking and eating. This Community Kitchen will introduce attendees to disability justice, food justice, and the intersections between the movements. We will centre disabled people and disabled people's experiences in our conversations about disability justice and food justice.

Join Students for Barrier-free Access, the Centre for Community Partnerships and Hart House for a night of conversation, cooking, eating and skill-sharing. The facilitators will also share kitchen hacks that make cooking more accessible.

Date: Tuesday March 13, 2018
Time: 6pm-9pm
Location: Waters Lounge, Woodsworth College, 321 Bloor Street West
Cost: Free to register here

Please note that registration is required. Please wear closed toe shoes and bring something to tie hair back with if it is long. Bring empty containers so you can take any extra food home!


Access Info:
Waters Lounge is an accessible venue but unfortunately the kitchen itself is not accessible. All conversation and teaching will take place in the accessible lounge area.
Accessible all-gender washroom is located on the same floor as the event.
We will have vegan and gluten-free snacks and will be cooking some vegan and gluten free dishes.

Facilitators:


Asam Ahmad
Asam Ahmad is a poor, working-class writer, poet, and community organizer. His writing tackles issues of power, race, queerness, masculinity, and trauma. His writing and poetry have appeared in CounterPunch, Black Girl Dangerous, Briarpatch, Youngist, and Colorlines. His poem “Remembering How to Grieve” can be found in Killing Trayvons: An Anthology of American Violence.

Kumari Giles
kumari is a multi-disciplinary artist, dancer, storyteller, curator, logistics nerd, aerialist, food enthusiast and community cook. As a queer non-binary mixed maker of many things, they believe in art and movement as a tool for empowerment, transformation and healing. They are committed to nurturing overlooked brilliance, working collectively and challenging systemic power.

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