Grand Valley Magazine Summer 2014 - (Page 16)
SU STA I N AB I L IT Y
LAND
LOVER
Farm Club president
is Green Leader
by Leah Twilley
Youssef Darwich has a lot of plans
after he graduates, including going to
graduate school and traveling abroad. But
ultimately, this second-generation land
lover wants to have a farm of his own.
The natural resources management
and biology major won the West
Michigan Sustainable Business Forum
Future Green Leaders Scholarship
Competition in April. He received a
$4,000 scholarship for demonstrating
the most innovative and inspirational
approach to promoting sustainability.
Darwich, a junior from Hartland,
came to Grand Valley with a desire to
solve problems. He said that desire has
increased since his first year on campus
when he explored agriculture as a class
writing topic.
"I learned about the detrimental
effects conventional agriculture has
on the environment, and it didn't make
sense to me that food production had
to degrade the land," Darwich said. "I
explored alternatives and found many
ways we could actually use agriculture
as a means of ecological restoration."
His interests in sustainable agriculture
led him to volunteer at Grand Valley's
Sustainable Agriculture Project, called
"the Farm" for short. The project,
on Luce Street in Allendale, began
with a group of students in 2008 and
has expanded to include a variety of
initiatives for faculty and staff members
and students to learn about sustainable
food systems and organic farming
practices. He helps the Sustainable
16
Summer '14
photo by Amanda Pitts
Community Development Initiative,
which houses the Sustainable Agriculture
Project, with maintaining the farm and
pursuing funding for new projects.
While spending upwards of 35 hours
on the farm every week in the summer,
Darwich has gotten to know the space
very well and has many ideas for its
future, which he presented at the Future
Green Leaders Scholarship Competition.
"In my essay, I talked about expanding
the Sustainable Ag Project by starting
a tree nursery,"
he said. "I've
"The growth of
collected
the farm has been
hundreds of
because of the
seeds on my
own, and the
students all along
Farm Club
and Youssef is a
received funding
prime example of a
for 200 more.
student who's been
I proposed
planting them
driving interest in
in a bed at high
the project."
densities then
- Ellen Schendel
transplanting
them to
difference spots when they
get bigger."
Darwich wrote about growing up
in urban Dearborn where his father
practiced sustainable farming. His father
immigrated from Syria when he was 18
years old and brought with him growing
practices that allowed Darwich to learn
about agriculture from an early age.
"Our backyard was a jungle. We had
fruit trees, grape vines, cucumbers,
tomatoes and chickens," he said. "I've
realized a lot of people don't have the
privilege to interact with our fellow
species in a diverse environment like
I did while growing up. I understand
those benefits and really want to enable
others at the farm to experience that
richness and satisfaction."
Ellen Schendel, professor of writing
and associate dean of Brooks College
of Interdisciplinary Studies, agreed with
Darwich that the Sustainable Agriculture
Project is a valuable place to teach and
learn. "It's taken off," she said. "There's
one sustainable agriculture class that is
based completely at the farm, and there
are three classes that meet there once
a week.
"The growth of the farm has been
because of the students all along and
Youssef is a prime example of a student
who's been driving interest in the project."
Darwich said his recognition would
not be possible without the support of
his professors and Farm Club friends.
"I think being recognized for what
I've done is only a testament for what
everyone can do if they have a strong,
supportive community surrounding
them," he said.
Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of Grand Valley Magazine Summer 2014
Table of Contents
Campus News
Fall Arts Celebration
Athletics
Donor Impact
Sustainability
Research
Q&A Karen Gipson
A seat at the table
Students dig program
Deployment to enrollment
Seeing double
Off the path
Arts
Alumni News
Grand Valley Magazine Summer 2014
https://www.nxtbook.com/gvsu/GVmagazine/GVMagazineSpring2017
https://www.nxtbook.com/gvsu/GVmagazine/GVMagazineWinter2017
https://www.nxtbook.com/gvsu/GVmagazine/GVMagazineFall2016
https://www.nxtbook.com/gvsu/GVmagazine/GVMagazineSummer2016
https://www.nxtbook.com/gvsu/GVmagazine/GVMagazineSpring2016
https://www.nxtbook.com/gvsu/GVmagazine/Spring2016GVMagazine
https://www.nxtbook.com/gvsu/GVmagazine/Winter2016GVMagazine
https://www.nxtbook.com/gvsu/GVmagazine/2015FallGVMagazine
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https://www.nxtbook.com/gvsu/GVmagazine/GVMSpring2015
https://www.nxtbook.com/gvsu/GVmagazine/GVMwinter2015
https://www.nxtbook.com/gvsu/Grandvalley/GVMFall2014
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https://www.nxtbook.com/gvsu/GVmagazine/spring2014
https://www.nxtbook.com/gvsu/GVmagazine/winter2014
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