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November 2003
A Cooks Tour of community gardens
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Gronn Place Housing Estate resident and chair of the Moonah
Adult Committee Pherina Tuati in the community garden with
Housing Minster Candy Broad.
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The Gronn Place Housing Estate community garden in West Brunswick
is an example of multicultural cooperation between people of differing
backgrounds.
Estate residents come from places as far-flung as North Africa,
Turkey, Lebanon and the Cook Islands.
The garden has become a source of personal satisfaction and achievement
for adults and children on the estate.
Housing Minster Candy Broad visited the Gronn Place community garden
with Pherina Tuati, chair of the Moonah Adult Committee and originally
from the Cook Islands.
The Cook Island community grows root vegetables such as taro and
kumara, a sweet potato, which are part of their traditional diet.
It has also planted banana trees.
While there is little prospect of the trees bearing fruit, the
leaves are put to good use for ceremonial cooking in an umu, an
earth oven.
Traditional cooking of meat, fish and vegetablesthey are
wrapped in banana leaves, placed on top of hot stones, covered with
earth and left to bake for several hoursproduces food that
is steamed and flavoured in its own juices.
The Gronn Place garden is one of 15 producing herbs, fruits and
vegetables flourishing on public housing estates around Melbourne
under the guidance of the Office of Housings Community Gardens
project manager, Basil Natoli.
The community gardens are also springing up at schools where many
students are from the public housing estates.
Plans are also in-hand to expand the program into regional areas
with the first underway at the Flinders Park Secondary College in
Geelong.
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