This
encounter lingers still. It is like a mist that never goes away, or a haze that
stays longer than necessary. It was an odd meeting. It revealed less than most
interviews but it has had a profound influence on me.
It
was the fall of 2005. I was in the area of southeast Georgia to interview black
farmers who had been engaged in fighting the USDA because of a wide range of
acts of discrimination including delayed loans, lack of expert consulting in
the field, loans arriving too little and too late, lack of notification of
disaster relief funds at low interest rates after drought or torrential rain
events, and the list could go on and on.
Mr.
Mays was my point of contact. Dr. Muhammad had handed me off to him, so to
speak. Mr. Mays had gotten me in touch with several more farmers. It was a rich
week for interviews.
There
we sat in the public library, Mr. Mays, Mr. Williams, Mrs. Williams, and
me. Mr. Williams was a man of few words. Mrs. Williams frequently covered for him with
explanations or details. He was thin, frail, looking older than his years. He
had cancer and his health was hanging in the balance.
We
talked in a variety of ways about the price of farming while black. They
outlined the ways in which white farmers were treated better by the USDA and at
the cotton gin by the local family that owned the gin and the feed store where
they purchased their seeds. Sounded like tenant farming revisited to me.
He
had cancer. His opinion is that farming and using pesticides had given him
cancer. We didn’t go into the details of what kind of cancer and what kind of
treatment, and those fancy notions of diagnosis and prognosis and where he went
for treatment. My sense was that it was not going to end well.
He used
another word that explained the cost of farming while black. I had never heard
it before but I generally knew what he was talking about. When the USDA may
seize your house and your property. When you don’t get good support or
assistance from the local USDA office, when the note is coming due soon and the
bank account is low because the crop didn’t produce because you could not
afford better seeds or more land or more help. And you got too little too late
to put insecticides on the field and the weeds are more plentiful that the cotton
crop. Then you fret, you worry, you stay up late at night. You obsess and
ponder. It never goes away.
Then,
there is the word. The big word. WORRIATION. The USDA brought upon him “worriation.”
You can google about and find it. One source has it like this: “an exceedinly amount of worries that are now
worsened because you are in a situation that is only getting worse than it
originally was because you failed to let a grudge of some kind go. ‘i
began to understand how important the now is for me to get it right this time
around so i wouldn’t have that burden or worriation on my shoulders if
something were to happen to my mom’.”
He
was worn out. His wife was taking care of him. He had given his life for the
cause, a cause bigger than him. His body was declining. Everyone knew it. Cancer
was having its way with him.
And
worriation was gnawing at his soul
An
interview I shall never forget. I'll never forget Dawson, Georgia and that afternoon in the library. This farmer couple. This word. Farming while black. Worriation.
I can't even imagine that kind of worriation! Thank you for being there, supporting them and soaking up their story!
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