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HistoryLink.org

Andy Shiga, 1919-1993


Judy Lightfoot

Street teens with University District Youth Center dig blackberry canes at the Shiga's Garden site


Shiga family archives

Andy Shiga, right, and other Evergreen Milk Cooperative employees in 1954

 

Shiga's Garden: fittingly, a story of sunshine and cooperation

Volunteers, artists, and an absentee landowner are together creating a P-Patch honoring the father of the University District Street Fair.

Urban vegetable gardening brings together the primal elements of earth, air, water, and sunfire with kibitzing passersby who pause on the sidewalk to ask the gardener picking beans, “Is the blue-gray monster over there actually food?" (“Yes, Brussels sprouts.”)

For a community garden project on University Way, Stacey Gianas is bringing together all of the above, plus many more unlikely garden-bedfellows. Several of her neighbors — along with a generous property owner in Taiwan, local artists, business owners, street kids, city departments, a herd of goats, and pedestrians who impulsively, irresistibly, stop to pitch in — have all been transforming a blackberry-choked vacant lot near the north end of University Way Northeast into a place where food and flowers can grow. The peaceful, communal nature of this effort would have delighted Andy Shiga, founder of the University District Street Fair, which celebrated its 40th anniversary in May. So it’s altogether fitting that this P-Patch will be named in his honor: “Shiga’s Garden.”

Andy’s son Alfred talked with me the other day about what it was like to grow up with a father who was as deeply committed to community happiness as to the family’s business success. The business endeavors included Shiga’s One World Shop, still located just south of University Bookstore on The Ave. “One World” did more than signal the store’s inventory of imported merchandise — it defined Shiga's philosophy of life.

Alfred summed up his father’s ethic: “Dad was a pacifist and conscientious objector. He had strong feelings about the futility of war, the tragedy and sadness of it. His mother, who was a nurse during the Russo-Japanese War, showed him pictures of the war-injured, so he had no illusions about what war was really like. His belief in peace made him a big proponent of dialogue between people.”

During 1969 and 1970, rising protests against the Vietnam War were inflamed by the U.S. invasion of Cambodia and the killing of four Kent State students demonstrating against the conflict. In Seattle thousands of University of Washington students marched against the war, and violence periodically erupted in the U District, with rioters smashing shop windows along The Ave. Endeavoring to bring people together, Andy Shiga proposed holding a peaceful fair “to create one small situation in which people will be encouraged to cross over various social and psychological boundaries, to stimulate the growth of openness, humor, love, and compassion amongst people, which is the real basis for a rational, free, and healthy world.”

Said Alfred, “The Street Fair was an extension of Dad’s philosophy. He was a proponent of conversation, which included when I did something bad — we’d sit down and talk about what I did, and not just for 10 minutes. He believed that through greater understanding between individuals, huge group conflicts could be avoided. And he had a sharp wit and a silver tongue that could convince people.” Andy persuaded U District Chamber of Commerce members, UW students, the Seattle Parks Arts & Crafts division, and others to sponsor a two-day “University District Sidewalk Fair: Interworld Arts” on an Ave that would be closed to vehicular traffic. “My dad was like water flowing over rocks,” Alfred mused. “It takes a long time to wear rocks down, but they wear down eventually.”

Smoothing the stony places in U District community life was a regular part of his father’s daily round. Alfred explained, “When I was growing up, Dad would walk up and down The Ave on errands, with me and my two little brothers in tow. On the way to the bank he’d meet somebody and stop to talk. We’d stand there while he talked. And talked. He was always smiling. There’s a photo of my father in front of a milk truck, standing next to a white man and a black man, from when he drove a truck for Evergreen Milk Cooperative. He had all kinds of friends — white, black, Chinese-American, everybody.”

Now Stacey Gianas, 28, is developing her own water-flowing-over-rocks technique. After wondering for several years about the chain-link fenced lot across the street from her apartment, Gianas, who has a UW degree in conservation biology, decided that she would try to reclaim this jungle of blackberry canes that was gradually filling up with items even less perishable — a grocery cart, a TV, castoff clothing, lumber — and turn it into a community garden.

Gianas has marshaled creative, evolving, unarmed forces to achieve the goal collectively. “In land restoration,” she told me, “if you don’t get different people involved, no project will work.” Contacting the owner of the lot was an intricate dance, because he lives in Taiwan, but Gianas finally located his accountant, based in Seattle, who persuaded the landowner to sign a rent-free lease through 2012 with Seattle’s P-Patch program. A next-door neighbor agreed to let P-Patch install a water sub-meter for irrigation. The Goat Lady in Duvall donated a herd of goats for three days, which made short work of the blackberry leaves. And now the roots are surrendering to volunteers who wield shovels loaned from other P-Patch sheds and wear work gloves donated by Stewardship Partners. A Japanese torii gate was donated and installed by artist Richard Lemmert. Cedar Grove Composting will donate 50 yards of compost.

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Comments:

Posted Tue, Oct 13, 8:47 p.m. inappropriate

Thanks for this. I'd seen the P-Patch under construction, but didn't know the story behind it. Glad to hear Shiga's Garden will be around for at least 3 years. If I'm not mistaken, this is the parcel, correct? http://www5.kingcounty.gov/kcgisreports/property_report.aspx?PIN=8714600055
Surprising that it hasn't been developed yet. I don't suppose anyone has a spare quarter of a million lying around to purchase it...

Posted Wed, Oct 14, 7:33 a.m. inappropriate

It's a wonderful story. There's a little more here:
http://shigasgarden.blogspot.com/2009/08/welcome-to-shigas-community-garden.html

I don't have any millions, but this has to be a high priority for the Parks Levy.

Posted Wed, Oct 21, 10:52 a.m. inappropriate

It's so nice to see a tangle of blackberries turning into a productive piece of land to be shared. This project has the potential to help transform the neighborhood into something better. Way to go community!

Posted Thu, Oct 29, 8:10 p.m. inappropriate

The Parks and Green Spaces Levy will be holding a public hearing on the on Monday, November 9 at 7:00 p.m. in the Park Board room at Park Headquarters building: 100 Dexter Avenue N. Please join us to show that the community supports this project. For more information: http://seattle.gov/parks/levy/opportunity.htm

Thank you!

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