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UK: The Punjabi City Farmers Nurturing Their Connection to the Land

Photographer Harkaran Singh documents the connection between the Punjabi Sikh community in the West Midlands and their community gardens as they reclaim their emotional and cultural relationship to farming and the land.

Words And Photographs By Harkaran Singh
Atmos
06.11.2023

Excerpt:

In the residential heart of Smethwick, a Black Country town in the U.K.’s West Midlands, is a small collection of community gardens. Stony Lane runs straight through them, eventually leading walkers up the main road to the Guru Nanak Gurdwara. The allotment community here comprises Punjabi Sikhs who settled in the Midlands for work in the 1960s and 1970s.

Many of the retired men and women come here to harvest crops like their ancestors back in Punjab, India. The space they’ve created is unique to them with small, decorated huts where they spend time either in solitude or with friends. It keeps them connected, stimulated, active, and more importantly talking to one another; it is a community and a home away from home in more ways than one.

I remember when one of the daughters of the gardeners asked me to capture her father and friends at the allotments. For me, it was a no-brainer as I’ve already spent years capturing the community. At the time I had no idea how special this place was—so much so that I had to make a return visit to do the project justice.

Read the complete article here.