Farming While Black Film Screening + Q&A Moderated by Konda Mason

Farming While Black

Available in 16d 14h 37m 43s
Available March 20, 2025 11:00 PM UTC
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Pay What You CanAfter this content becomes available March 20th at 11:00 pm UTC, you'll have 72 hours to start watching. Once you begin, you'll have 24 hours to finish watching the film. The March 20th at 11:00 pm UTC livestream can be viewed anytime until March 23rd at 11:00 pm. Need help?

While we encourage you to join us for the live screening, a recording will be available for 72 hours for those unable to attend in real time.

Farming While Black is a feature-length documentary film which examines the historical plight of Black farmers in the United States and the rising generation reclaiming their rightful ownership to land and reconnecting with their ancestral roots.


As the co-founder of Soul Fire Farm in upstate New York, Leah Penniman finds strength in the deep historical knowledge of African agrarianism – agricultural practices that can heal people and the planet. Influenced and inspired by Karen Washington, a pioneer in urban community gardens in New York City, and fellow farmer and organizer Blain Snipstal, Leah galvanizes around farming as the basis of revolutionary justice.


In 1910, Black farmers owned 14 percent of all American farmland. Over the intervening decades, that number fell below two percent, the result of racism, discrimination, and dispossession. The film chronicles Penniman and two other Black farmers’ efforts to reclaim their agricultural heritage. Collectively, their work has a major impact, as each is a leader in sustainable agriculture and food justice movements.

  • Year
    2023
  • Runtime
    75 minutes
  • Language
    English
  • Country
    United States
  • Social Media
  • Director
    Mark Decena
  • Producer
    Liz Decena
  • Co-Producer
    Lynn Waymer
  • Cinematographer
    Lawrence Rickford
  • Editor
    Bernardo Josue
  • Sound Design
    Jeremiah Moore