World Grace Project empowers indigenous leaders to resource, develop and integrate our refugee and immigrant communities toward self-sufficiency in the Cedar Valley.
Grace is unique. It is giving without receiving. It is paying it forward. This project takes margins found in current economic models and creates windows of grace for those needing a bridge to opportunity. It engages the community in these windows of opportunity allowing everyone the opportunity to give back to those around them.
Waterloo is the most diverse city in Iowa, making it challenging to bridge all the gaps in human services. The World Grace Project’s primary goal is workforce development for vulnerable or low-income populations of Waterloo, while raising awareness of cultural diversity by engaging the greater community in the project.
Our secondary goal is creating connections to healthy food through the use of our Life Garden, an indoor hydroponic garden that can grow 21 heads of lettuce in 2 square feet. With proper maintenance, the system can produce an estimated 280-300 heads of lettuce per year, allowing participants to be a part of a healthy behaviors and food security initiative for their city.
In the Myanmar community, 46% were in agriculture and farming before they came to the U.S. After resettling, agriculture or agriculture processing is a common trade for the immigrant community. We seek projects in agriculture as an opportunity that fit the communities we serve. Our Life Garden represents the hope and life that the immigrant community seeks to find in America.
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Galloway, D. R. (2019). Child Care & Workforce Needs Assessment of the Refugee Community in Waterloo. Waterloo: Community Foundation of NE Iowa.