Birth Name: | James Gilbert Embry |
Birth Date: | April 23, 1949 |
Birth Place: | Richmond, Kentucky |
Occupation: | Educator, farmer, eco-activist, public speaker |
Website: | http://sustainlex.org |
Jim Embry (born James Gilbert Embry; April 23, 1949, in Richmond, Kentucky) is a lifelong civil rights activist, eco-activist farmer, social justice advocate, educator, public speaker, photographer, scuba diver, writer. He is active in the local food and sustainable agriculture movement. In 2006, he founded the Sustainable Communities Network. Embry is the Director of the Sustainable Communities Network. He has over 50 years of experience as a social activist.[1] [2] [3] [4]
Embry comes from an African American activist family. He is the grandson and great-grandson of farmers and community activists. His ancestors were enslaved Africans that were brought to Kentucky in the 1800s.[5]
In April 1968, Embry attended Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s funeral and served as funeral marshal.[6]
1974 – Bachelor of Science, Zoology, University of Kentucky
On March 5, 1964, as a teenager, Embry attended the march on Frankfort, Kentucky, a call for legislation to end discrimination, and segregation. It was an interracial protest with around 10,000 Kentuckians. Martin Luther King Jr. and Jackie Robinson participated, along with other civil rights activists and the folk singers Peter, Paul, and Mary.[7] [8] [9]
In 1967, he attended the University of Kentucky. While attending the University of Kentucky, he was involved with the Black Student Union. He participated in what were called "bitch-ins". Embry says the "bitch-in" gatherings were where students met and had discussions of issues such as the Vietnam War and the killings in Cambodia. They had a student newspaper, the Kentucky Kernel. In a 1978 oral history interview, he mentioned that at the Black Student gatherings, they talked about student representation on the University of Kentucky Board of Trustees. He mentioned also that they advocated for banning the song "Dixie" from being played at football games and other campus events.
In 2001, Embry moved to Detroit to be the Director of the James and Grace Lee Boggs Center to Nurture Community Leadership. In Detroit, his work included urban agriculture and food justice.
In 2018, he was a founding member of the worker co-operative Wild Fig Bookstore.[10] Embry's work is local, national, and International in advocating for sustainable communities. He participates in international forums such as the World Social Forum in Italy and Terra Madre/International Slow Food Gatherings as a six-time US delegate.[11]
Embry studied organic farming in Cuba.
Embry is a member of the Black Farmers and Urban Growers conference. He is the state governor of Slow Food USA for Kentucky. He is a member of Black Soil, Good Foods Cooperative, and other food justice organizations.[12] As a writer and photographer, Embry has contributed articles and photographs to We Are Each Other's Harvest, Sustainable World Source Book, Encyclopedia of Northern Kentucky, Kentucky African American Encyclopedia, Latino Studies, Biodynamics Journal, African American Heritage Guide, Stella Natura, and other publications.
Embry's photographs have appeared in exhibitions, books, hospitals, galleries, and magazines.[13] [14]