Ukrainian soldier planting potatoes in a trench in the 2022 war zone. Photo: Pravda Gerashenko |
This Friday, November 11th, is Veteran’s Day for honoring military veterans of the United States Armed Forces. I found a Jeffco CMG blog written in 2010 by Elaine Lockey that featured a book, “Defiant Gardens: Making Gardens in Wartime” by Kenneth Helphand. In the book, gardens prove to be an invaluable inspiration for people in war time. Besides the highlights of the ghetto gardens and the barbed-wire gardens of the prisoners of war and internment camps in the World Wars, soldiers themselves planted gardens in conflict war zones: the trench gardens built during WWI, Gulf War gardens built in Saudi Arabia, a base camp garden in Baghdad, Iraq, and now in in the trenches of Ukraine.
Unlike Victory Gardens known during World War II, the
soldiers’ gardens were planted in precarious situations where they took comfort
in the simple act of gardening.
According to Helphand, defiant gardening often isn't about food at all. Motivations vary, but fall into five general areas:
Hope: "Planting is an optimistic act," Helphand
says. "You put a seed into the ground in anticipation it will grow. It
takes time, attention and maintenance. There's a miraculous aspect. Hope is
embodied in all that."
Life: "Gardens are alive. They provide a connection
with nature and life's forces."
Home: "Gardens either are part of or an extension of
home, or places where we've lived or would like to be."
Work: "It's something to do. The garden often is part
of a person's identity and culture."
Beauty: "Gardens are beautiful, and in a time of crisis
that beauty is accentuated," Helphand says. "They're often strikingly
dramatic when done in devastated areas."
World War I photograph
of soldiers in the French trenches flanked by their planting beds. Notice the
use of twigs as ornamental borders delineating each soldier's plot. |
"Gardens in the war," writes Kenneth Helphand, "...exemplified the struggle to create something normal in the most abnormal conditions."
Ukranian soldiers plant onions in the trenches. Photo: Pravda Gerashenko |