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Thank You to Our Sponsors

Strawberry Shortcake DonorsLisa and Maury Friedman

Rt. Reverend Bishop Jon Bruno

Wild Strawberry DonorsDr. David Braun

Diane Kabat

Thank You to Our SponsorsWood Strawberry Donors

Wendy and Gil KlierDavid WeberProfessor Lois OppenheimPascale & Brian PassSue MillerAlisa Reich and Peter ReichRabbi Sharon Brous and David LightJessica Ritz and Henry MyersLeslie Kautz & Jack Weiss

Strawberry Fresh from the Vine Donors

Barbara Osborn Daniel DominguezAviva KrausDr. Arthur & Judith WeberLola Clark

Thank You to Our Sponsors

Special Thanks ToOur partners at Whole FoodsKaty MacNamara & Marilupe Villarreal, Event StylistsRachel Skupsky, Netiya’s Summer InternTarte CateringDJ SaulomiteFreshii

Thank You to Our Sponsors

Abundant Harvest OrganicsAir BnBAmelia SaltsmanAOC Restaurant/the Lucques GroupThe Art of TeaBorder GrillChef Minh PhanChicks with Knives/Rachael NarinsChipotle Restaurants Discovery Cube Los AngelesErewhon Organic & Natural MarketErnest Miller, Rancho La Merced

ProvisionsEvan KleinmanFLOAT Chinese Medical Arts/Dr. Abigail

MorganThe Gourmandise School of Sweets and Savories/Clemence De Lutz Gossett

Hnina GourmetHugo’s RestaurantInstitute of Domestic TechnologyKatherine of Athena Skin CareKure SpaLittle Saplings/Ruth SteinbergLiza Shtromberg JewelryMargerum Wine CompanyNot Ketchup/Erika Penzer KerekesPasadena Museum of California ArtPeddler’s CreameryRobertson Art SpaceSantiagoSharon RaponeSimply OrganicThe Staging AgencyWhole Foods Market, Sherman Oaks

Silent Auction Donors

Netiya is an interfaith food justice network of 42 faith-

based institutions in Los Angeles

Netiya works with congregations to

cultivate gardens on unused land to grow and tithe nutritious

food

Netiya advances institutional collaboration around food procurement

and food relief, so that Angelenos of all faiths can

have greater access to food that is worthy of a blessing

We have installed 13 organic Just Gardens

on unused congregational lands, with plans for three

more this year

Our focus is on empowerment

and food sovereignty,

rather than food relief

We ask our congregations to tithe

10% of their land, and to reverse-tithe the

produce: up to 90% of the fresh fruits,

vegetables, and herbs that are grown are given

to the community

Netiya strives to make systemic change at the

institutional level, as well as the individual

level

Grow Wise, Netiya’s newest program, will

repurpose congregational and private land to grow

food; and create scalable land

management practices for saving water and

going solar

“...some schools may improve their program by constructing a new

science building or maybe an arts building. A garden has, instead of four walls and a ceiling, two walls and the sky as a ceiling, and it is a

new learning space." Netiya partner, Amira Al-Sarraf, New Horizon

Muslim School

“We hope students will see the garden as a place for inquiry,

exploration, and discovery, for appreciating nature and our Creator, for learning where food comes from,

for eating more healthfully, for understanding the value of water in

an ecosystem, and for becoming better human beings.” Netiya partner, Amira Al-Sarraf, New

Horizon Muslim School

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