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Gleaning

Gleaning is the act of collecting leftover crops from farmers' fields after they have been commercially harvested or on fields where it is not economically profitable to harvest. It is a practice described in the Hebrew Bible that became a legally enforced entitlement of the poor in a number of Christian kingdoms.[1][2] Modern day "dumpster diving", when done for food or culinary ingredients, is seen as a similar form of food recovery.[3] Gleaning is also still used to provide nutritious harvested foods for those in need. In the United States, it is used due to the need for a national network to aid food recovery organizations. This is called the National Gleaning Project,[4] which was started by the Center for Agriculture and Food Systems at Vermont Law and Graduate School to aid those less fortunate much like the old Christian Kingdoms.

The Gleaners by Jean-François Millet, 1857

Bible edit

According to the Book of Deuteronomy and Leviticus, farmers should leave the edges of their fields unharvested (pe'ah), should not pick up that which was dropped (gleanings), and should not harvest any overlooked produce that had been forgotten when they harvested the majority of a field.[5][6][7] On one of the two occasions that this is stated in Leviticus, it adds that in vineyards, some grapes should be left ungathered,[8] a statement also found in Deuteronomy.[9]

These verses additionally command that olive trees should not be beaten on multiple occasions, and whatever remains from the first set of beatings should be left.[10] According to Leviticus, these things should be left for the poor and for strangers,[6][8] and Deuteronomy commands that it should be left for widows, strangers, and paternal orphans.[7][9][10] The Book of Ruth tells of gleaning by the widow Ruth to provide for herself and her mother-in-law, Naomi, who was also a widow.[11]

Rabbinical views edit

In classical rabbinic literature, it was argued that the biblical regulations concerning left-overs only applied to grain fields, orchards, and vineyards.[12] The farmer was not permitted to benefit from the gleanings, and was not permitted to discriminate among the poor, nor try to frighten them away with dogs or lions;[13][14][15] the farmer was not even allowed to help one of the poor to gather the left-overs.[13][14][15] However, it was also argued that the law was only applicable in Canaan,[16] although many classical rabbinic writers, who were based in Babylon, applied the laws there too;[17][18] it was also seen as only applying to Jewish paupers, but poor gentiles were allowed to benefit for the sake of civil peace.[19]

Historic European practice edit

 
Gleaning by Arthur Hughes

In many parts of Europe, including England and France, the Biblically derived right to glean the fields was reserved for the poor; a right, enforceable by law, that continued in parts of Europe into modern times.[1][20]

In 18th century England, gleaning was a legal right for "cottagers", or landless residents. In a small village the sexton would often ring a church bell at eight o'clock in the morning and again at seven in the evening to tell the gleaners when to begin and end work.[21] This legal right effectively ended after the Steel v Houghton decision in 1788.

Modern times edit

 
Impoverished Germans gleaning in 1956

The Shulchan Aruch argues that Jewish farmers are no longer obliged to obey the biblical rule.[22] Nevertheless, in modern Israel, rabbis of Orthodox Judaism insist that Jews allow gleanings to be consumed by the poor and by strangers during Sabbatical years.[23]

In the modern world, gleaning is practised by humanitarian groups[24] which distribute the gleaned food to the poor and hungry; in a modern context, this can include the collection of food from supermarkets at the end of the day that would otherwise be thrown away. There are a number of organizations that practice gleaning to resolve issues of societal hunger; the Society of St. Andrew, for example, and the Boston Area Gleaners.

Gleaning events occur wherever food is in excess. In addition to supermarkets, gleaning can also occur at farms in the field. Volunteers, called gleaners, visit a farm where the farmer donates what is left in their fields to collect and donate to a food bank. In New York State in 2010, this form of gleaning alone rescued 3.6 million pounds of fruits and vegetables.[25]

When people glean and distribute food, they do so at their peril; in the Soviet Union, the Law of Spikelets (sometimes translated "law on gleaning")[26] criminalised gleaning, under penalty of death, or 10 years of forced labour in exceptional circumstances.[27] In the U.S., the Bill Emerson Good Samaritan Act of 1996 limited the liability of donors to instances of gross negligence or intentional misconduct, alleviating gleaning from much of the risk that was allegedly hampering the delivery of surplus food from restaurants and dining facilities to emergency food centers. The law preempts state Good Samaritan Acts, that provide less protection.[28]

On the island of Bali, traditional law allows fruit from a tree to be picked by the passerby from the ground—even if the tree is on privately owned land.[citation needed]

In the United States there are also laws that support and sanction gleaning. These laws allow corporations to receive grants for the use of gleaning, mandates the agriculture sector to financially sustain gleaning nationally, and sanctions the distribution of the vegetables harvested from gleaning.[1] In 2020, there were 143 gleaning organizations in the United States and Canada combined, harvesting anywhere from 163,000-5.2 million pounds of food gleaned in the year.[29]

Gleaning in art edit

Gleaning was a popular subject in art, especially in the nineteenth century. Gleaning in rural France has been represented in the paintings Des Glaneuses (1857) by Jean-François Millet and Le rappel des glaneuses (1859) by Jules Breton, and explored in a 2000 documentary/experimental film, The Gleaners and I, by Agnès Varda.[30] Vincent van Gogh's sketch of a Peasant Woman Gleaning in Nuenen, The Netherlands (1885) is in the Charles Clore collection.[31]

Woolgathering edit

 
Gathering Wool by Henry Herbert La Thangue

Woolgathering is a practice similar to gleaning, but for wool. The practice, now obsolete, was of collecting bits of wool that had gotten caught on bushes and fences or fallen on the ground as sheep passed by. The meandering perambulations of a woolgatherer give rise to the idiomatic sense of the word as meaning aimless wandering of the mind.[32]

Fishing edit

 
Gleaning in a seagrass meadow[33]

Along marine coastlines, gleaning has been defined as "fishing with basic gear, including bare hands, in shallow water not deeper than that one can stand".[34] Invertebrate gleaning (walking) fisheries are common within intertidal seagrass meadows globally, contributing to the food supply of hundreds of millions of people.[33]

Ecological gleaning edit

The term gleaning is also applied to modes of feeding which involve taking food from surfaces. For example, in Australia pardalotes (small songbirds) are renowned for their feeding on lerps, scale insects on Eucalyptus sp. leaves.

Many fish forage by picking off small food items from hard surfaces, another example of ecological gleaning.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Hussey, Stephen (1997). "'The Last Survivor of an Ancient Race': The Changing Face of Essex Gleaning". The Agricultural History Review. 45 (1): 61–72. JSTOR 40275132.
  2. ^ Carpenter, Eugene E. (2000). Holman Treasury of Key Bible Words: 200 Greek and 200 Hebrew Words Defined and Explained. B&H Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-8054-9352-8. Retrieved 2013-08-06.
  3. ^ Marshman, Jennifer; Scott, Steffanie (January 2019). "Gleaning in the 21st century: Urban food recovery and community food security in Ontario, Canada". Canadian Food Studies. 6 (1): 100–119. doi:10.15353/cfs-rcea.v6i1.264. hdl:10012/9736. Retrieved 1 December 2020.
  4. ^ National Gleaning Project
  5. ^ Leviticus 19:9
  6. ^ a b Leviticus 23:22
  7. ^ a b Deuteronomy 24:19
  8. ^ a b Leviticus 19:10
  9. ^ a b Deuteronomy 24:21
  10. ^ a b Deuteronomy 24:20
  11. ^ Ruth 2:2
  12. ^   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSinger, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "Gleanings of the field". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.
  13. ^ a b Hullin 131a
  14. ^ a b Pe'ah 5:6
  15. ^ a b Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, 4:11
  16. ^ Pe'ah 2:5 (Palestinian Talmud)
  17. ^ Hullin 134b
  18. ^ Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, 1:14
  19. ^ Gittin 59b
  20. ^ Vardi, Liana (1993). "Construing the Harvest: Gleaners, Farmers, and Officials in Early Modern France". The American Historical Review. 98 (5): 1424–447. doi:10.2307/2167061. JSTOR 2167061.
  21. ^ L W Cowrie (1996) Dictionary of British Social History Wordsworth Reference p.130 ISBN 1-85326-378-8
  22. ^ Shulchan Aruk, Yoreh De'ah 332:1
  23. ^ "Israel prepares for 'fallow' new year". BBC News. 2007-09-12. Retrieved 2010-05-03.
  24. ^ "Food in Community: keeping community groups fed in Totnes". The Guardian. March 27, 2014.
  25. ^ Lee, Deishen; Sönmez, Erkut; Gómez, Miguel; Fan, Xiaoli (April 2017). "Combining two wrongs to make two rights: Mitigating food insecurity and food waste through gleaning operations". Food Policy. 68: 40–52. doi:10.1016/j.foodpol.2016.12.004.
  26. ^ Poli︠a︡n, PM (2004). Against Their Will: The History and Geography of Forced Migrations in the USSR. Central European University Press. p. 87. ISBN 978-963-9241-68-8.
  27. ^ Solomon, Peter (1996). Soviet Criminal Justice Under Stalin. Cambridge University Press. pp. 109–116. ISBN 978-0-521-40089-3.
  28. ^ "MEMORANDUM FOR JAMES S. GILLILAND, GENERAL COUNSEL, DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE". March 10, 1997.
  29. ^ Peterson, Shawn (2020). "2020 Gleaning Census" (PDF). National Gleaning Project. p. 63. Retrieved November 7, 2022.
  30. ^ Callenbach, Ernest. "The Gleaners and I (Les Glaneurs Et La Glaneuse)". Film Quarterly, vol. 56, no. 2 (2002): 46–49. doi:10.1525/fq.2002.56.2.46
  31. ^ "Vincent van Gogh: The Drawings". vggallery.com.
  32. ^ "Woolgathering". Merriam-Webster online dictionary. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  33. ^ a b Nessa, N., Ambo-Rappe, R., Cullen-Unsworth, L.C. and Unsworth, R.K.F. (2019) "Social-ecological drivers and dynamics of seagrass gleaning fisheries". Ambio, pages 1–11. doi:10.1007/s13280-019-01267-x.   Material was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
  34. ^ Nordlund, L.M., Unsworth, R.K., Gullström, M. and Cullen‐Unsworth, L.C. (2018) "Global significance of seagrass fishery activity. Fish and Fisheries", 19(3): 399–412. doi:10.1111/faf.12259.   Material was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

External links edit

  • Gleaning Stories Stories of Gleaning and Gleaners
  • The National Gleaning Project

gleaning, this, article, about, agricultural, process, bird, feeding, behaviour, birds, glean, redirects, here, album, they, might, giants, glean, album, collecting, leftover, crops, from, farmers, fields, after, they, have, been, commercially, harvested, fiel. This article is about the agricultural process For the bird feeding behaviour see Gleaning birds Glean redirects here For the album by They Might Be Giants see Glean album Gleaning is the act of collecting leftover crops from farmers fields after they have been commercially harvested or on fields where it is not economically profitable to harvest It is a practice described in the Hebrew Bible that became a legally enforced entitlement of the poor in a number of Christian kingdoms 1 2 Modern day dumpster diving when done for food or culinary ingredients is seen as a similar form of food recovery 3 Gleaning is also still used to provide nutritious harvested foods for those in need In the United States it is used due to the need for a national network to aid food recovery organizations This is called the National Gleaning Project 4 which was started by the Center for Agriculture and Food Systems at Vermont Law and Graduate School to aid those less fortunate much like the old Christian Kingdoms The Gleaners by Jean Francois Millet 1857 Contents 1 Bible 2 Rabbinical views 3 Historic European practice 4 Modern times 5 Gleaning in art 6 Woolgathering 7 Fishing 8 Ecological gleaning 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksBible editAccording to the Book of Deuteronomy and Leviticus farmers should leave the edges of their fields unharvested pe ah should not pick up that which was dropped gleanings and should not harvest any overlooked produce that had been forgotten when they harvested the majority of a field 5 6 7 On one of the two occasions that this is stated in Leviticus it adds that in vineyards some grapes should be left ungathered 8 a statement also found in Deuteronomy 9 These verses additionally command that olive trees should not be beaten on multiple occasions and whatever remains from the first set of beatings should be left 10 According to Leviticus these things should be left for the poor and for strangers 6 8 and Deuteronomy commands that it should be left for widows strangers and paternal orphans 7 9 10 The Book of Ruth tells of gleaning by the widow Ruth to provide for herself and her mother in law Naomi who was also a widow 11 Rabbinical views editIn classical rabbinic literature it was argued that the biblical regulations concerning left overs only applied to grain fields orchards and vineyards 12 The farmer was not permitted to benefit from the gleanings and was not permitted to discriminate among the poor nor try to frighten them away with dogs or lions 13 14 15 the farmer was not even allowed to help one of the poor to gather the left overs 13 14 15 However it was also argued that the law was only applicable in Canaan 16 although many classical rabbinic writers who were based in Babylon applied the laws there too 17 18 it was also seen as only applying to Jewish paupers but poor gentiles were allowed to benefit for the sake of civil peace 19 Historic European practice edit nbsp Gleaning by Arthur HughesIn many parts of Europe including England and France the Biblically derived right to glean the fields was reserved for the poor a right enforceable by law that continued in parts of Europe into modern times 1 20 In 18th century England gleaning was a legal right for cottagers or landless residents In a small village the sexton would often ring a church bell at eight o clock in the morning and again at seven in the evening to tell the gleaners when to begin and end work 21 This legal right effectively ended after the Steel v Houghton decision in 1788 Modern times edit nbsp Impoverished Germans gleaning in 1956The Shulchan Aruch argues that Jewish farmers are no longer obliged to obey the biblical rule 22 Nevertheless in modern Israel rabbis of Orthodox Judaism insist that Jews allow gleanings to be consumed by the poor and by strangers during Sabbatical years 23 In the modern world gleaning is practised by humanitarian groups 24 which distribute the gleaned food to the poor and hungry in a modern context this can include the collection of food from supermarkets at the end of the day that would otherwise be thrown away There are a number of organizations that practice gleaning to resolve issues of societal hunger the Society of St Andrew for example and the Boston Area Gleaners Gleaning events occur wherever food is in excess In addition to supermarkets gleaning can also occur at farms in the field Volunteers called gleaners visit a farm where the farmer donates what is left in their fields to collect and donate to a food bank In New York State in 2010 this form of gleaning alone rescued 3 6 million pounds of fruits and vegetables 25 When people glean and distribute food they do so at their peril in the Soviet Union the Law of Spikelets sometimes translated law on gleaning 26 criminalised gleaning under penalty of death or 10 years of forced labour in exceptional circumstances 27 In the U S the Bill Emerson Good Samaritan Act of 1996 limited the liability of donors to instances of gross negligence or intentional misconduct alleviating gleaning from much of the risk that was allegedly hampering the delivery of surplus food from restaurants and dining facilities to emergency food centers The law preempts state Good Samaritan Acts that provide less protection 28 On the island of Bali traditional law allows fruit from a tree to be picked by the passerby from the ground even if the tree is on privately owned land citation needed In the United States there are also laws that support and sanction gleaning These laws allow corporations to receive grants for the use of gleaning mandates the agriculture sector to financially sustain gleaning nationally and sanctions the distribution of the vegetables harvested from gleaning 1 In 2020 there were 143 gleaning organizations in the United States and Canada combined harvesting anywhere from 163 000 5 2 million pounds of food gleaned in the year 29 Gleaning in art editGleaning was a popular subject in art especially in the nineteenth century Gleaning in rural France has been represented in the paintings Des Glaneuses 1857 by Jean Francois Millet and Le rappel des glaneuses 1859 by Jules Breton and explored in a 2000 documentary experimental film The Gleaners and I by Agnes Varda 30 Vincent van Gogh s sketch of a Peasant Woman Gleaning in Nuenen The Netherlands 1885 is in the Charles Clore collection 31 nbsp Jules Breton The Gleaner 1875 Aberdeen Art Gallery nbsp Jean Francois Millet Des Glaneuses 1857 nbsp Jules Breton Le Rappel des glaneuses 1859 nbsp Leon Augustin Lhermitte Les glaneuses 1898Woolgathering edit Woolgatherer redirects here For the play by William Mastrosimone see The Woolgatherer Woolgathering redirects here For the book by Patti Smith see Woolgathering book nbsp Gathering Wool by Henry Herbert La ThangueWoolgathering is a practice similar to gleaning but for wool The practice now obsolete was of collecting bits of wool that had gotten caught on bushes and fences or fallen on the ground as sheep passed by The meandering perambulations of a woolgatherer give rise to the idiomatic sense of the word as meaning aimless wandering of the mind 32 Fishing edit nbsp Gleaning in a seagrass meadow 33 Along marine coastlines gleaning has been defined as fishing with basic gear including bare hands in shallow water not deeper than that one can stand 34 Invertebrate gleaning walking fisheries are common within intertidal seagrass meadows globally contributing to the food supply of hundreds of millions of people 33 Ecological gleaning editThe term gleaning is also applied to modes of feeding which involve taking food from surfaces For example in Australia pardalotes small songbirds are renowned for their feeding on lerps scale insects on Eucalyptus sp leaves Many fish forage by picking off small food items from hard surfaces another example of ecological gleaning See also editCanner occupation Dumpster diving Food bank Food rescue Food salvage Freeganism Tzedakah Usufruct Waste pickerReferences edit a b Hussey Stephen 1997 The Last Survivor of an Ancient Race The Changing Face of Essex Gleaning The Agricultural History Review 45 1 61 72 JSTOR 40275132 Carpenter Eugene E 2000 Holman Treasury of Key Bible Words 200 Greek and 200 Hebrew Words Defined and Explained B amp H Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8054 9352 8 Retrieved 2013 08 06 Marshman Jennifer Scott Steffanie January 2019 Gleaning in the 21st century Urban food recovery and community food security in Ontario Canada Canadian Food Studies 6 1 100 119 doi 10 15353 cfs rcea v6i1 264 hdl 10012 9736 Retrieved 1 December 2020 National Gleaning Project Leviticus 19 9 a b Leviticus 23 22 a b Deuteronomy 24 19 a b Leviticus 19 10 a b Deuteronomy 24 21 a b Deuteronomy 24 20 Ruth 2 2 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Singer Isidore et al eds 1901 1906 Gleanings of the field The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls a b Hullin 131a a b Pe ah 5 6 a b Maimonides Mishneh Torah 4 11 Pe ah 2 5 Palestinian Talmud Hullin 134b Maimonides Mishneh Torah 1 14 Gittin 59b Vardi Liana 1993 Construing the Harvest Gleaners Farmers and Officials in Early Modern France The American Historical Review 98 5 1424 447 doi 10 2307 2167061 JSTOR 2167061 L W Cowrie 1996 Dictionary of British Social History Wordsworth Reference p 130 ISBN 1 85326 378 8 Shulchan Aruk Yoreh De ah 332 1 Israel prepares for fallow new year BBC News 2007 09 12 Retrieved 2010 05 03 Food in Community keeping community groups fed in Totnes The Guardian March 27 2014 Lee Deishen Sonmez Erkut Gomez Miguel Fan Xiaoli April 2017 Combining two wrongs to make two rights Mitigating food insecurity and food waste through gleaning operations Food Policy 68 40 52 doi 10 1016 j foodpol 2016 12 004 Poli a n PM 2004 Against Their Will The History and Geography of Forced Migrations in the USSR Central European University Press p 87 ISBN 978 963 9241 68 8 Solomon Peter 1996 Soviet Criminal Justice Under Stalin Cambridge University Press pp 109 116 ISBN 978 0 521 40089 3 MEMORANDUM FOR JAMES S GILLILAND GENERAL COUNSEL DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE March 10 1997 Peterson Shawn 2020 2020 Gleaning Census PDF National Gleaning Project p 63 Retrieved November 7 2022 Callenbach Ernest The Gleaners and I Les Glaneurs Et La Glaneuse Film Quarterly vol 56 no 2 2002 46 49 doi 10 1525 fq 2002 56 2 46 Vincent van Gogh The Drawings vggallery com Woolgathering Merriam Webster online dictionary Retrieved December 18 2019 a b Nessa N Ambo Rappe R Cullen Unsworth L C and Unsworth R K F 2019 Social ecological drivers and dynamics of seagrass gleaning fisheries Ambio pages 1 11 doi 10 1007 s13280 019 01267 x nbsp Material was copied from this source which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4 0 International License Nordlund L M Unsworth R K Gullstrom M and Cullen Unsworth L C 2018 Global significance of seagrass fishery activity Fish and Fisheries 19 3 399 412 doi 10 1111 faf 12259 nbsp Material was copied from this source which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4 0 International License External links edit nbsp Look up woolgathering in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gleaning Gleaning Stories Stories of Gleaning and Gleaners The National Gleaning Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gleaning amp oldid 1204259428, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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