Brother Richard J.
Samyn, O.F.M '95
To Brother Rick Samyn, O.F.M. Capuchin and master gardener,
growing food is about more than planting and harvesting.
It is about teaching kids to eat better and sharing with
them the human food relationship to Creation.
To that end, Samyn began the Earth Works Urban Farm Project
to address the nutritional needs of Detroit’s poor. In partnership
with the Gleaners Community Food Bank, and the Greening of
Detroit, Samyn created a three-quarter acre farming project
on Detroit’s east side. Earth Work’s goals are to create awareness
of the need for sustainable food systems within our communities,
and to promote healthier eating habits for youth. Much of the
produce grown at Earth Works is distributed through the Women,
Infant and Children (WIC) Project FRESH program in Detroit
and Wayne County, and to the Capuchin Soup Kitchen.
“Brother Rick began the Earth Works Project in 2001 as a way
of helping the less fortunate, by calling them to use their
talents in preparing gardens, and learning the techniques involved
in planting and caring for gardens in a more natural setting,”
said Father Lloyd Thiel, chairperson of development for Capuchin
Ministries. “Rick has become a very integral part of the Capuchin
Soup Kitchen programs. His goal is to promote the use of non-synthetic
farming techniques and to help create healthier eating habits.”Samyn
enjoys teaching adults and children alike how to plant seeds,
nurture plants and make jam. He especially enjoys teaching
elementary school children about where vegetables come from,
he says, because so many believe that they come from the grocery
store. A honey bee apiary teaches them where honey comes from,
and produces combs that will be spun for honey.
The project garnered national media attention when an article
in the Detroit Free Press was picked up by Knight wire services.
In fact, so impressed were inmates at the Western Wayne Correctional
Facility in Plymouth, that they volunteered to raise and donate
seedlings for the project.
“I am driven by the belief that the quality of life is not
how much one consumes or controls, but by how one cares for
neighbor and nature,” says Samyn. “I believe in creating an
agricultural urban farm model based on respect and mutuality.”
Following high school graduation, Samyn spent four years in
the Navy and nine in the Coast Guard, working as a ship’s mechanic.
He also worked in law enforcement for the Coast Guard investigating
illegal drug activity.
An ad in a Catholic newsletter about the Capuchins caught
his eye. To learn more, he visited the friars of Puerto Rico
where he was stationed, and eventually joined the Capuchins
in Detroit in August of 1988. It was there that he discovered
his passion: to care for and love the natural world, and seek
a way to live with least harm.
Samyn received his Bachelor of Social Work degree from Marygrove
in 1995, then put his skills to work by creating the position
of client advocate at the Capuchin Soup Kitchen. Though he
has moved on, that position is now staffed by three employees
at various sites of the soup kitchen ministry. They work with
soup kitchen clients to access community resources, secure
employment and help people cope with substance abuse.
“Marygrove really gave me confidence in myself and reinforced
my commitment to justice and working for systemic change in
our society,” Samyn said. “There were two important lessons
I learned from my Marygrove experience. These lessons did not
come from some text or lesson plan. They came from students
and faculty. My fellow students taught me courage, the courage
of that single mom achieving her goals under tremendous odds.
From Marygrove faculty, I saw dedication and commitment to
stick with it, to show commitment to the Marygrove student
body and the Detroit community as a whole.”
Samyn’s personal creed is, “Hold on to the vision and whether
it bears success or failure, trek the noble path.” His advice
to college students today is similar. “Stay focused. Love well,
listen long and follow your vision.”
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