January 2024 TPT Member Magazine

Rose McGee Believes in the Unifying Power of Sweet Potato Pie By Amy Melin

"So the sweet potato pie has been one of those healing factors for me. I just know that there's power in it. I know that it means so much when people are able to have a slice of it, and it takes them into memories of happier places." The people of Ferguson agreed. McGee's offers of her sweet potato pie were met with surprise, appreciation and gratefulness. Since then, McGee has shared countless pies with members of the Twin Cities community. She's also traveled all over the country, bringing her pies to people and communities in the wake of tragedy. For example, her sweet potato pies comforted members of the Mother Emanuel AME Church in South Carolina and the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh after mass shootings. Since that first trip to Missouri in 2014, McGee's pies have been going out by the dozens thanks to an annual event. Inspired by the reaction she received from people in Ferguson McGee challenged leaders in her hometown of Golden Valley, Minn., to do more. The result? An annual event over the Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday weekend aimed at community building. Each year, volunteers gather to make the number of pies equal to the age Dr. King would have been that year. That first year, the group made 86 pies. In 2024, that number reaches 95. But the work doesn't stop there. A community gathering follows, with attendees breaking into small groups to talk about race and equity, and how those issues surface in their communities. "We hope [attendees] take away a better understanding of how to be empathetic and how to listen to each other respectfully and how to really understand that everybody's story is important, is valuable," she adds. Are you inspired to whip up a pie of your own, perhaps to pay tribute to Martin Luther King, Jr.? Check out Rose's recipe.

Rose McGee does not love to cook. It's a surprising admission from a woman who's come to be known by many as "The Pie Lady." With more than 4,000 sweet potato pies to her credit, this Minnesotan is building community and inspiring unity with her Sweet Potato Comfort Pies (sweetpotatocomfortpie. org). And that commitment to community recently earned her a 2023 Facing Race Award from the St. Paul & Minneapolis Foundation, a recognition that honors anti-racism advocates for making Minnesota a place where everyone can thrive. McGee's work was first inspired by the 2014 events in Ferguson, Mo., following the shooting death of an African-American man, Michael Brown, by a police officer. Watching the unrest on television, McGee was suddenly inspired to bake pies and bring them to Ferguson. "It wasn't something that I was interested in doing, baking. But somewhere it resonated in my heart that, you know, this is what you should do," she says. With 30 pies loaded in her car, McGee and her son headed to Missouri. "Black culture has always been in a struggle in this country, and it's in a struggle that continues. From day to day, being faced with white supremacy or racism. And with that comes, 'How do you exist? How do you maintain hope? How do you heal?'" McGee explains.

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JANUARY 2024

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