Hop Hopkins
Hop Hopkinsco-founder of PANTHER RIDGE FARM, is a certified Arborist, a Master Gardener, has his Basic Permaculture Design Certificate and is a certified Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) instructor. Hop was born in Dallas, Texas and has been a Grassroots Environmental Justice Community Organizer in Seattle, WA, Portland, OR and Los Angeles, CA. He received his BA from New College of California as a graduate in the Culture Ecology & Sustainable Communities program. There Hop focused on natural building, ecological design and analyzing race and class within the Intentional Communities movement. He and his wife, Adalila Zelada-Garcia, homeschool their two daughters and steward a quarter of an acre of land inhabited with chickens, honey bees, and multiple compost piles.
For seven years Poppa Hop contributed his talents to the Los Angeles Conservation Corps in various roles including Urban Forestry Manager and Director of Vocational Programs. In these roles he spearheaded program implementation, created training programs and assisted with curriculum development for underserved youth in the areas of Wildland Firefighting, Environmental Remediation, Water Efficiency and Solar Installation. He then spent a year and a half with the Los Angeles Neighborhood Land Trust where he was the Director of Programs and managed the Youth Education and Urban Agriculture program. Poppa Hop has also served as a Board Member for the Community Coalition for Environmental Justice, Western States Center and People’s College of Law. Presently, Hop sits on the Advisory Committee for the Southern Food and Beverage Museum, is a Board Member for Village Playgarden (where he earned his nickname) and an active member of the Urban Agriculture Working Group of the Los Angeles Food Policy Council.
Additionally, Poppa Hop is a long time vegetarian, Nonviolent Communication practitioner and recently completed the Ojai Foundation’s Center for Council Practice Training for Social Justice Organizers. Hop believes that life is not a competitive struggle and he is driven by his vision to create a network of residential food forests, in order to support the development of stable, human-scale, solar, self-reliant neighborhood communities integrated with cooperative local economies.[1]
Hop Hopkins is the former Director of Organizational Transformation at the Sierra Club, where he helped the organization evolve its commitment to anti-racism. Hop is a longtime social movement strategist and scholar, and has been a leader in movements from HIV/AIDS to anti-globalization, food sovereignty, anti-displacement and clean energy transition, after beginning his career as a grassroots environmental justice community organizer. Most recently he was a Climate Justice Fellow and adjunct professor at Antioch University. He is based in Los Angeles, CA.[2]
Communist connection
Comrade Paula Solomon (1946-2023) was memorialized by a crowd of about 50 people at the historic activist First Unitarian Church on Sept. 3 2023. An array of speakers attested to her character, dedication, and steadfastness over an entire lifetime of positive contribution to people’s movements.
Paula was the ultimate “red diaper baby,” born to Lee Solomon and Will Solomon, both Communist Party USA members and activists in Los Angeles. Will had been blacklisted on the L.A. waterfront and was often out of work, and it was her mom Lee who seemed to be the greater influence on young Paula. One of Lee’s projects was the founding of the People's College of Law, a law school established to teach students how, as lawyers, to help ordinary people—workers, tenants, students, immigrants, members of oppressed groups—rather than the rich and the corporations.
Will and Lee owned a modest six-unit apartment building on a busy street in Central L.A., and Paula inherited it. As her parents had done, Paula ran the building almost like a commune, offering affordable housing to kindred spirits, and lifelong caring for those, like comrade Esther Cicconi, who was able to age in place there with “a little help from her friends.”
Another resident of the building, activist and writer Carolfrances Likins, who became one of Paula’s closest companions, cohosted the memorial with Hop Hopkins.
A couple who had lived in Paula’s building, Terre Lownds and Peter Lownds, also spoke and read poems in her honor. Terre related that she once asked Paula if she was related to King Solomon. “Probably,” Paula answered with a straight face. “Even as we grieve,” Terre recited, “we groove. Even as we tire, we try.” Peter, calling Paula “a consistently courageous person,” also stated that his great-grandfather was named Zalmen Solomon—so maybe they too were even related somewhere along the line.
FRSO connection
Gabriel Sayegh's; article "Redefining Success", was posted on October 1st, 2001 by Freedom Road Socialist Organization.
- In the growing resistance to capitalism within the United States, many white activists consider Seattle as the "beginning of a movement" and gauge anti-capitalist work using Seattle as the measuring stick.
Special thanks to "Chris Dixon, Sonja Sivesind, Alan Rausch, and Therese Saliba for their feedback on this article. Thanks to Trevor Baumgartner, Jennica Born, Lydia Cabasco, Chris Crass, Stephanie Guilloud, Hop Hopkins, Kimi Lee, and Scott Winn, for the discussions that helped flesh out these ideas".[3]