Molly Marsh is managing editor at Partners In Health, an organization that works to provide health care to poor populations around the world.

Posts By This Author

New and Noteworthy

by Molly Marsh 12-01-2007

Poverty 101

'They Are All Our Children'

by Molly Marsh 12-01-2007

One of the opening scenes in Angels in the Dust shows waking children, some two to a bed, others with cats curled up beside them, greeting what looks like a chilly day in South Africa.

Stories as Spiritual Practice

by Molly Marsh 11-01-2007
From parables to street theater, imagined worlds open our eyes.

New and Noteworthy

by Molly Marsh 09-01-2007

Race Matters

True to Our Native Land, edited by Brian Blount, describes itself as the first African-American commentary on the New Testament.

New and Noteworthy

by Molly Marsh 08-01-2007

Maxed Out

New and Noteworthy

by Molly Marsh 07-01-2007

Encountering the Holy

The Life of Meaning: Reflections on Faith, Doubt, and Repairing the World, edited by Bob Abernethy, host of the PBS show Religion & Ethics N

Fashion Conscious

by Molly Marsh 06-01-2007
Clothing the world with justice.

Healing the Sick

by Molly Marsh 04-01-2007

Taking the church's temperature on health care.

Knit Local, Act Global

by Molly Marsh 02-01-2007
Stitching for Social (and personal) change.

Words! Camera! Democracy!

by Molly Marsh 11-01-2006
Storytelling in the digital age.

New and Noteworthy

by Molly Marsh 09-01-2006

The Alpha and Omega

New and Noteworthy

by Molly Marsh 08-01-2006

Good News

New and Noteworthy

by Molly Marsh 07-01-2006

A Basis for Peace

New And Noteworthy

by Molly Marsh 06-01-2006

A New Season

Grub for Body and Soul

by Molly Marsh 05-01-2006
An interview with food activists Anna Lappe and Bryant Terry

Every movement needs its revolutionaries and spokespersons, and in the growing crusade for a healthy, ethical, and “fair” food system, Bryant Terry and Anna Lappé happen to be both. Terry is a chef and founder of b-healthy! (Build Healthy Eating and Lifestyles to Help Youth)—a nonprofit group in New York that teaches low-income kids not only about nutrition, but also how to prepare healthy food themselves. Lappé is a writer, speaker, and co-founder (with her mother, Frances Moore Lappé) of the Small Planet Institute and Small Planet Fund. The latter supports grassroots efforts around the world that address the causes of hunger and poverty.

The two packed their passion and experience into Grub: Ideas for an Urban Organic Kitchen, a practical book that explains why our food system is the way it is, but also what we can do to change it. And don’t be surprised if, along the way, you pick up a few tips about cooking (pepper grinders are key) and music (Césaria Évora is nice accompaniment to cinnamon-dusted sweet potato fries). Associate editor Molly Marsh spoke recently with the author-activists.

Sojourners: So why the name Grub? What is grub?

Bryant Terry: When Anna and I started working on this project, we had so many people tell us that healthy organic food is for wealthy baby boomers. That’s a common misconception. We wanted people to understand that grub—healthy, local, sustainable food—is food that’s accessible to everyone. It’s something all people have a right to.

New and Noteworthy

by Molly Marsh 04-01-2006

Island Living

New and Noteworthy

by Molly Marsh 03-01-2006

Communities at Risk

“AIDS is born in the house of poverty,” an Indian health worker says on Making Ends Meet: AIDS and Poverty, a new resource from the Mennonite Central Committee. The 18-minute DVD looks at communities in India and South Africa and how AIDS is impacting the economies of each. The DVD includes additional interviews, a 25-minute story on church workers in Zimbabwe and Mozambique, and other features. Excellent for Sunday school or study groups. www.mcc.org/aids

New and Noteworthy

by Molly Marsh 02-01-2006

Loving Our Enemies

I Hope You Never Forget

by Molly Marsh 02-01-2006
Today's scrapbooks don't look a thing like our grandmother's albums.

Remember Whose You Are

by Molly Marsh 12-01-2005

Shiloh Baptist Church, Washington, D.C.