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Majora Carter – The Woman Who Grew a Forest in the Ghetto and Planted Justice in its Roots

“You don’t have to move out of your neighbOURhood to live in a better one.”

The South Bronx — once branded as America’s urban wasteland — had become synonymous with poverty, pollution, and policy neglect.
Factories belched toxic smoke. Highways cut through homes. Parks were rare.
And hope — rarer still.

But then came a daughter of the Bronx.
Not to escape it. But to reclaim it.
Not to greenwash it. But to green it.

Meet Majora Carter, the urban revitalization strategist who turned environmental justice into a civil rights movement,
and transformed her blighted neighbourhood into a global blueprint for sustainable cities.

From a Broken Neighbourhood to Bold Vision

Majora grew up in the Bronx, in a family where dreaming small was a survival strategy.
But when she returned after college and saw how systemic neglect had poisoned the very air her community breathed, she decided:

“I’m not going to wait for permission to fix what’s broken.”

In 2001, she founded Sustainable South Bronx (SSBx) — an organization that would challenge the idea that poor communities must remain poor, or worse, toxic.

Her approach was radical and revolutionary:

  • Turn vacant lots into vibrant parks
  • Train local residents in green-collar jobs
  • Build waterfronts, not waste dumps
  • Redesign cities to honour equity, ecology, and economy

The Hunt’s Point Riverside Park

Perhaps her most iconic victory was the transformation of Hunt’s Point — once a literal dumping ground —
into the first waterfront park in the area in over 60 years.

This was not just about trees and trails. It was about:

  • Reclaiming public space
  • Reconnecting communities to nature
  • Creating joy where there was only injustice

“I didn’t grow up in a world that told me I deserved beauty. But I fought to give it back to my people.”

“Green the Ghetto” and the Birth of an Urban Justice Movement

When she took the TED stage in 2006 and declared the now-iconic phrase “Green the Ghetto,” she didn’t just spark applause — she sparked a movement.

  • Her TED Talk went viral before virality was a thing.
  • Her message echoed globally: “Environmental justice is not a luxury. It’s a human right.”

Since then, she has advised the Obama administration, worked with the Department of Energy,
and helped cities around the world build equitable, green infrastructure.

She’s proved again and again that urban renewal is possible — without gentrification.
That greening a neighbourhood doesn’t mean pushing its people out.

Recognition & Legacy

  • MacArthur “Genius” Grant recipient
  • Named one of Fast Company’s 100 Most Creative People in Business
  • Co-founder of Majora Carter Group, a consulting firm for urban regeneration
  • Featured in TIME, CNN, NPR, and The Atlantic
  • Continues to build eco-social enterprises that keep wealth local

Her Words

“We don’t want handouts. We want infrastructure. Opportunity. And dignity.”
“Greening is not just about parks — it’s about power.”
“The South Bronx deserves the same dreams as Manhattan.”

Why She’s a Human of Change

  • Because she turned environmental design into a tool for justice
  • Because she showed the world how cities can heal their deepest scars
  • Because she never believed that geography should determine destiny

Majora Carter didn’t just clean up the South Bronx.
She reimagined it. Reclaimed it. And reignited it.
And in doing so, she taught a generation of planners, mayors, and citizens that you don’t have to leave your home to build a better one.

Majora Carter
Episode 10 | Humans of Change
One World. One Change. One Human.

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