At Freedom Farm Community
The first time Ann Rader-Hayes and her husband, Edgar Hayes, visited Camp Deerpark was for a church retreat in the year 2000. They were living at Menno House in Manhattan and attended Manhattan Mennonite Fellowship.
In 2004, Ann and Edgar, along with Ann’s brother and sister-in-law, Benand Elka Rader, and parents, Bill and Clara Rader, purchased a piece of land in Orange County, New York, and began a farm. They named it Freedom Farm Community. In keeping with a vision they had when they were young, the goal of Freedom Farm Community was to combine youth education in peace and justice with organic sustainable farming and Christian community. Ann wanted to grow food without the use of chemical fertilizers, pesticides or other artificial chemicals and share it with people who couldn’t otherwise afford organic food. Today, Ann and Edgar donate a variety of vegetables, such as carrots, lettuce, tomatoes, squash, kale and onions, to local soup kitchens and senior homes.
When the farm was purchased, Ann and Edgar didn’t realize how close it was to the camp that they had visited four years earlier. But when they made the discovery, Edgar ventured across the mountain in the fall of 2004 to introduce himself to their new Camp Deerpark neighbors. Edgar found Ken Bontrager in the middle of patching motel walls after a flood and their brief conversation ended with the standard, “Let’s get together sometime.” It was nearly two years later when Ken and Deborah invited Edgar and Ann, and Sean and Kim McConaghay, to their home for a meal. Sean had been hired as facilities director in January of 2006 and the McConaghays were eager to put down roots in the community.

The meal was the start of a beautiful partnership between Camp Deerpark and Freedom Farm Community. Camp Deerpark from early on had a desire to include farming and gardening in the children’s camp program. Freedom Farm had a desire to engage youth in education that offered alternatives to violence, sustainable agriculture and opportunities to discover God’s transformative love for each of us. Over the years, Freedom Farm has helped with racial reconciliation and conflict resolution training of Camp Deerpark summer staff. And during the summers, Ann has shown up at camp each Friday, delivering fresh produce to share with campers and guests.
All of the campers take a trip to Freedom Farm during the summer to help with chores around the farm, or to learn how to make different foods like butter or pizza. The campers love the chance to have even more space to run around, visit animals, and to see how food they eat is grown. In 2017 Freedom Farm hosted a July Fourth picnic for campers.
“Camp Deerpark is fortunate to have a relationship with Freedom Farm and the support they provide us in the form of produce and program sharing,” said Paul Holderbaum, a summer camp nature teacher at Camp Deerpark. “The interaction between our Christian ministries provides an even more powerful witness to our local community.”
“In the ‘early days’ of Freedom Farm, before their barn was built and our kids grew up and rearranged our schedules, we’d gather in the old farm-house dining room for a weekly potluck we called “Soup Tuesday,” said Sean McConaghay, Camp Deerpark facilities director. “These meals were usually in our collective offseason, and despite the drafty windows, the environment was always warm. Edgar and Ann make you feel welcome not just with their words, but with their lives—which is probably why the single young men from Camp Deerpark had no qualms about showing up late to finish off the food!”
Camp Deerpark campers and staff have also enjoyed worshipping with the Rader-Hayes family at the farm around a campfire. A quote from the farm’s 2016 Annual Update noted that, “Even our valley burst into song when youth from Camp Deerpark belted their praises under the night sky.”
“There is a great deal of love shared between folks at Camp Deerpark and the Rader-Hayes family at Freedom Farm,” said Ken. “Kim McConaghay serves on the Freedom Farm board. Ben Rader served for nine years on the Camp Deerpark board. We have had an annual Thanksgiving Day football game for at least 10 years. And in the months after Hadassah’s death, our family needed a place to spend quality time together away from camp, as there were several young adults living in our home. So we had weekly meals in the Freedom Farm barn. It became a wonderful place of healing for our family.”
—Written by Dillon Hershey, Ken Bontrager, and Donna Stoltzfus.
Related Entries
Share:
Releasing and Loving “The Other Side”
This is Session 1 of the Prince of Peace: Jesus and Peacebuilding from the Election to the Holidays webinar series. (Click here to sign up for session invites.) This session is about what we do with those in our lives who see things differently — even very differently. We do this using a paradigm from…
Story of A Tree
A fresh tree stump is like a magnet to me. I have to look at the rings to read the tree’s story. It’s at once humbling to look inside a living thing that is much longer-lived than yourself, but also encouraging to see how it weathered the ups and downs of life, the good times…
Camp’s Political Endorsement
I’ve been eligible to vote for 30 years, but – like many in my generation – I’ve never felt like a politician or party truly represented me. They may win me at one point, but they’ll loose me in the next. When I have voted, it always seemed I was going to the polls holding…
Prince of Peace
Camp’s mission statement says we offer people the opportunity to fellowship in “serenity”. Serenity literally means “clear skies” — a state of refuge from the storms of the World. Right now, our World does feel pretty stormy with a divided country going into an election and numerous disasters and conflicts abroad and at home. Because…
Mapping Spiritual Journey with NYC Leaders
In order to know where you’re going, it’s a good idea to know where you are. One of the best ways to know where you are is a good map. The NYC LMC District is seeing growth in many of our churches right now, and opportunities for re-inventing and re-launching in others. But these are…
How Do You Define Mission?
When somebody says “I’m on a mission”, what do you think of? If the word is said in church, what is the first thing that comes to mind? You may think of someone clutching a Bible in a jeep jostling down jungle roads. Or you cold be thinking of a caring staff at an remote…
A Special Request for Baby Vivian
Serving God, while the greatest of blessings, is no guarantee that everything will go well in life. Tragedy, difficulty, and suffering can find any of us at any moment, and when it does, the people of God are essential in helping us navigate the valleys of shadow with Jesus by our side. Ben Gosnell came…
You Can Always Come Home
In the pursuit of mission, I’ve moved around a lot as an adult. To be perfectly honest, I haven’t found a place since Mom and Dad’s house that I felt was mine — a place I could call home. If you find yourself longing for home, you’re in some pretty good company. It says in…
Map Makers Project
Camp is a big place and we have some big plans. But this raises a big question: Just where is everything? In the past, we asked around and maybe somebody would know. Now, we’d like to get all that information down on a map. We’ll use it to maintain the grounds, plan maintenance projects, and…
Welcoming Wisdom: Cabin 2 Opens in Promise Woods
We’re very pleased to announce that Cabin 2 “Wisdom” is now open in Promise Woods for retreat groups and other guests. Wisdom is our 5th (of 6) bunk cabin to be completed and it sleeps 10 in the spacious bunk room and two more in the cozy bedroom. Like all of our camper-style cabins, it…
- « Previous
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- Next »
