After overcoming a stage-4 cancer diagnosis several years ago, Jacqueline Maria Santiago-Vicente got a second chance at life. Ever since then, she’s been working to do the same for her city.

But the community leader fully admits there was a time when she gave up and turned her back on Camden.
“I’m very honest with anyone who ever asks me,” Santiago-Vicente said. “I’ve been a social worker and teacher for almost 40 years now. I just got tired of putting bandages on everything.”
About 20 years ago, she said the drug and crime situation in her neighborhood had gotten so bad that she felt helpless to do anything about it, and more importantly, she was frightened for the safety of her children.
She said she moved to Chicago to get away from the problems in her home town and to try and start a new life.
But after about 12 years away, she received devastating news. She was diagnosed with an aggressive cancer and she decided her best chance at medical care would be at home in New Jersey.
Home to Heal
Despite undergoing intensive treatments, her outlook quickly worsened. But it was at that point, when things seemed bleakest, that everything started to change.
“During chemotherapy, I’m here, I’m sitting at my mom’s house, I look across the street,” she said, recalling her experience on Byron Street in North Camden. “There were two abandoned houses and I see some people working there.”
Calling herself a nosy person, she said she was worried someone was trying to break into one of the vacant houses, so she went out to investigate.
Out on the street, she said she met Jessica Franzini, who works with The Heart of Camden organization, who explained how that non-profit organization was working to improve the block.
“I said, ‘you know what, I’m in the middle of chemo right now, but when I get better, I’m going to volunteer with you,’” she recalled.
But Santiago-Vicente remembered that even though she said it, she didn’t really believe she’d ever get better. Her prognosis had recently taken a turn for the worse and she was actually thinking more about the end of her life.
She said a vacant lot there on the same block was at one time where her grandmother’s house stood, and if she died, she wanted her family to plant a tree on it as a way to remember her.
But she survived her battle with cancer and instead of a single remembrance tree, she grew gardens in that spot, and in many others, and she created multiple programs that teach others to do the same.
“Now I’m at 25-30 lots all over Camden,” she said. “So I’m still here. I’ve planted many trees.”
Beginning to Grow
That lot began what she’d later dub the Byron Gardens and led to her forming North Camden Community Gardens in 2017, with the mission of beautifying the city one vacant lot at a time.
“If it’s about greening and cleaning, I’m there,” Santiago-Vicente said.
She said she doesn’t own the properties she works on and said most of the lots she beautifies have been vacant five to 10 years.
“I’m what they call a guerilla-gardner,” she said. “I just beautify spaces that don’t belong to me.”
