UUCS had a busy December! The December Share the Plate collection went to fill a dozen huge Aldi's grocery bags for needy families at Mary H. Wright School in our church neighborhood. Also in December, we collected toys and books and money for clothes for the Children’s Shelter in Spartanburg—a couple skilled shoppers did a great job of finding bargains in pajamas, socks, etc.! We joined many of our fellow UU congregations in this country and around the world for the longstanding “Guest at Your Table” program. This is a six-week collection for people in need both in our country and abroad. This program helps personalize giving for our youth. And, lastly, our Christmas Eve collection went to TOTAL Ministries.
The new Building and Grounds Committee discussed their role in the Green Sanctuary plan at their December meeting, and appreciates their importance in the Green Sanctuary program.
We’re not meeting in December, but at our January meeting, we will begin to choose three issues to present to the congregation for vote at annual meeting. One of these will replace Hunger.
Each one will need 1-2 educational sessions at a Wed. or Sun. morning time. We briefly discussed this—we’ll look at some material online at UUA website and confer via email. We will continue the Green Sanctuary as our second issue.
Sunday, December 25, 2011
The Season of Giving
Monday, November 21, 2011
Foocus on Economic Justice
Social Justice Meeting will be Wednesday, Nov. 30th, 7 pm, after a WW supper prepared by our youth group as a youth fundraiser—let’s support their efforts!
Our first Fair Trade Mini Fair was a rousing success! Everyone liked the organic, fair trade chocolate, hot chocolate, and teas, UU Service Committee holiday cards, and fair trade scarves. Carolyn Bourassa’s soaps and crafts were also a hit, as were Ella Webster’s origami cranes. This Green Sanctuary project was a lot of fun! We’ll have a second chance to buy holiday cards the Sunday after Thanksgiving, and also have a second chance for tea and chocolate when we sell coffee again. The fair trade, organic coffee sales will move to the second Sunday of every month, beginning Dec. 11th.
Be sure to read the December Unison on the "Common Ground" conference that brought together activists from across the state. From UUCS, Jinx Jenkins, Alice Sutton, Judy Allen, and Marie Griffin attended the conference, and Marie reported on the conference. The inspiring keynote speech was given by Dr. Reverend Neal Jones, minister at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Columbia.
Monday, November 7, 2011
First Fair Trade Mini-Fair!
Sunday November 20th
UUCS 1st Fair Trade Mini Fair !
12:00- 2:00
Buy
Fair Trade TEA, CHOCOLATE, and, of course, COFFEE
HOLIDAY CARDS FROM Unitarian Universalist Service Committee
Beautiful crafts from our talented church family
FAIR TRADE SCARVES FROM SERRV, and More!!
We’ll also launch the Guest at Your Table program that day.
Check out the SJ bulletin board & Read more about it in the November UNISON
Friday, September 9, 2011
Social Justice at UUCS 2011-2012
In May 2010 at the Annual Congregational Meeting, we voted YES to affirm a name change from Social Concerns to Social Justice. This change reflected our church’s stronger mission statement, “We embody and promote religious freedom, caring community and social justice…” We also made a transition to our new Social Justice Plan by electing one local & one global issue as focal points of our plan.
Appalachian Tragedy: Mountaintops and Miners was our global issue. Our congregation held educational sessions, showed movies, and wrote letters calling for political action. Several SJ members participated in the D.C. “Appalachia Rising” mobilization and march, and brought material (and enthusiasm!) back to share.
When a Christmas toy fund in a WV community was robbed, we participated in a campaign to replenish it, publicizing the need as well as contributing toys and donations. A Sunday service in February focused on mountaintop mining and one incredible woman, Judy Bonds, who helped forge the local and national movement against it. In June, a dozen youth and adults took a 3-day trip to West Virginia to see mountaintop removal, tour a coal mine, and participate in the March on Blair Mountain. This completed our focus on this issue. However, much of our work here helped inform and motivate us to work on our local issue.
The UUA Green Sanctuary Program was our local issue for 2010-2011. This is a three-to-five year project, so we continue this for the 2011-2012 year. This is a comprehensive program –a journey—towards a more earth-aware and earth-caring lifestyle for our church community, bringing in everyone from the pagan to the tech-savvy. During the first year, many of us worked on reducing our environmental impact and recycling more of our waste products. However, a professional environmental assessment is a requirement for the Green Sanctuary Program. The SC Dept of Energy gave us a grant for this ($1700), which paid 100% of the cost, but was not completed until April 2011. We will work on our application and action plan this year. The Green Sanctuary Program has both local and global aspects.
We want to involve everyone in our action plan. The action plan includes two projects for worship and celebration, two for religious education, and four sustainable living projects, to be carried out in about a two-year time frame. We have several members who have interest and expertise to share with us, and each group or committee has the opportunity to decide how they would like to participate. These projects can involve every church member, regardless of age or abilities. “The formation of a Green Team was the spark that set into motion a wide range of progressive environmental movements within the church” UU Charleston, SC
In August 2011, UUCS joined the UUSC Fair Trade Coffee Project, which promotes fair wages and environmental preservation on coffee plantations. This is both a Green Sanctuary and Hunger project for us (“double-dipping”?), as it helps the tropical environment as well as the workers there. This is NOT a fundraiser—we want maximum member-participation for maximum benefit to the environment & coffee plantation workers! We look forward to learning more about the issues associated with Fair Trade Coffee and finding opportunities to help.
2) For our second issue during 2011-2012, we chose Hunger, an ongoing concern here, also with both local and global efforts. As a church, we have filled our food barrel repeatedly, collected groceries for Park Hills School families, and donated monetary contributions to TOTAL Ministries (the Spartanburg area, church-based NPO which assists local families) through Christmas Eve and Share the Plate collections. During 2010-2011, our youth and adults attended a vigil for Homelessness, collaborated in preparing meals for the SPIHN program (combating homelessness in SPTG) and participated in a Mobile Food Pantry event, packaging & handing out food for 300+ families. In August 2011, we again participated in a Mobile Food Pantry.
Hunger is a heartbreaking problem. Why is there so much hunger in a world that has more than enough food to feed itself? This issue requires education and thought, as well as action, and lends itself to large and small-scale efforts for both youth and adults.
Social Justice and Lifespan Faith Development work to coordinate activities and share ideas. SJ presents several Sunday 9:30 am programs, Wednesday evening programs, and at least one worship service a year. SJ research on homelessness last year (one of the local issues presented for congregational vote) motivated our teens to chose homelessness for study and action last fall. The younger group, children in K5-5th grade, are in the ‘EARTH SCOUTS,’ a program for children to become empowered to make a positive difference in their homes, schools and communities." This coordinates well with the Green Sanctuary focus.
Continuing Activities
Consistent, continuing involvement in our local community has been the cornerstone of our Social Concerns program, and we remain committed to this even while our Social Justice program takes a more activist approach.
“Share the Plate Sundays” are the second and third Sundays of every month. We donate half of the undesignated money as well as designated checks to one special need each month. While most of these are local causes, some are for national and international needs or crises. For 2010-2011, special collections and “Share the Plate”collections were:
October: Association Sunday $180.
November: Park Hills Christmas total: $810 plus “adoptions” of nine children plus LOTS of food for 18 children
Dec. SPIHN total: $312.54, add from Soc. Jus. to make $325.
Christmas collection: $1337.33 to split between Total Ministries and The Mountain,
$668.67 increase from Soc Jus to $675 each.
Holiday dinner, etc: Wyoming Co. West Virginia Toys for Tots: over $400 from our
congregation & friends, but amt. really is unknown.
January (medical supplies for Haiti) $769.89;
February (baby supplies & nurse-midwife expenses for Haiti) $338.77
Total: $1108.66 -- a lot of congregational support for this trip!
March: Check for $165 Given to Upstate Pride to help with Gay Pride Festival
UU Uganda LGBT fund $110.00
April: Youth Trip to WV $328.54 (also WW supper fundraiser for this)
This includes a $100 donation to Keeper of the Mtns Foundation
May: Check for $440 to UUC-Tuscaloosa after the tornado damage
June: National Alliance for Mental Illness, Spartanburg Office $330
Park Hills School (PH), in our church neighborhood, has had the greatest percentage of poor and minority children in the county. For several years, our church partnered with PH, and many church members volunteered there in countless ways. We served as tutors and classroom aides, and helped on field trips and field days. One church member helped students in a school garden. We provided school uniforms and “adopted” needy families for Christmas gifts and bags of groceries. Now, this school has been closed, and we plan to continue volunteering in the elementary school serving the neighborhood, Mary H. Wright School.
SPIHN (Spartanburg Interfaith Hospitality Network) works with numerous religious congregations and social service agencies throughout Spartanburg County (SC) to provide temporary shelter, food, and support to homeless families. UUCS partners with Fernwood Baptist Church four to five times a year when they host the homeless families in the SPIHN program, by providing one meal and hosts for that meal. Our youth group and other groups take turns meeting this responsibility.
Love Knit & Crochet, akin to a Prayer Shawl group, began in 2010. We make shawls for very elderly church members who are no longer able to come to church. In the fall, we make scarves for the homeless; last fall, we completed 13 in time for a Christmas donation to The Haven, a Spartanburg refuge for homeless women and families. We made baby blankets and bibs for our nurse midwife’s trip to Haiti (more below). And, of course, we teach crochet and knitting to any who want to learn.
UUCS is involved with other local activities, and the SJ committee is often responsible for coordinating or publicizing them. We participate in the South Converse Neighborhood Assoc., helping plan a revitalized park, and in basics such as trash pick up days. We collect newspapers for Animal Allies, a low-cost animal clinic. We have a goal of one barrel of food a month for TOTAL Ministries’ food pantry. Several members provide clerical support once a month at St. Luke’s Clinic, the free medical clinic.
And More
When an unexpected opportunity for congregational learning and action in Social Justice arises, we may take it! One church member, a nurse-midwife, wanted to go to Haiti for a week to teach in a school for midwives there, and UUCS supported her; she plans a medical mission to Nicaragua this fall, and we will support her again. The SJ committee and LFD are likely to work together, as we did in July 2010, hosting four student activists on their tour publicizing the tragedy in North Korea and what LiNK (www.linkglobal.org) is doing. SJ members also walked with and hosted the Dreamwalkers, four students walking from Miami to DC, publicizing the plight of undocumented immigrants. We believe that actions speak louder than words. We look for ways for all church members and friends to get involved and feel good by doing good.
Social Justice History
UUCS has been active in many social concerns throughout its history. We have lent our church facility to groups who would not have been able to find another home. To mention a few examples, church members were active in founding the Spartanburg chapters of PFLAG and NAMI Connection. We worked to found Upstate Pride SC and bring about the Gay Pride Festival (the first one was held on the church grounds). We had the first openly GLBT minister in Spartanburg. We have a strong focus on our home community and an understanding of our place in Spartanburg as a beacon of liberal religion.
Online
For up to date details, please check out http://uucs-socialconcerns.blogspot.com/ directly or access it and the Social Justice page from http://www.uucs.org/
Work is Love Made Visible
~
Khalil Gibran
Sunday, May 22, 2011
2011-2012 PLANS
Last May, our congregation approved two issues for the year, one global issues and one local issue. Our global issue has been Appalachian Tragedy: Mountaintops and Miners. Our congregation has held educational sessions, shown movies, collected toys for W.V. children at Christmas, and written letters calling for political action. About 20 youth and adults are going on our trip to West Virginia to see mountaintop removal, tour a coal mine, and participate in the March on Blair Mountain in June. This will complete our focus on this issue.
1) Our local issue for this year was the Green Sanctuary Program. During this year, many of us worked on reducing our environmental impact and recycling more of our waste products. However, a professional environmental assessment is a requirement for the Green Sanctuary Program. The SC Dept of Energy gave us a grant for this ($1700), which paid 100% of the cost, but was not completed until April. So, we have not formally begun this program. We want to focus on this for 2011-2012. It has both local and global aspects.
2) For our second issue, we want to choose Hunger, also with both local and global efforts. As a church, we have filled our food barrel, collected groceries for Park Hills families, and donated collections to Total Ministries through Christmas Eve and Share the Plate. Our youth and adults this year have attended a vigil for Homelessness, collaborated in preparing meals for the SPIHN program (combating homelessness in SPTG) and participated in packaging & handing out food for 300+ families. This is a big problem that lends itself to both large and small-scale efforts, for both youth and adults, and we would like to really focus on it.
Today, the congregation approved and committed to both these issues. The Green Sanctuary and Hunger both offer many ways for adults, teens, and children to get involved.
We look forward to a fruitful year for Social Justice— if these issues excite you, watch for opportunities to participate—and you’re always welcome at any of our meetings! ~ Alice Sutton, chair, May, 2011
Friday, April 15, 2011
Green Sanctuary Assessment
Green Sanctuary: Our first meeting of the Green Sanctuary Team was both challenging & fruitful—we’ve got good ideas for our Action Plan. Our next meeting will be May 11th. If this is up your alley, please look at the professional energy assessment online at http://mrainey.freeservers.com/Family/UUCEnergyAssessment2011.pdf
The Green Sanctuary manual is online at www.uua.org/leaders/environment/greensanctuary/118741.shtml ~see page 90 for a sample action plan.
April Share The Plate: Our youth are fundraising for the June 6-8 trip to West Virginia to see mountaintop mining firsthand and participate in a march alongside the leaders in the fight for the abolition of mountaintop mining. Our April collections will contribute to their expenses and also include a donation to the cause. Read more about the trip (adults are invited, too) in the April Unison, and let us know by April 21st if you are interested in going with us! Email socialjustice@uucs.org
The Mobile Food Pantry will be at Fernwood Baptist Church April 29th distributing over 6,000 lbs of food to pre-screened Total Ministries clients. Fernwood invited us to help out since we’re their SPIHN partners, and several youth & adults have already volunteered. If you would like to help, too, email Alice at socialjustice@uucs.org
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Green Sanctuary News
Green Sanctuary: At long last, our professional energy assessment is done! That means we can get a Green Team together and develop our plans to become a certified green sanctuary. I'll shortly post a link to the report here so you can download it!
Share the Plare, Jan and Feb: Ruth is on her trip to Haiti to teach at the School for Midwives in Hinche, up in the mountains. Our church contributed over $1,000 to buy medicine and medical supplies for safer births, healthier babies, along with a minor portion of Ruth’s expenses. And Ruth’s stock of medical supplies is packed with knitted baby blankets, hats, and bibs from our Love Knit & Crochet group. Ruth will report on her trip in April at a 10:00 Sunday meeting. We're looking ofrward to many pictures & stories! The UUSC (UU Service Committee) has a Haiti trip program, now just for medical teams, although in the future they plan to make work projects available for nonmedical teams, too.
Share the Plare, Mar: We contributed $165 for Upstate Pride and $100 for the UUA Uganda- LGBT fund. You’ll see our Standing On The Side of Love banners at the 3rd Annual Upstate Pride SC Festival, June 4th, along with UU advertising and our beverage booth.
Political Action Opportunity: Sunday, Apr 3rd, Sloane Wheelan of Planned Parenthood, SC., will be at church with sample letters for us to sign & send to state and national legistors.
Thursday, February 24, 2011
We’re Excited!
&bull Did you miss Anatomy of Hate, the fascinating movie presented on Valentine’s Day at Converse College? This film provoked anti-gay demonstrators and TWO big demonstrations for love & tolerance, one on campus, one across from campus. A good sized group of UU’s were among the demonstrators and the large audience! You’ve got another chance to see the movie, 7:00 Wednesday, March 2nd, at UUCS – this is free and open to both adults and youth.
&bull We agreed to make the first Sunday of each month an opportunity for the congregation to sign letters for various causes. Sunday, March 6th, we’ll have letters to state legislators protesting budget cuts to important programs such as education—Jinx is preparing these.
&bull Unitarian Universalists are fighting for gay rights in Uganda: UUA President Peter Morales announced the fund on January 25 to help human rights activists in that country. This was just before David Kato, a Ugandan gay rights activist, was fatally beaten.
What can we do to help? We agreed to designate our March Share the Plate to split between the UUA LGBT Uganda fund and our own Spartanburg Upstate Pride as they work to put on the 3rd Annual Upstate Pride SC Festival on June 4th. And we applaud the appointment of Cynthia Lanier to the Upstate Pride Board.
&bull Ruth’s Haiti Trip: Ruth leaves Mar. 26th to teach at Haiti's School for Midwives for a week. She’s taking medical supplies with her --she has over $1100 from UUCS plus other donations from friends and family to spend for medicines, baby supplies, etc. She’ll bring back lots of photos & share her experience in Hinche, Haiti, at a presentation in April.
&bull We’ll have a short meeting March 16th to present Ruth with the total of knitted, crocheted, and other baby gifts for her trip and discuss possible global issues for next year: candidates so far are the Gulf Coast, Haiti, Midle East/freedom, Women’s Issues/fair trade/microfinance.
&bull We set Mar. 23rd for the Green Sanctuary meeting--yes, the Environmental Assessment should be completed by next Monday! Alice will mail SJ committee members a copy when we receive it. Anyone else who wants to look at it may request it—happy to share!!
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Water, Cool, Clean Water (with apologies to Marty Robbins)
UUCS has focused on Social Justice all month, so while Don took the day off, I gave today's sermon. I have a new respect for ministers who write sermons regularly. Many thanks to all who complimented me afterwards! And many, many thanks to Keith Plumley, Ron Fowler, Joyce Harrison, and Jim Brown for creating the musical part of the service-- it was just perfect!
I'm really looking forward to next week's super-musical service, "Justice in Song
The Rev. Don Rollins: We can’t change the world with music alone, but neither can we change the world without it. Come find out why."
And here is my sermon:
I grew up mostly in Southern California, which is a natural desert. Between May and September, it almost never rains, and total annual rainfall is only 15 inches. That scarcity made water important to me. Our favorite family vacations were camping in the Sierras, and beautiful images of water fill my childhood memories: dark blue water in a mountain lake, Clear, sparkling, ice cold water, snowmelt, tumbling down the rocks in a streambed...
Cool, clean water-- so simple, yet for many people, unattainable.
Only last July, the UN declared clean water a 'fundamental human right.' According to the World Health Organization, 1.2 billion people worldwide don’t have access to clean drinking water, and about 1.5 million children under five die each year from water and sanitation-related diseases.
In developing countries, people dip water out of ponds shared with livestock, or rivers fed by run-off from untreated human sewage. They walk miles to carry home water, this muddy water from dirty rivers and ponds.
Often water is not just contaminated by animals and human sewage. Waste from mines and industries is a problem all over the world. In Honduras, in South Africa, in Nigeria—anywhere there is mining, companies dump lead and other toxins in their waste piles, poisoning water, poisoning animals, and poisoning people.
I could talk to you about how poverty and corporate greed deprive poor people in far away countries of that basic human right, clean water.
But today, I want to tell you a story about water much closer to home, a story about the Appalachians, just up the road from us, and another woman who loved cool, clean, water. Julia, or Judy, Bonds was born the same year I was, the daughter of a coalminer, in Marfork Hollow. She loved living in Marfork Hollow, a narrow green valley in southern WV, where her family had lived for 7 generations.
As a child, Judy fished and swam in the nearby stream. later, as a young divorced mother, she raised her daughter there. She worked in minimum wage jobs, convenience store clerk, waitress, Pizza Hut manager… She was happy to be a grandmother at 45.
"There is nothing like being in the hollows," she once said. "You feel snuggled. You feel safe. It seems like God has his arms around you."
But in the 1990’s, Massey Energy Co., moved in, and began blasting—Explosions of AnFo, a combination of diesel fuel and ammonium nitrate, shook the earth, disturbed house foundatons, and made sleep impossible. Clear streams turned orange or stopped flowing. The air became filled with dust. Children, including Judy’s grandson, developed asthma. Families began moving out. Judy refused to go. Marfork was home, even as green mountains became ugly, flat scars.
Then her 6-year-old grandson asked her a question: "What's wrong with these fish?"
He was standing in the local creek, holding fistfuls of dead fish, with more floating belly-up around his ankles.
Judy said, "So I began to open my eyes and pay attention." And the more she learned, the angrier she got.
She discovered that Marfork was one of many West Virginia hollows dealing with the effects of mountaintop removal mining, or MTR. This was developed in the 1970s, and big coal compainies began using it more and more by the late 1980’s. It’s cheap because it takes very few workers. They completely blast off the tops of mountains so that huge machines can mine thin seams of coal. This annihilates streams and forests, and causes extensive flooding and blasting damage to homes. The pollution from mining and the toxic chemicals used in the preparation of coal for market have been linked to rising asthma rates and other serious respiratory ailments, particularly among children, like Judy’s grandson. Slurry dams thick with heavy metals such as arsenic, mercury and lead routinely overflow into watersheds, contaminate drinking water and drive toxic sludge into residents' backyards. And thousands of local people are driven out of their homes.
Almost 2,000 miles of Appalachian headwater streams have been completely buried and over 500 Appalachian mountaintops leveled, looking like moonscapes, sometimes covered over with thin grass. Over 800 square miles of one of the most bio-diverse regions of our planet have been destroyed.
All this is to produce low quality coal that is burned to make electricity—producing severe air pollution & coal ash. Air pollution spreads over the region and neighboring states.
The more Judy learned, the angrier she got. And the Pizza Hut manager became an activist, a volunteer with Coal River Mountain Watch, a local grass-roots group.
She learned that Massey planned a dam farther up Marfork hollow - an impoundment that would hold millions of gallons of coal sludge. Her family would be in danger if the dam failed, and such dams had failed before - including in 1972 at Buffalo Creek, W.Va., where 125 people were killed in the toxic flood.
Sitting on her front porch, dusty with ash from nearby blasting, Judy was outraged to hear her grandson describe an escape route should a coal waste dam break and flood their valley. “I knew in my heart there was really no escape,” Judy said. “How do you tell a child that his life is a sacrifice for corporate greed?” She knew that it was time to move. They were the last residents to evacuate from Marfork Hollow.
She hadn’t saved her hollow, but she worked harder to save her mountains. She became executive director of Coal River Mountain Watch. She became a passionate and inspirational public speaker and a community leader. She learned how to challenge the mining companies' federal and state permit applications. She worked with college-educated environmentalists and college professors, and educated them because she brought something to the cause that they couldn’t—the deep understanding of a hillbilly woman!
Embracing her hillbilly identity, she shrugged off the argument that rural people needed the coal industry's jobs. "If coal is so good for us hillbillies, then why are we so poor?"
She worked 90 hour weeks for $12,000 a year as director of Coal River Mountain Watch. Then, in 2003, she was awarded the prestigious $125,000 Goldman Environmental Prize. She didn’t know what that was, but she quickly found out.
“The Goldman Prize honors grassroots environmental heroes from the six inhabited continental regions: Africa, Asia, Europe, Islands and Island Nations, North America, and South and Central America. The Prize recognizes individuals for sustained and significant efforts to protect and enhance the natural environment, often at great personal risk. These “Grassroots” leaders are involved in local efforts, where change is created through citizens’ participation in the issues that affect them. By recognizing these leaders, the Prize seeks to inspire other ordinary people, ordinary people like us, to take extraordinary actions to protect the natural world.”
After paying for her grandson's braces, helping her daughter buy a car and paying off the family's mortgage, Judy donated nearly $50,000 to Coal River Mountain Watch - an amount equal to the organization's annual budget.
In the 2008 book, Coal River, the writer Michael Shnayerson quotes her as saying "We’re a colony here, and the coal companies rule. We can complain all we want, but those complaints are just swept aside in the name of progress and jobs. It's like we're selling our children's feet to buy shoes." As more people became involved in fighting MTR, Coal Companies fought back – and many people in the small Appalachian communities were afraid to speak out, or believed their lies. The closer to success the fight got, the more of a price Judy paid.
Coal River Mountain Watch co-director Vernon Haltom said,
“Judy endured much personal suffering for her leadership. She endured physical assault, verbal abuse, and death threats because she stood up for justice for her community. I never met a more courageous person, one who faced her own death and spoke about it with the same voice as if it were a scheduled trip.”
Yes, Judy was diagnosed with lung cancer last summer. Cancer rates are high in coalmining country, and Judy’s years in Marfork Hollow, breathing toxic dust, may have caused that cancer.
But the fight against MTR continued. Years ago she envisioned a “thousand hillbilly march” in Washington, DC. In September 2010, that dream became a reality as thousands marched on the White House for Appalachia Rising. Senators, Representatives, and the EPA became more responsive to the outcry against the devastation of MTR! Amber Pennington, Jinx Jenkins,, and I were lucky to be there. Sadly, Judy Bonds was not—she was too ill.
“But Judy had done all any one person could conceivably do to stop mountaintop removal.”
Judy fought for her community’s rights, and for all Americans’ rights to clean water & clean air. She fought to save some of the oldest mountains on earth. She was stricken with cancer… but kept fighting. She could see victory ahead, with the national attention that MTR was getting, with a huge rally in DC… with the EPA suspending and reviewing some mining permits, including the biggest, Spruce Mine.
She passed away early this month. A week after her death, the EPA vetoed that Spruce Mine permit, one of the big goals in her fight. That one big win sets a precedent for reviewing and vetoing other permits. And it saves many miles of pure creeks and streams.
Bo Webb, another 6th generation West Virginian & leading activist, was a close friend of Judy. He said, “I can feel Judy nudging each of us, “Hey guys, We are the ones We have been waiting for.” I believe she knows that the battle for our mountains can be won, as long as the rest of us keep fighting.
Judy Bonds was an unlikely hero, but she is an example to us all. She fought for her country, that the mountaintops would stay green, rich in plants, birds, squirrels, and deer, that the streams would stay clear and full of fish, that children could grow up safe and healthy in those hollows. That the beautiful Appalachians would be here for generations to come.
Another unlikely hero, Helen Keller, said that none of the things we cherish in life will be ours unless we act courageously—Judy Bonds did.
What can we learn from Judy Bonds? She opened her eyes when her grandson asked her "What's wrong with these fish?" standing in the creek, holding fistfuls of dead fish. And she took action.
There are too many injustices to count them, too many people, animals, and places in need of help. Our world is being destroyed in so many ways, in pursuit of easy money. Sometimes we just want to keep our eyes shut and concentrate on living our personal life as well as we can –
But we all need to keep our eyes open and take action for the things that are most important to us—those may be Environmental causes like Appalachian Mountaintop Removal, Reducing energy use, Clean water all around the world, or more Wildlife Habitat as our cities grow. Or they may be People Causes, like Homelessness and Hunger in Spartanburg, or Mothers and Babies in Haiti.
I love how churchmembers and friends here reach into their pockets and help with these problems—that is wonderful. And it’s very important. You can’t solve problems without money.
Actions are harder than donating money, but also more personally satisfying. And group actions can be the most satisfying of all. If you haven’t taken some actions lately, I invite more of you to join us in actions – perhaps not going to Haiti with Ruth Stanton in March, but making a baby blanket to send with her… Or go with our church youth group to Beckley, WV and see Mountaintop mining sites. Work with our grade school students, the Earth Scouts, in creating wildlife gardens this spring. Help develop the Green Sanctuary Action Plan. And today, Stop at our table in the Fellowship Hall and sign our new round of letters to Congress and the EPA to stop Mountaintop Removal!
Monday, January 17, 2011
STARTING THE NEW YEAR RIGHT!
“Check out” the checks at the entry to the sanctuary – I’m really proud of how our church community has made a difference in our community of Spartanburg, our religious community, our national community, and the international community. Well, in case you forget to check them out, here is a list:
Early December 2010:
$810 plus many toys and groceries to needy children at Park Hills School
$325 to SPIHN (Spartanburg Interfaith and Hospitality Network)
Christmas Eve Collection, 2010:
$675 Total Ministries
$700 The Mountain UU Camp & Conference Center
Also in December
over $400 to Wyoming Co., West Virginia Toys for Tots: and helped get the word out to friends and family with Facebook
AND, beginning the new year right,
$420.00 School For Midwives, Hinche, Haiti. Ruth Stanton will use this money for medical supplies on her medical mission– see the article in the upcoming UNISON!
We are so fortunate that we are able to share our plenty with others!
Our Global Issue: Appalachia and More. New meeting time, Sunday Jan. 23rd 12:45 (after congregational vote). We’ll celebrate the EPA victory, plan our next Appalachian efforts (esp. the youth trip to Beckley), and brainstorm about next year’s global issue—if you have an issue you’d like us to consider, please come! All are welcome. Bring a sandwich—beverage & dessert provided.
Green Sanctuary: Meeting postponed pending completion of our free $1600 energy assessment.
After that, we will need the Green Sanctuary Team (from interest survey) to meet and work on the Official Green Sanctuary Plan to submit to UUA. All interested members and friends should go ahead and download and read a copy of the Green Sanctuary Manual at www.uua.org/leaders/environment/greensanctuary/index.shtml.
ATTENTION Duke Power Customers: Order your FREE compact fluorescent light bulbs today!
Call 1-800-943-7585 and choose option 1, or visit www.duke-energy.com/freecfls1 to see if you are eligible. This is really easy—we just got 12!
The Earth Scouts (grade school youth) will be focusing on the National Wildlife Federation program to create a certified wildlife habitat. We approved SocJus $ to buy a NWF book for each Scout and discussed Intergenerational activities for the spring
SC Planned Parenthood rep. Sloane Whelan will have a table for letter signing in the Fellowship Hall the first Sunday in February, so look for her!