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Winds of Change
September 2005

Contents

Hey Joe -
Can You Hear Us
NOW?
The Coalfields, Where Water is Considered a Luxury
The Real Friends of Coal
Over the Top! OVEC and WV-CAG Reach $$$ Goal
A Bushel of T H A N K S !
“Christians for the Mountains” Organizes in WV
2004 Supreme Court Race Most Negative
States Suing EPA Over Proposed Mercury Pollution Standards
A Song for the Pain of Our West Virginia Mountains
First Issue of Mountain Defender Newspaper a Success!
Global Warming May Take Economic Toll
Coal River Residents Win Major Victory; Proposed Coal Silo Was Too Close to Elementary School
Success Brings Threats to Project Organizers
Energy Bill: Billion$ of Reasons to Support Real Campaign Finance Reform
Midwest Renewable Energy Fair - A Vision of the Future, Today
WV Archives and History Commission Agrees: Blair Mountain Must Be Saved from Coal Mining, Belongs on National Register
Summit for the Mountains V Generates New Ideas
Marathon Ashland Needlessly Putting Community at Risk
Pink Slip Time for Besieged DEP Chief?
Justification for Mountaintop Removal Mining Based on Lies
Coal Barge Woes Rear Their Ugly Head in Huntington - Again
Miscellany
Cartoons


For viewing the PDF version of the newsletter

 

Winds of Change Newsletter, September 2005     See sidebar for table of contents

“Christians for the Mountains” Organizes in WV

 
Watch your step! Fred Kruger and others examine the massive destruction at Kayford Mountain.
Watch your step! Fred Kruger and others examine the massive destruction at Kayford Mountain.

by Allen Johnson

“The Earth is the Lord’s” was the theme of over 20 Christians gathering in Charleston to organize a strategy to protect and restore God’s creation in the Appalachian region. Deriving their stance from an array of scriptures including Psalm 24’s “The Earth is the Lord’s,” the group pledged their efforts to mobilize Christians and their churches to combat grievous ravages against God’s Earth such as mountaintop removal (MTR) coal extraction.

Several of those attending are well-established activists in secular environmental groups. Judy Bonds exclaimed, “My faith in God is what gives me motivation and strength to carry on in the fight to save the mountains and the communities.” Christians for the Mountains will build its own unique, faith-based identity in order to reach out to Christians and their churches.

One highlight of the gathering was a trip to Kayford Mountain, site of a massive MTR operation. Larry Gibson, who owns and protects a small piece of property as an island in the midst of the surrounding land carnage, gave an impassioned speech to the group. “I’m so glad you are here, but why did you [meaning Christians] take so long?” Impressed by the visual impact of a MTR site, the group agreed that inviting and urging church groups to visit Gibson’s property and for clergy to take airplane flyovers would be an effective strategy to teach and motivate them to action.

The group included Catholic and Protestant Christians. Initially the organization will consist of a temporary steering committee that will develop a constituency, expand a network for communication, build a web page, work on a visual media presentation specifically geared for church audiences, and participate in public events, including Mountain Justice Summer.

As the network develops, people will be encouraged and helped to contact their local churches, write letters to newspaper editors, set up talks at church conferences, and encourage and challenge people of every walk to reflect biblically, theologically, and within their church tradition on their responsibility toward God for creation. A mission statement is in the process of development.

Christians for the Mountains needs people who identify with Christian faith and concern for the environment to contact us. Mobilizing the many people in Appalachia who identify with Christian faith to personally take responsibility for God’s creation and to advocate for public policy that will restore and protect God’s creation will make an extraordinary positive effect.

For more information or to get involved with Christians for the Mountains go to www.christiansforthemountains.org or e-mail info@christiansforthemountains.org.
 

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