Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Hiddenness: I Saw a Corn Crake!

 

The elusive corn crake

by Nancy Corson Carter


From May 30 through June 8, 2013 my husband Howard and I joined a band of 42 pilgrims gathered by the Shalem Institute for Spiritual Formation. This pilgrimage was to the small Hebridean island of Iona. This tiny island, measuring only about three miles long and one mile wide, lies off the west coast of Scotland. Here, the Celtic monastic community, alive in the fifth and sixth centuries and not dispersed until the 13th century, participated in a unique flowering of art and education, based on scripture and upon Gods revelation in Creation.

 

The shared intent of our pilgrimage, entitled Earth Care—Earth Prayer,” was to:

• listen deeply for Gods invitations to pray and care for our wondrous Earth

• open to the spiritual treasures of holy Iona, the Iona Community, and our

 own pilgrim community

• deepen our awareness of the Holy Ones radiant Presence, and to

• praise God.

 

What I found on Iona reminds me of Isaiah 58:11: You shall be like a watered garden, like a deep spring that never runs dry.” That verse gives me courage when I am close to despairing in my avocation of Earth-caring; it correlates with a deeply refreshing companionship that I felt on Iona—because of the land itself, its creatures, its hallowed history, and the pilgrim circles within and beyond our gathering. Even though I use the first person in this meditation, I am always aware of a great, encompassing we.”

 

J. Philip Newells The Book of Creation: An Introduction to Celtic Spirituality was a welcome companion to this pilgrimage. His commentary about John Scotus Eriugena, a ninth-century Irishman, particularly encouraged my receptivity to revelations from all forms of life on the island, even birds I had never heard of—the Corn Crakes!

 

[Eriugena] taught that God is the Life Forcewithin all things. Therefore every visible and invisible creature,he said, can be called a theophany.All life manifests something of the One who is the essence of life. . . . Through the letters of Scripture and the species of creaturethe eternal Light is

revealed. (xxi)1

 

Though Eriugena was accused of pantheism, it is clear that he saw creation not as God in itself, but as Gods dwelling place; he said each creature is a manifestation of the hidden,” or in Newells words, a showing forth of the mystery of God” (67-8). That so many Celtic saints are associated with creatures of Earth, sky, and sea affirms human creatureliness as a relationship to cherish and honor rather than to deny. Indeed, it is a gift at the heart of who we are" (71 ff). If we open ourselves to reciprocal caring with the whole creation, we will discover much that we might otherwise never know.

 

Hiddenness” is a word often indicating secrets or withheld information. However, it makes me think of seeing through a glass darkly” or the cloud of unknowing.” “Hiddenness” may suggest mystery yet to be revealed as we continue on our journey.

 

I found the theme of hiddenness by entering briefly into a somewhat comic relationship. Soon after our arrival on Iona, I became aware of a mysterious bird called a Corn Crake. It is also known as a Landrail; its Latin name is onomatopoetic for its rather grating call: Crex crex. In a little photographic display in our hotels central corridor of unique creatures which sometimes visited Iona, I first saw a Corn Crakes image. It looked to me like a long-necked light brown chicken with gangly legs and feet, a bit, Im sorry to say, like a rubber chicken. With the guidance of one of my fellow pilgrims, I quickly learned to recognize the strange grating utterances of the males. Its said that they can be heard a mile away. In the early breeding season, they sound often during the day and intensively at night—one bird may call more than 10,000 times between midnight and 3:00 am. (A Gaelic name for this bird is Cleabhair coach or mad noisemaker.”) But the strange thing is that while they call insistently for mates in voices extremely hard for humans to miss, they crouch so low as they creep along through the open meadow grasses that they rarely even ruffle a stem. They really seem to be invisible.

 

My husband Howard, a friend, and I were walking the path by the field below the Iona Cultural Center when I saw a Corn Crake pop up on the stone wall about 50 feet ahead of us. I knew what it was because Id studied the photo, and I excitedly pointed and exclaimed Its a Corn Crake!” Its a Corn Crake!” Our friend hadnt studied the hotel photo; he was doubtful, but I knew. The Corn Crake made an awkward jump into flight, crossed the path ahead of us, and skimmed over the opposite stone wall. We scurried to catch another glimpse, but it disappeared without a trace into the grassy field. Soon we heard the familiar call, but wed had our one look for our visit even though we tried hard for a repeat sighting.

 

Corn Crakes are rare enough that birders go well out of their way to come here so that they can add them to their life lists. These aficionados come by cruise ships as well as by ferries, and they often tote cameras with enormous lens, yearning to snap a photo or two. Were not sure why, but weve heard that the localsname for them is twitchers”? We saw many of them clustered hopefully around the fences of the fields where the hidden birds made their loud, unmistakable calls. One lady said shed been steadily looking for them, but that she had managed to see only a few legs.”

 

A review of the general habits and recent past history of the birds in this region demonstrates why its rare to see even those few legs.” The Corn Crakes travel from their wintering grounds in Africa to arrive on Iona for breeding usually by late April, leaving before the end of September. Friends from our hometown who visited the island in late July didnt hear them at all. Corn Crakes were once widespread in western and central Europe, extending east as far as Siberia, but they were lost from most of the UK after the 1930s. Local ecologist John Clare writes that Iona, and to a lesser extent the Ross of Mull, are now two of the few places in the British Isles where Corn Crakes nest in any numbers.”2

 

Conservation measures and reassessment of large and apparently stable populations in Russia, Kazakhstan, and western China have restored them to the category of Least Concern on the IUCN Red List, but they continue to be carefully monitored. The focus of conservation efforts in Europe is to change the timing and method of hay harvesting; later cutting gives time for breeding to be completed, and leaving uncut strips at the edges of fields and cutting from the center outwards reduces casualties. Hayfields with limited cutting or fertilizer use (which I assume includes those on Iona) are ideal.

 

As though the Corn Crake were emissaries of approaching transition, I have begun to understand the idea of hiddenness personally. A friend recently gave me Henri J.M. Nouwens The Inner Voice of Love, and I was somehow led (like the little Puritan mouse that nibbled to the Bible passage God intended to be read) to open to one of his spiritual imperatives” titled Keep Trusting Gods Call”:

 

As you come to realize that God is beckoning you to a greater hiddenness, do not be afraid of that invitation. Over the years you have allowed the voices that call you to action and great visibility to dominate your life. You still think, even against your own best intuitions that you need to do things and be seen in order to follow your vocation. But you are now discovering that Gods voice is saying, Stay home, and trust that your life will be fruitful even when hidden.(89)3

 

Without ignoring the irony of the admonition to stay home,” I ponder what a difficult lesson Nouwen suggests. My Type A over-active Martha (vs. Mary) self constantly confuses me with guilt over not doing enough” and a lack of discernment over what is mine to do. I pray for clearer knowing, for a deepening trust that God is leading me to find. Again, I turn to Nouwen, whose book seems written expressly for this stage in my life, a stage” that could be called later life” or elderhood.” He counsels that

 

…you have not fully acknowledged this new place as the place where God dwells and holds you. You fear that this truthful place is in fact a bottomless pit where you will lose all you have and are. Do not be afraid. Trust that the God of life wants to embrace you and give you true safety (15).

 

So here I am—I venture that God might see me as goofy as the Corn Crakes appear to me, yet I yearn to be lovingly encouraged to fulfill my own creatureliness. Its a large hope, and I am always looking and listening for allies on this journey. I have been reading Václav Havels Letters to Olga, written from prison where he was sentenced in 1979 to 4 ½ years of hard labor for his human rights activities in Czechoslovakia. In the middle of his incarceration, he writes of a growing mood” of contemplation,” which he defines as the manifestation of a deeper, more spiritual relationship to the values of the world and my life” (204). What Havel says about this mood” strikes a chord for me as I explore the hiddenness” the Corn Crakes have roused me to ponder:

 

It is an experience of the manifestation—the vivid presence—of an otherwise hidden, yet all-determining dimension of the spirit, that is the presence of faith, hope and the profound conviction that there is a meaning(205).

 

The very fact that Havel has found this understanding in prison inspires me with the power of the human spirit to meet despair-inducing adversity with hope, daring to probe beyond surfaces to deeper meaning. Its a bit of a stretch, and I do not wish to appropriate his hard-earned wisdom glibly, but I like to think that Havel and I and the Corn Crakes are kindred spirits, expressing in quite different languages our kinship with the community of all Being. Finding even glimpses of what such hiddenness may mean is a gift as I travel a new path from middle age into later years.

 

When I think of the wholeness of Creation which Celtic Christianity claims as Gods intention, my thoughts go to places where it is now disrupted by threats of extinction. Within the context of a sacred universe, the loss of any form of life diminishes all of us; it takes away something from the whole book of our meaning.” As an educator, a seeker, a pilgrim, and one committed to advocacy for Earth care, this is of great concern to me.

 

Among the animal species, we are perilously close to losing such treasures as the California condor, the Bactrian Camel, the Hawaiian Monk Seal, the Mountain Gorilla, the Iberian Lynx—all are included among the25 most endangered species on Earth,” and this list names only ones we know about.

 

Extinction is not the hiddenness Ive been discussing so far, though it may be useful to compare them. Extinction as we now use the word, is a death, an ending of some life form that prevents its continuity. Extinction as a conceived crisis of species being torn from the fabric of creation surely must be one of the worst sins. In this case, it may mean that we humans have acted with the arrogance of hubris, not

admitting the possibility of anything hidden or unknowable as we pollute, mine,

toxify, clearcut, kill, and otherwise abuse Creation as a resource” for our use.

 

On the spiritual level, however, the idea of hiddenness shows us the absolute unknowability of the universe, let alone the unfathomable intricacy of the Earth itself. Stepping out into the depths of spirit, we are called to walk in a way that may be visible only one step at a time. Hiddenness requires a surrender to mystery that precludes any attempt to cleverly devise a map and run ahead; we must wait and trust invisible Being.

 

Iona itself was threatened when it went up on the auction block in 1979; luckily the Fraser Foundation purchased it back from the Argyll Estates and presented it to the nation. The National Trust now owns much of the island. In 2000 the Iona Cathedral Trust passed the abbey, nunnery, Reilig Ã’dhrain, and St. Ronans into the care of Historic Scotland.

 

I began this meditation with a fascination with Corn Crakes, but the more I thought of them, there in the great matrix of Celtic Christianity, the more I felt that they expressed important aspects of the spirit of holy Iona: that too was invisible but strongly present. It had been threatened but it survived. I did see one Corn Crake, but Im still trying to decode its message, a beguilingly quirky yet resonant one. What is hidden draws me onward in a mysterious adventure!

 

Nancy Corson Carter, professor emerita of humanities at Eckerd College, has published two poetry books, Dragon Poems and The Sourdough Dream Kit, and three poetry chapbooks. Some of her poems, drawings, and photos appear in her nonfiction book, Martha, Mary, and Jesus: Weaving Action and Contemplation in Daily Life and in her memoir, The Never-Quite-Ending War: a WWII GI Daughter's Stories.

 

1J. Philip Newell, THE BOOK OF CREATION: AN INTRODUCTION TO CELTIC
 SPIRITUALITY (New York: Paulist Press 1999), pp. xxi, 67-8, 71ff.
 
2 John Clare, Iona and Mull CORNCRAKES ( Mull, Scotland; Moving Stationery Ltd.,
2010), p. 1.  This pamphlet is also the source of the photo included.
 
3 Henri J.M. Nouwen, THE INNER VOICE OF LOVE (New York: Doubleday, 1996), p.
89, 15.
 
4 Václav Havel, LETTERS TO OLGA (New York: Knopf, 1988), p. 205.


Tuesday, April 18, 2023

Earth Day Sunday 2023



Celebrating Earth Day Sunday 2023 
with Your Congregation

Earth Day is April 22nd, but you can celebrate Earth Day Sunday with your congregation any time in April or throughout the year. All Creation praises God’s name, and we can give thanks to God for the wonder and beauty of the world around us!


Here are some resources that may be helpful in planning an Earth Day or Creation Care Sunday at your church. We know that many congregations have creative and original ideas of their own for how to celebrate, and we have included a few from PEC members and friends below. It is our hope that we can share ideas to inspire discussion in the Comments Section of this Blog post.


First Presbyterian Church in New York City will be celebrating an Earth Day family friendly neighborhood cleanup after worship on Sunday, April 23rd.

Here is a list of activities around Earth Day taking place at Druid Hill Presbyterian Church in Atlanta, GA:

EARTH DAY WORSHIP AND CELEBRATION

Sunday, April 23

Alternative Commute Day: You are encouraged to find a way to church that uses less carbon than your normal commute. This could be carpooling, public transportation, biking, walking, taking one car instead of two, or whatever works best for you. Get creative: even piggy-back rides count!

Community Electronics Recycling Day, 10 - 10:55 AM, 12 - 12:15 PM; Front Parking Lot:

The Mission Team will be collecting unwanted electronics and delivering them to the Center for Hard to Recycle Materials (CHARM) who will ensure they are properly recycled. Any small household item that requires electricity or charging and charging cords will be accepted. A Mission Team representative will be in the front parking lot to collect recyclables.

Earth Care Sunday School Class with Dr. Stan Saunders, 10AM; Parlor: Many modern Christians have grown up hearing that someday the earth will be destroyed and God will take the righteous to heaven. The New Testament, in contrast, persistently describes God coming to be with us in a renewed heaven and earth, an end that is actually more consistent with the larger biblical story. On Earth Day weekend we will have a special class, taught by retired Columbia Seminary professor Dr. Stan Saunders, which will explore that story and its implications for a Christian approach to our environmental crises. The Christian Ed team hopes you will join us in what is sure to be an engaging class.

Earth Day Worship Service, 11AM; Front Lawn: In recognition of Earth Day weekend, DHPC will gather for worship on the lawn as we give thanks for the gift of God’s amazing creation and commit ourselves to protecting it. Join us as we gather in song, prayer, scripture, and action. Feel free to dress casually in blue, the color of clear, clean water, or green, the color of forests, fields, and more. An opportunity to do some planting will follow worship, so be prepared to play in the dirt!




EARTH CARE FILM, CONVERSATION, AND LUNCH

Sunday, April 30, 12pm - 2pm; Parlor

The Mission Team invites you to bring a bag lunch and join us in the Parlor to watch and discuss a series of short films called Current Revolution (66 minutes), this year’s featured film of Faith Climate Action Week. These films show the possibility of a just transition to a clean energy economy where the well-being of workers and frontline community members is valued. We hope you will join us for what is sure to be an informative film, followed by rich conversation. Bonus: popcorn will be provided.




Village Church in Prairie Village, KS will host a workshop led by environmental theologian and author The Rev. Dr. Patricia Tull on Saturday, April 22nd. An Electric Car Expo will take place afterwards in the church parking lot. If you would like to watch the livestream of the workshop, you can connect through the church's website HERE.




First Presbyterian Church in Asheville, NC will be participating in an ecumenical Earth Day Sunday celebration with other churches as a progressive stroll along their shared street. Activities will include environmental information and resources, children's activities, and snacks.




PEC Moderator Rev. Bruce Gillette will leading his church in Owego, NY through several activities in celebration of Earth Day:





We are doing an ecumenical worship service on Earth Day/Saturday morning outside the Episcopal Church and then we will go together to plant trees. Saturday evening our church is hosting a community vegetarian potluck dinner to introduce people to a wide range of delicious, planet-friendly meals. We will ask for the recipes and share them later on our church website and Facebook to encourage healthy diets (for planet and personal health) year-round.

Saturday evening, we are showing “The Letter” in our fellowship hall after the dinner. “The Letter” tells the story of a journey to Rome of frontline leaders to discuss the encyclical letter Laudato Si’ with Pope Francis: https://www.theletterfilm.org We are thrilled that other churches, especially the Roman Catholic parish, are encouraging people to come to the dinner and the movie. The film is now on YouTube for easy showing and sharing. The PCUSA General Assembly has encouraged everyone to study it.

Sunday morning, we will sing a hymn emphasizing creation care (see below for ideas), lift up environmental concerns in the prayers, and make connections between the Bible and creation care in the sermon (see below).

We have invited electric vehicle owners to show off their cars and trucks in designated parking spaces next the church following the worship service. We will also be planting a new tree in honor of our oldest church member (Eudora had her 100th birthday recently). I hope it will inspire more tree planting on church property and beyond.


Creation Care Hymns in Glory to God by David Gambrell
Hymns by Carolyn Winfrey Gillette (permission is given for free use to PEC friends)

Preaching on April 23 lectionary text (great resource for lectionary preaching year-round).
Litany of Confession - Lord's Prayer & Creation Care
Actions Beyond Worship:
EarthDay Sunday from Presbyterian Hunger Program
TreadLightly (good beyond Lent)
Respondingto Climate Change free conversation guide (Christian Century).
Presbyteriansfor Earth Care (PEC) Webinars on many topics: https://presbyearthcare.org/events/


Wednesday, January 25, 2023

WOMAN OF POWER, WOMAN OF GRACE

 



Woman of Power, Woman of Grace:  FOR CREATION

by Diane Waddell with Jerry Rees

 

Jerry Rees and I came to know Carey Gillam through her father Chuck, a true eco-warrior, a member of Village Presbyterian Church, and a staunch defender of Earth Care. Chuck had been a faithful and outspoken member of our Presbytery Earth Care Team for several years and had not mentioned anything about his amazing daughter.  After he humbly told us about her, our team has followed her work, met with her, shared her work with others, and has been constantly amazed.  Carey exemplifies hard work and self-sacrifice (at a world-class level) in trying to make the earth safer and less toxic.

 

It has not been easy.  Early on, she worked so hard in her job with Reuters—uncovering the unfortunate facts about the devastating effects of glyphosate—that her position was changed by some powers that were.”

 

Nevertheless, she kept pursuing the facts and now is able to share what the public needs to know to help protect our lives and the well-being of Gods Good Green Earth.  We bring to you her story (which is far from finished) and invite you to read her books and follow her current work through US Right to Know, a not-for-profit food industry research group. Here is the rest of her story…

 

Carey Gillam is an investigative journalist and author with more than 30 years of experience covering food and agricultural policies and practices, including 17 years as a senior correspondent for Reuters international news service. She has won several industry awards for her work. Her first book, Whitewash: The Story of a Weed Killer, Cancer and the Corruption of Science, was released in October 2017 and won the coveted Rachel Carson Book Award from the Society of Environmental Journalists, as well as two other awards.

 

Carey's second book, a legal thriller titled The Monsanto Papers - Deadly Secrets, Corporate Corruption, and One Man's Search for Justice, was released March 2, 2021.

 

Gillam has been asked to speak all over the world about food and agricultural matters, including before the European Union Parliament in Brussels, the World Forum for Democracy in Strasbourg, and to public officials, organizations, and conferences in the U.S., Canada, Australia, Argentina, France, and The Netherlands. She has also been an invited lecturer to several universities, including Emory University, Berkeley Law School, Washington University, the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, the University of Iowa, the Cambridge Forum in Harvard Square, and others.

 

She has served as a consultant on, and participant in, several documentaries, including the award-winning Poisoning Paradise, released in June 2019 by actor Pierce Brosnan and his wife Keely Brosnan. A new documentary based on Careys books Into the Weeds will have its U.S. release on Earth Day in April.

 

Gillam writes regularly for The Guardian. Her work has also been published in The New York Times, Huffington Post, Time, and other outlets.

 

In May of 2022, Gillam helped launch a non-profit environmental news outlet called The New Lede as a journalism initiative of the Environmental Working Group.

 

You can receive updates on Gillams work by subscribing to her free Substack called UnSpun.

 

Gillam speaks to issues of food safety and security, environmental health, agricultural issues, corporate corruption of regulatory policies, as well matters about journalism, fake news, corporate pressure on media, and more.

 

Carey, we appreciate you greatly and thank you for pursuing justice for earth and her inhabitants.

 

 

Diane Waddell and Jerry Rees are members of Earthkeepers of Heartland Presbytery.  Jerry is a member of Village Presbyterian Church, which hosts Earthkeepers meetings.

GOING CAR FREE

 

Matt Walker braves the cold.

Going Car Free

by Eric Diekhans

 

Lake View Presbyterian Church’s choir director Matt Walker didn’t have a grand plan to go car-free. It just kind of happened.

 

Thirty years ago, Matt arrived in Chicago in an aging Chevy Metro. “When my car broke down and it was just too far gone to repair,” Matt says, “I thought, I'll just have to run out and buy another car. In the meantime, I took public transportation and walked, and I started riding my bike, I found I could defer getting that car a little bit longer.”

 

Matt grew up in Flint, Michigan, where kids free-wheeled through his residential neighborhood. But in a city dominated by General Motors and car culture, few people saw the bicycle as a means of transportation.

 

Matt found that he could get around on Chicago’s public transportation, but riding a bike was often easier and more convenient. “It started like, ‘It's summer, it's a nice day. I think I'll ride to work.’ After a while cycling became more habitual during nice weather. And then a couple of times, I got caught in bad weather and I realized, ‘Well, that's not so bad.’”

 

He didn’t miss the frustrations that came along with taking the bus. “There’s the moment, when I’ve just missed the bus and realize, I’m going to be standing there another 40 minutes, and if had been there two minutes earlier, I could have been on that bus.”

 

Matt liked having the sense of control that came from riding his bike. Traffic didn’t affect him as much as it did when he was riding the bus, and he reliably knew when he would reach his destination. His day job is as a custom framer. His ride to work is three miles and consistently takes about 20-30 minutes. On the bus, the trip takes anywhere from 40 minutes to an hour and a half.

 

When Covid hit, Matt was thankful he didn’t have to ride a crowded bus. He continued to commute by bike until winter, when a big snowstorm hit Chicago. Then he switched to walking.

 

Finding a Church Home

 

Matt grew up in an evangelical church, but when he was looking for a church home in Chicago, Lake View Presbyterian was closest to his apartment. "I poked my head in,” says Matt, “and decided I didn't need to look any further.”

 

Matt was busy pursuing work in theater, and it took several years until he joined the choir. He then became a deacon. When his term ended, he thought he’d go back to just being a member of the congregation. But shortly before Easter, the choir director quit.

 

“I volunteered just as a stop gap, with no intention of making it my job. In the meantime, they were doing a job search, and I knew they don’t usually hire a member of the congregation.”

 

Matt finished out the year as temporary choir director. The church wasn’t having luck in finding a permanent replacement. Matt finally asked Joy Douglas Strome, Lake View’s pastor at the time, for the permanent job. The church had to get special dispensation to hire a member, but the process came to a satisfying conclusion for everyone.

 

One of the best perks of his position is that Matt can ride his bike to choir rehearsal and Sunday service.

 

Over the years Matt has seen a lot of improvements in Chicago’s bike infrastructure, though the city still has a long way to go. “I lived in Uptown for years and they never had bike paths, but now they have great bike paths on Broadway. I’m more likely to go to a neighborhood with good bike paths than not, especially during the summer street festivals. It makes the neighborhood more attractive for commerce, for street festivals, and street fairs, I think they’re a good addition to any neighborhood, especially for major thoroughfares.”

 

Matt offers several tips for people thinking of going car free, or just using a bike as a transportation alternative. “If you live in an apartment, definitely find a building that has a safe, covered place to put your bike.”

 

“Proximity is also important,” Matt continues. “I live in a neighborhood where I don't have to go long distances to whatever I need. Also proximity to work. I lived in North Andersonville (on Chicago’s north side) for quite a while. Anytime I had to go anywhere, it was an hour and a half to two hours. So it was a great workout every day. The only problem was it was much harder when the weather was bad.”

 

Matt also advises investing in good saddlebags. “You don't have a trunk. You can't just throw everything in the backseat of the car.”

 

Matt rides year-round, and offers some winter riding tips. “Loose layers in cold weather. If I’m comfortable on a cold morning, a half hour into my ride I’ll be sweating. Good gloves, good waterproof boots, and something to cover your head and face. If those are covered, you can wear fairly light clothing over the rest of your body, because you don’t want to get sweaty.”

 

Matt also has safety tips “I haven’t had an accident in years. When I ride my bike, I assume everyone is trying to kill me. I assume cars don’t see me. Always be aware that nobody is aware of you.”

 

Matt always wears bright clothing. At night, he uses a minimum of three lights.

 

If you’d like to learn more about commuting by bikes, there are many books, websites, and blogs you can check out. You might also want to read How Cycling Can Save the World by journalist Peter Walker.

 

Eric Diekhans is a fiction writer, Executive Director of the Greater Chicago Broadcast Ministries and a member of Lake View Presbyterian Church in Chicago.

FINDING JOY

 

Natalie Ward, JOY Market Coordinator (left) and Jessica Witt, gardener and CSA-manager

Justice, Outreach and Yoga For Creation

by Diane Waddell

 

We love it when a plan comes together! We are grateful to God for our opportunity!

 

Our New Worshiping Community, Justice, Outreach, and Yoga (JOY NWC), in St. Joseph, Missouri, is part of Heartland Presbytery. We started out as an ecumenical group celebrating and bringing to life Pope FrancisEncyclical, Laudato Si, in our community. This group is now a part of our JOY gathering, embracing justice and healing for Creation.

 

Our six leaders engage with our community and within our buildings sacred space (a beautiful little church/chapel). They are working on a CSA (community supported agriculture) offering, which includes wondrous baked goods!

 

Anne adds her beautiful native flowers, herbs and vegetables grown in her greenhouse. She often donates the native plants to our local parks and spaces where our group has been invited to “plant native.

 

LuAnn shares her native plants and expertise by planting native flowers in an historic park site (and has spent countless hours recycling cans and bottles after concerts.)

 

Saundra is a fabric artist. She dyes wool with natural dyes and spins on her spinning wheel, making lovely and creative pieces.

 

My granddaughter Elizabeth loves working with clay and has enjoyed making multiple items of pottery, which are quite popular.

 

Jessica has added a wonderful affirming and positive spirit to the market. She sells gems and jewelry and shares about their healing properties.

 

We are grateful that the community has been supportive of our efforts, and have found that the market is a place where vendors can commune and community members come together to share bounty of Gods creation and the gifts and talents of their neighbors. We host outside when possible, inside when needed, and sometimes both, depending on the weather.

           

We are so appreciative of the PCUSA and grassroots groups, including Presbyterians for Earth Care. We have chosen to ground ourselves in Matthew 25 and also receive the four offerings offered by the denomination. We have shared programs on sustainable farming, such as a review of Kiss the Ground,” and enjoy partnering with another ecumenical group in Kansas City called Sustainable Sanctuary Coalition for more programs on sustainable agriculture and creation care.

 

Diane Waddell is former moderator of Presbyterians for Earth Care.

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

Wisdom Weavers

 


Ilarion Kuuyux Merculieff

ILARION KUUYUX MERCULIEFF & THE WISDOM WEAVERS OF THE WORLD

by Nancy Corson Carter

Ilarion Larry” Merculieff was a notable leader when the Yukon Presbytery hosted Presbyterians for Earth Care for a Regional conference, Seeing the Signs of the Times: A Practical Theology on Climate Change” in 2014.

Larry brought a wise and thoughtful energy that we learned had its roots in his traditional Unangan (Aleut) upbringing on the remote Pribilof Islands in the middle of the Bering Sea. He had learned there to attune to the web of life in its amazing diversity—from sea lions to kittiwakes, all in great numbers then. When he was four he received his Unangan name Kuuyux.” This name is given to one person in each lifetime among his people. Kuuyux” means an arm extending out from the body, a carrier of ancient knowledge into modern times, a messenger.

He was from the last Unangan (Aleut) generation that had a fully intact traditional upbringing, where the entire village participated in raising its children. In his adolescence, he was sent by the government to boarding schools to get proper” western modern education. There,” he writes, in high-school, university and on, I climbed up the modern-world ladder, while learning its ways and harnessing them to help my tribe, the fish, wildlife and land, other Native peoples around me, and people in general.” 1

As Kuuyux, the messenger, he received a vision of gathering a multicultural council of elders and earth activists to share indigenous wisdom and sacred teachings to respond to the suffering of Mother Earth. So in 2017, Kuuyux gathered a council of thirteen Elders from around the world to meet in Hawaii on the island of Kauai. For four days, they considered Mother Earths plight, to pray and discuss what humans should do now. The Elders agreed for the occasion to be filmed—including councils and ceremonies, which is unprecedented. The site Wisdom Weavers of the World shows a 14-minute video of highlights, translated by volunteers into fifteen different languages. It was shared globally by Reuters News Agency for Earth Days 50th anniversary in April 22, 2020.     

Mother Earth is crying for her human children,” Kuuyux says in the documentary. She has lived for billions of years. Shell live for more. Its a question of whether or not we human beings are going to live.”

 The film names some of the widely diverse participants, including Zhaparkul Raimbekov, a snow leopard shaman from Kyrgyzstan, Lorenzo Izquierdo, a Mamo spiritual priest from Colombias Arhuacopeople, and Mona Ann Polacca, a Hopi-Havasupai-Tewa elder and founding member of the International Council of Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers. 2   Along with the others, their deliberations led to a unified message:

Rather than giving way to a constant striving after purely political or technological fixes, we must shift our consciousness.  If we will listen to our hearts, they said, we will know what to do.

An ancient prophecy that guides the Wisdom Weavers speaks of the necessity of balancing the masculine and the feminine. Since an imbalance favoring the masculine persists in our time, the elders say that the women must lead us now; they are the keepers of life. If women, with mens support, open their hearts and share what they know, in ceremony, in their sacred ways, the balance may be restored. 3     

On behalf of their Heart-Council Team, Kuuyux” Ilarion Merculieff encourages us: 

Today, the world is focused on the use of ones mind as the source of all intelligence, when we know that the intelligence lies not only in the head, but the entire body, which is informed by ones heart.

Trust completely, not with the mind, but with the heart (it is connected to the divine). If you are present in this moment, in your heart, and trust, all will take care of itself. This is part of what nature has taught Indigenous peoples.” 4

 

1 gcill.world

Global Center for Indigenous Leadership & Lifeways (Kuuyux is founder and president) is the

source of much of the information in this article.

 

2 Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-earth-day-indigenous-idUSKBN2221G7

 

3 wisdomweavers.world, The Prophecy”  (28 September 2022); Coherencelab.org gives bios

 and contact info.They plan another council.

 

4 Email: A Message of Wisdom from the Elders in the Time of Pandemic,” Tues. April 7, 2020

 from WWW, Aang waan: Hello, my other self.”

 

Nancy Corson Carter, professor emerita of humanities at Eckerd College, has published two poetry books, Dragon Poems and The Sourdough Dream Kit, and three poetry chapbooks. Some of her poems, drawings, and photos appear in her nonfiction book, Martha, Mary, and Jesus: Weaving Action and Contemplation in Daily Life and in her memoir, The Never-Quite-Ending War: a WWII GI Daughter's Stories.


Land

 


LAND: The Bedrock of Civilization, Foundation for Fecundity, Axis of Earth Care, and Basis of Freedom

By Andrew Kang Bartlett 

It would be hard to understate the importance of land. How we use it is an existential proposition for all forms of life from the tiny to the immense. And as Malcolm X said, Land is the basis of all independence. Land is the basis of freedom, justice and equality.”

 

As the climate crisis intensifies, stopping land grabs and defending the land and territory rights of Indigenous, Black and African-descended peoples, family farmers, and traditional communities are core to protecting peoples and ecosystems.

 

Pension funds are targeting farmland for speculation and expansion of agribusiness, driving the destruction of ecosystems, displacing Indigenous and traditional communities in the Brazilian Cerrado, and family farmers in the United States - particularly farmers of color. Workers and retirees whose pension funds are invested in farmland speculation also face risks to their future stability from the unsound nature of these investments.

 

In response to this multi-pronged threat, the Presbyterian Hunger Program and a transnational collaboration of old and new partners joined forces to initiate the Stop Land Grabs campaign. We began slowly in 2016 and have been gaining steam ever since. Our strategy connects Brazilian and U.S.-based organizations to raise public awareness, hold financial actors accountable, stop farmland speculation, strengthen community-to-community solidarity, and defend land, food, water and other resource rights.

Financializing Land

 

Following the 2008 financial crisis and the collapse of the U.S. housing market, financial corporations began to speculate on farmland, promoting the expansion of corporate agribusiness in the Brazilian Cerrado. The Brazilian Cerrado is the most biodiverse savanna in the world. Its intricate root system plays a crucial role in Brazils water system. Much of the agribusiness expansion is for plantation agriculture” – the monocrop production of soybeans, primarily exported for feed in factory animal farms in the U.S. and elsewhere.  This rush to buy land has led to illegal land seizures and sales, uprooting and violating the land rights of Indigenous, Quilombola (Afro-Brazilian), and peasant communities with ancestral ties to the land. Tactics of intimidation, violence, and fraud have been used against these communities, resulting in human rights violations and destruction of community food systems, water sources, biodiversity, and livelihoods.

 

Research by our partner coalition member, Rede Social de Justiça e Direitos Humanos / Network for Social Justice & Human Rights, exposed retirement fund manager TIAA (via subsidiary Nuveen) and Harvard University as the main funding sources driving these land grabs.

In the U.S., financial corporations like TIAA have spent billions of dollars to acquire hundreds of thousands of acres of farmland across the country. In Mississippi, these acquisitions have taken place in predominantly Black counties, exacerbating the effects of land theft from Black farmers. This land is rented primarily to large-scale farms for commodity crop production, especially of soybeans for animal feed.

 

This model of corporate land ownership, contract agriculture, and agribusiness monocultures threatens the rights of farmers and communities, the health of local food systems, and the diversity and resilience of rural economies.

 

Stop Land Grabs Coalition

 

Together, our work connects Brazil-based organizing and advocacy for Indigenous, Quilombola, peasant and traditional peoplesland rights with U.S.-based organizing and advocacy efforts led by farmers, students and faculty, and environmental, social justice and human rights NGOs and activists, connecting as well with Canada and Europe-based organizing. Other coordinating members include: ActionAid USA, Comissão Pastoral da Terra (CPT), FIAN International, Friends of the Earth US, GRAIN, Grassroots International, National Family Farm Coalition, Maryknoll, Presbyterian Hunger Program, Rural Coalition, and Uprooted & Rising.

 

Our Strategy and Where You Fit In

        I.   Expose financial actors and hold them accountable for their role in land grabs

        II.  Secure Land Rights for communities on the frontlines

        III. Support communities in building alternatives

 

Some accomplishments of the Stop Land Grabs Campaign/Coalition (SLGC) on these strategies:

I.  Exposing financial actors and holding them accountable for their role in land grabs

        SLGC has held teach-ins and webinars around the country to raise public awareness about the issue of land grabs and connections to social, economic, and environmental injustices, and weve inspired action among hundreds of participants.

        Advocacy based on our research led to a decline in new farmland investments in Brazil. For example, a new global farmland fund launched by Nuveen/TIAA has raised less than 25% of its $2.4 billion target as of July 2020, and exposing Harvard Endowment Fund for its land grabbing led to it slashing its natural resources portfolio by more than half.

        Meetings with the World Bank resulted in amendments to their land regularization program in the Brazilian state of Piauí to recognize community land rights and stewardship.

        Organizing on college campuses has birthed five successful faculty resolutions that call on TIAA to provide transparency and accountability in its land grabbing and deforestation investments. The State University of NY system passed a rash of faculty senate resolutions.

 

II.  Securing Land Rights by accompanying communities on the frontlines

        We provided documentation critical to annulling over 124,000 hectares of illegal land titles, demarcating 400 hectares of land belonging to traditional communities, and winning legal recognition of land rights for three Indigenous and traditional communities in the state of Piauí in 2020-21.

        Working with farmers organizations and educational institutions, we analyzed policy and collected narrative-based data on the impact of corporate land grabs on farmers of color in the Mississippi Delta region.

 

III.  Supporting communities in building alternatives

        Collective land rights secured for rural communities in Brazil have made it possible to protect ecological food production, water sources, local knowledge, culture, and biodiversity.

        Bringing together small farmers in the U.S. to develop alternatives has led to the formation of cooperatives, land trusts, community farms, mentor farms, food processing and distribution hubs, building alternatives to the dominant corporate consolidation and expansion approach.

        The development of farmer-led policy solutions by community leaders in the Rural Coalition have led to equity provisions in the Farm Bill that ensure assistance and access for young and beginning farmers, BIPOC farmers, and farmworkers transitioning to farming in shaping the future of agriculture.

 

Help Stop Land Grabs in Three Ways

 

We need your support to increase our impact and strengthen Stop Land Grabs!

1.      Stay abreast of the campaign with our enewsletter and sign the petition to TIAA.

2.      Check out and share the story map on land grabs developed for campus organizing  .

3.      Donate to the Presbyterian Hunger Fund so we can continue this work and to support partners in the Coalition.

 

Andrew Kang Bartlett has worked with the Presbyterian Church (USA) Hunger Program in Louisville, KY since 2001. The Hunger Program works to create healthy, sustainable and just local food economies globally. Andrew works to equip Presbyterians and others around initiatives, partnerships and campaigns that address the underlying causes of hunger, and he coordinates the U.S. grant-making program. In Louisville, he is active on the leadership teams for the Food in Neighborhoods Community Coalition

Building Bridges

 

Planting trees in Armenia


Amenia Tree Project Builds Bridges

By Eric Diekhans

Wedged between Turkey and Azerbaijan, many American wouldn’t be able to find the small, land-locked country of Armenia on the map. But Armenia Tree Project has become a model for environmental stewardship and international bridge building.

 Activist Carolyn Mugar was in Armenia during the very dark days of the early 1990s, following the collapse of the Society Union. It was a time of war and an energy crisis, as well as the aftermath of a terrible earthquake. There was no water, no heat, and no light, and people were denuding the landscape to heat their homes, even cutting down trees in city parks. Mugar saw that even if Armenia survived these crises, the mass deforestation would bring about an environmental catastrophe.

But Mugar had a vision of a better tomorrow, that led her to found Armenia Tree Project. “What Armenia needed was hope,” says Jeanmarie Papelian, Executive Director of ATP.

Mugar, believed planting trees was a very visible way to give hope to desperate people. In the 28 years since its founding, ATP has planted and seven million trees, serving the Armenian people, offering jobs and raising the standard of living, and protecting the global environment.

 ATP doesn’t just plant trees and move on. Its team in conjunction with local workers it hires, cares for the trees and makes sure they thrive.

 Education Builds Bridges

 Environmental education has become another major focus for ATP. “We felt that it was really important for the next generation of Armenians to be better stewards of the environment,” says Papelian. “We reach thousands of students every year, not only in Armenia, but in many parts of the diaspora.”

 The educational program is called Building Bridges, and engages youth in Armenian schools and churches. Youth groups even travel to Armenia, where they visit an ATP education center, where they are paired with students from a local school. They receive a lesson, do an educational activity, and then they all plant trees together.

 Churches are a central part of the Armenian Diaspora community, which is spread all over the world, and congregations have become deeply involved in this work. “Any Armenian you meet will tell you that Armenia was the first country to adopt Christianity as its national religion in the year 301,” says Papelian.  “We’ve had great success in spreading our message through churches. I’m always invited to speak at coffee hours and to Sunday school classes.”

 Papelian likes to share Gensis 1:29 with her audience. “I have given you every plant yielding seed that is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree with seed in its fruit.”

 Collaborations

 Armenia Tree Project has collaborated and been inspired by other environmental organizations around the world. One nonprofit they’ve worked with is the Jewish National Fund, which plants forests in Israel.

 In 2019, ATP co-hosted an international forest summit at the American University in Yerevan in connection with their 25th anniversary. “We talked about the challenge of reforesting Armenia,” says Papelian. “The country is currently at about ten percent forest cover. Ideally, experts say, it should be twenty percent.”

 During the summit, ATP brought in representatives from the Jewish National Fund, and from the Green Belt Movement in Kenya, to talk about their approaches.

 The three countries have very different climates but, according to Papelian, “there are still lessons to be learned about engaging the local community and how to take action on their own, because it has to be a bottom up approach.”

Armenia Tree Project is eager to share its vision beyond the Armenian community. “Invite us to come and talk about Armenia Tree Project,” says Papelian. “You don’t have to be Armenian to appreciate that anywhere in the world where people are planting forests will benefit all of us.”

 If you want to get even more involved, you can visit Armenia to explore ancient Christian monasteries and churches, eat delicious food, and visit an ATP site, where you can make a difference by planing your own tree.

 

Eric Diekhans is a fiction writer, video producer and editor, and a passionate cyclist. He’s a member of Lake View Presbyterian Church in Chicago, where he has served as an Elder and Deacon.