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Michelle Peedin, Program Coordinator, Partners in Health and Wholeness

Reflecting on the Climate Strike

October 2, 2019 By Michelle Peedin, Program Coordinator, Partners in Health and Wholeness

On Friday, September 20, 2019 NC Interfaith Power and Light participated in the biggest climate strike in North Carolina history. Raleigh’s event was only one strike in the hundreds that […]

Reflecting on the Climate Strike

October 2, 2019 by Michelle Peedin, Program Coordinator, Partners in Health and Wholeness

On Friday, September 20, 2019 NC Interfaith Power and Light participated in the biggest climate strike in North Carolina history. Raleigh’s event was only one strike in the hundreds that happened all over the world for the Global Climate Strike. It was the largest worldwide climate mobilization ever and the largest youth-led mobilization on any issue in history. It was estimated that 1500 youth climate leaders and adult allies came out to Raleigh striking to demand transformative action be taken to address the climate crisis.

The photos below are just a snapshot of the passion and energy that was seen and felt at the Raleigh Climate Strike. Don’t miss our youth-made video of participants sharing their reasons for striking! We hope the photos and video below inspire you to take action in your own faith communities!

Rishi Ranabothu, Youth Leaders Initiative Founder
Sarah Ogletree, NCIPL Program Coordinator
Rev. Dr. Jennifer Copeland, Executive Director of the NC Council of Churches
Susannah Tuttle, Director of NC Interfaith Power and Light
Michelle Peedin, NCIPL Youth Leaders Coordinator

Gary Smith, Chair of NCIPL Energy Working Group, with his group Community United Church of Christ in Raleigh.

Gary, Connie, Diana from Pittsboro Presbyterian Church

Sue Barnett from Unitarian Universalist PEACE Fellowship, Raleigh with NCIPL Program Coordinator, Sarah Ogletree

Rev. Pat Watkins and Rev. Dr. Denise Honeycutt from the United Methodist Church Caretakers of Gods Creation Community

Michelle Peedin, NCIPL Youth Leaders Coordinator

Phill Wilson from United Church of Chapel Hill

Becca Lamb, Michelle Peedin, NCIPL’s Youth Leaders Coordinator, and Avery Davis Lamb, previously with IPL DMV

Rishi Ranabothu, Tristan Peedin, Zeke DeGette

NCIPL Team: Michelle Peedin – Youth Leaders Coordinator, Sarah Ogletree – Program Coordinator,
and Susannah Tuttle – Director of NC Interfaith Power and Light

NCIPL Youth Leaders Initiative – “For The Love Of” Video

Here is a video that one of our youth made. Tristan Peedin, 16 years old, interviewed and edited this compilation video of strikers at the Climate Strike last Friday in Raleigh, NC. At NCIPL we recognize that storytelling is a powerful way to educate, inspire, and mobilize this climate justice movement.

We asked each interviewee to share with us their “For the love of” reason for striking! The ages range from 7-61! An intergenerational movement led by the youth – the generation who will carry the most weight of this climate crisis.

To learn more about NCIPL’s Youth Leaders Initiative or our newly forming network, Click Here. 

More Photos from the Raleigh Climate Strike








Filed Under: Blog, Uncategorized Tagged With: environment

Meet NCIPL Intern Daniel Perrin, Youth Leader

August 8, 2019 By Michelle Peedin, Program Coordinator, Partners in Health and Wholeness

Daniel Perrin has been interning with North Carolina Interfaith Power and Light this summer. He describes below what led him to this work and how he got connected to NCIPL. […]

Meet NCIPL Intern Daniel Perrin, Youth Leader

August 8, 2019 by Michelle Peedin, Program Coordinator, Partners in Health and Wholeness

Daniel Perrin has been interning with North Carolina Interfaith Power and Light this summer. He describes below what led him to this work and how he got connected to NCIPL.

I’m Daniel Perrin, and I am now, at last, a summer intern with North Carolina Interfaith Power and Light. From the time that I first started learning about this world, I cared about many things, but climate change always seemed to be the all-encompassing issue to me. As I  introduce myself to this community, I want to talk a little bit about myself and how I became involved with NCIPL.

To do that, let me start out with the basics. I am now a rising 9th grader and will be attending Carrboro High School in the fall. Three amazing years at Smith Middle School helped forge my interest in the environment and made it stand out among a crowded field of other issues pressing our world. I currently live in Chapel Hill with my family and my relationship with them has only furthered my interest in the environment. After all, environmental justice is one of the few issues that affect everyone, though no doubt some more than others. There is nothing to do but solve it! That is the only way to get past this and share the same world with every future generation.

In 2017, I was in 7th grade, the usual year for going through the Bar or Bat Mitzvah process for young people of Jewish faith. At my synagogue, Judea Reform Congregation in Durham, the tradition is for every person becoming a Bar or Bat Mitzvah to complete a social justice or Mitzvah project in accordance with your studies. The portion of the Torah that I chanted was B’reishit, the very first section. To give you a sense, B’reishit translates literally to “in the Beginning” and makes a very clear connection to the environment. This portion of the Torah talks about the earth being created and then passed on to Adam and Eve to care for it. To go along with this theme I tried to create an ambitious project centered around bridging religion and environmental action. Enter NCIPL.

The first part of my social justice project was to spearhead and help conduct an energy savings analysis of our synagogue and campus. We worked to coordinate it, and soon thereafter a volunteer auditor from NCIPL — little did I know in a short amount of time, I would be a volunteer with NCIPL — came to our synagogue. That day, we walked around the campus for more than an hour and were led by the auditor, a retired electrical engineer, who taught us ways to reduce our carbon footprint with low or no-cost solutions. What resulted? 11 pages of real, tangible solutions to help our synagogue and help our world.

This project experience introduced me to NCIPL and they stayed on my mind as we coordinated the next part of the project: installing a solar panel at the synagogue to power the Ner Tamid or Eternal Light. The Eternal Light is a symbol of God’s presence that illuminates the sanctuary. On February 19, 2019, a 50-watt photovoltaic solar panel was installed outside the synagogue as well as an AGM battery. The battery stores and supplies energy to the Eternal Light even during the night and several cloudy days in a row. I see powering the Eternal Light with solar energy as a great symbolic act for our community. It represents God’s presence as an eternal source of light. We finally finished that part of the project in February of this year. It was a long process that involved jumping through many hoops, but I learned a lot from the project. Overall, the work that I helped accomplish at my synagogue really struck me as momentous and important because the symbolism can be applied anywhere. I thought at the time, and I think even more now, that NCIPL’s work takes a unique angle to a crucial issue. In some ways, it’s a better angle, because it resonates with people now and emphasizes the personal affect climate change is having on people.

And now, here I am, writing this blog post as an intern with NCIPL, and I am looking forward to continuing this great work.

For more information about NCIPL’s Youth Leadership Initiative contact: michelle@ncchurches.org
For general inquries about NCIPL’s programs contact: programs@ncipl.org

Filed Under: Blog, Homepage Featured Tagged With: environment

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Eco-Justice Connection
27 Horne St.
Raleigh, NC 27607
(919) 828-6501
info@ncchurches.org

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