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Eco-Justice Connection

Eco-Justice Connection

An initiative of the North Carolina Council of Churches

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EJC Voices

Eco-Justice Youth Leadership Fellow

September 13, 2021 By chris

  NICOLAS EASDALE I have a passion for drawing and painting, because I want to be an illustrator and a storyboard writer for Marvel Comics. Marvel Comics is notorious for […]

Eco-Justice Youth Leadership Fellow

September 13, 2021 by chris

 


NICOLAS EASDALE

I have a passion for drawing and painting, because I want to be an illustrator and a storyboard writer for Marvel Comics. Marvel Comics is notorious for many things, but ever since its creation in 1939 as Timely Comics, Marvel Comics have always used Superhero stories as platforms to speak about political and social issues of the time.

I find the biggest issue of my generation’s time, and the next generations to come to be Climate Change, and I believe that I have a moral obligation as a human being to do everything I can in order to ensure that we take care of our home.

We have 8 years to make sure that the state of the environment will remain sustainable. We are living in an environment where summer ends in November, and starts in January for tropical places, multiple hurricanes within one year happen, there are countless fires in California, and NYC was flooded by a tropical storm. Seeing these awful natural disasters getting progressively worse and worse, I feel as if I need to take part in this fight for the human race to thrive within this planet.

Contact Nicolas: easdalenick@gmail.com


BIO

I am Nicolas Easdale, a 2021-2022 Fellow who was hired by Susannah Tuttle of North Carolina Interfaith Power & Light in July, 2021. A recent High School graduate from Franklin Academy, I am currently a Freshman in Broward College, where I am attending as an Art Major and as a transfer student. I live in Broward County, Florida.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Eco-Justice Youth Leadership Fellow

September 10, 2021 By chris

  HANNAH KLEIN I am currently in my last year of undergraduate school at Appalachian State University. My two greatest passions have always been the environment and spirituality, thus I […]

Eco-Justice Youth Leadership Fellow

September 10, 2021 by chris

 


HANNAH KLEIN

I am currently in my last year of undergraduate school at Appalachian State University. My two greatest passions have always been the environment and spirituality, thus I decided to pursue a double degree of Sustainable Development (concentration in Community, Regional, Global Development) and Religious Studies with an emphasis on ancient Hebrew texts. I also hope to one day attend graduate school to obtain a Masters of Divinity or Theological Studies, ideally at Yale or Notre Dame. It is my goal to take this knowledge and apply it outside of the college sphere by pursuing just economic systems, climate change policies, and sustainable and spiritual community building. My belief is that faith is deeply tied to our relationship to the natural environment, and essential in the fight for climate justice.

My spiritual background is deeply influenced by mental illness: as someone who struggles with Scrupulosity, a religious/moral form of OCD, I am acutely aware of how damaging Toxic Theology can be on a personal level. It is my belief that one of the largest obstacles in the fight for climate justice is the prevalence of such Toxic Theology in public and private spaces. Thus, my main focus in school, and eventually my career, is to speak out against spiritual distortions such as humanity’s right to dominate nature, the politicization of faith, gender inequality, labor exploitation, and racism. I hope that through the study and use of Hebrew and Christian Scriptures, I can one day speak to people at large—perhaps in congregational settings or policy lobbying–and help them understand the true, liberating God at the heart of those texts—the One who encourages care for Creation and for all our neighbors. Another dream of mine is to write a book exploring these ideas, and bringing them down-to-earth so that people can utilize them in their daily lives.


BIO

Hannah is currently a senior at Appalachian State University. She is pursuing a double major of Sustainable Development and Religious Studies, with Honors. After school, she plans to take time to engage with practical theology and social activism, then to apply to graduate programs for a Masters of Divinity. With NCIPL she aspires to create a national network of Interfaith, Power & Light youth leaders who will collaborate to form creative solutions for environmental and social injustice. She is passionate about the power of spirituality to influence people’s engagement in social action; thus, Hannah utilizes an interfaith-based platform to communicate our moral responsibility to protect creation. In her personal life, she spends time reading, exercising, being in nature, and hanging out with her corgi, Milo.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Faith & Climate Resilience Summit & National Day of Action

August 23, 2021 By chris

Faith Communities & Climate Resilience Thursday, August 26, 5:30 p.m. Online Our faith communities are on the frontlines of climate impacts and climate resilience. As climate disasters — wildfires, hurricanes, heat waves, […]

Faith & Climate Resilience Summit & National Day of Action

August 23, 2021 by chris

Faith Communities & Climate Resilience

Thursday, August 26, 5:30 p.m.
Online

Our faith communities are on the frontlines of climate impacts and climate resilience. As climate disasters — wildfires, hurricanes, heat waves, and more — accelerate around the world, it is critical that we are preparing and asking our leaders to do the same. Join us to hear stories of how climate change is impacting faith communities, how those communities are building resilience, and how the federal government must invest in climate-ready infrastructure. Click here to register.

Act for Creation. Act for Justice. A National Faith Call-In Day for Congressional Climate Action

Friday, August 27
Online

Our spiritual traditions teach us to act with love and compassion to address the crises before us. We are in a critical moment: our actions this month could determine the course of the climate crisis for generations to come. Sign up to join people of faith in calling your members of Congress, asking them to pass a climate budget that includes important, once-in-a-generation investments in climate change prevention and resilience. By signing up to participate in this one-day virtual advocacy event you’ll receive:

  • A call and email script to contact your Members of Congress
  • A toolkit to engage with your Members of Congress over social media

Now is the time to call on Congress to address both the climate crisis and environmental justice in our communities. Click here to register.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

NCIPL Eco-Justice Education & Advocacy Fellow

August 16, 2021 By chris

  SUSAN BROOKS After graduating from North Carolina State University and Harvard Law School, I became a public defender in Florida and have continued in the field of public defense […]

NCIPL Eco-Justice Education & Advocacy Fellow

August 16, 2021 by chris

 


SUSAN BROOKS

After graduating from North Carolina State University and Harvard Law School, I became a public defender in Florida and have continued in the field of public defense at a state agency. My work with poor people, especially those of color, has shown me how societal and policy decisions can and often do have an adverse impact on them. Nowhere is this more pronounced than in regard to the environment. Disadvantaged folks live downhill, downstream, and downwind in areas vulnerable to pollution and the consequences of rising temperatures. My concern for these communities, as well as our earth in general, has led me to take action.

Having grown up in Southeastern North Carolina, I am acutely aware of how bioemissions can make an area unlivable. From my time growing up and smelling the stench of a nearby pulp paper mill to holding my breath as I drive past an industrial hog facility on my way to and from my home town, I have a small idea of what it must be like to endure such burdens on a day-to-day basis. I believe that education, empathy, and a commitment to equity are key to bringing justice to the citizens of these communities and that change is possible if we all work together. My first step in that process will be to coordinate a webinar series for fall 2021 on the proposal to produce biogas from hog waste, with the goal of promoting understanding of the issue, the community’s concerns about it, possible solutions to it, and how people of faith can assist the community in its advocacy for the health and happiness of its citizens.

Contact Susan: sebrks@bellsouth.net.


BIO

Susan Brooks is excited to begin working with NCIPL as she feels a calling to be more involved in environmental, particularly environmental justice, issues. Susan has served at the North Carolina Office of Indigent Defense Services (IDS) in various capacities since 2003. Susan graduated summa cum laude from North Carolina State University in 1990 with a B.A. in English and a minor in Political Science. Upon graduation from Harvard Law School in 1994, Susan worked for the public defender office in Jacksonville, Florida and then at a couple of private civil practice law firms in North Carolina before joining IDS, where she seeks to assure that attorneys appointed to represent poor people in the state have the resources, training, and support they need to best serve their clients. Susan is active at Benson Memorial United Methodist Church in Raleigh, where she serves as lay leader and vice-chair of the Church & Society Committee, promoting awareness and education within the congregation and the community on issues such as climate change, ecology, racism, homophobia, poverty, and other societal concerns. Susan lives with a handsome tabby cat named Gadget.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

#ActNow for Creation Justice!

July 21, 2021 By chris

Faith community members took to the streets of North Carolina in Raleigh and Greensboro in order to walk as an interfaith representation of people who support legislation on Congressional bold, […]

#ActNow for Creation Justice!

July 21, 2021 by chris

Faith community members took to the streets of North Carolina in Raleigh and Greensboro in order to walk as an interfaith representation of people who support legislation on Congressional bold, climate justice & jobs.

We delivered the Faith Leaders National Letter to Congress endorsed along with 3600 other organizations around the country.

This NC Climate Action Campaign event was organized by NC Interfaith Power & Light (NCIPL) a campaign of the Eco-Justice Connection work of the NC Council of Churches – in partnership with the Interfaith Creation Care of the Triangle (ICCT).

Photos via @NCIPL at the Offices of Rep. Deborah Ross & Rep. Kathy Manning on 7.21.21 ~>

#ACTNOW
#Faith4Climate

Filed Under: Blog, Uncategorized

Endorse NCIPL Resolution to Duke Energy

July 20, 2021 By chris

This fall, NCIPL leaders drafted a Resolution to Duke Energy asking that they set a carbon dioxide emissions reduction goal for the year 2030. Setting this reduction goal in this time frame is essential to alleviating […]

Endorse NCIPL Resolution to Duke Energy

July 20, 2021 by chris

This fall, NCIPL leaders drafted a Resolution to Duke Energy asking that they set a carbon dioxide emissions reduction goal for the year 2030. Setting this reduction goal in this time frame is essential to alleviating and preventing the worst impacts of global climate change, and is the recommendation of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

As people of faith and conscience, we know that we must reduce emissions now in order to care for this planet and each other. We are therefore calling on corporate leaders and communities, like Duke Energy, to make the necessary emissions reductions for the good of our world. Join us. Please endorse our resolution here.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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