December 8, 2010
Out of Town, but...
Faithful blog followers. I was married to my beautiful bride in early November and jumped in a plane for Central America 24 hours later. Needless to say, I have a few things keeping me away from Radical Roots. But fear not, some really exciting things are happening with the project this winter and spring. I'll keep you posted when we return in early January.
In the meantime, check out the December/January issue of The Progressive. In between the pages of some brilliant writing by Wangari Maathai, Terry Tempest Williams, Barbara Kingsolver, and Bill McKibben appears an excerpt of my interview with Wendell Berry. If you'd like to join the Radical Roots mailing list or read a full transcript of the Berry interview, email me at radicalrootsproject@gmail.com. Cheers.
October 20, 2010
2010 Festival of Faiths :: Sacred Soil
Every year for the last 15 years, the Festival of Faiths chooses one theme that unites us all, to serve as a common thread to explore, explain, and discuss our faiths: both respective and in the places that they intersect. This year that thread is soil. The Festival, which runs from November 3-9 in Louisville, KY, will explore everything from slow food, creation care, and natural systems agriculture and features a fine lineup of speakers including Wes Jackson, Wendell Berry, and Will Allen.
For the full list of activities, check HERE.
Walmart is Going 'Local'
Walmart just announced an initiative aimed at increasing their stake in local food and sustainable agriculture development. The new Heritage Agriculture Program focuses on sustainable agriculture among its suppliers as it tries to reduce its overall environmental impact. Walmart plans to attack this issue of sustainability by reintroducing the cultivation of produce in areas "where it once grew." (Pictured above are the three "local regions" they will begin their efforts in).
Given that Wal-Mart is the world’s largest grocer, with one of the biggest food supply chains, any changes it makes to their procurement and distribution systems will have wide implications. Some farmers might see this news as their big break. I suspect many others are nervous, disappointed, even angry as they consider how this news will affect the vitality of locally operated distribution systems, wholesale and farmers markets, and food coops. The requirements to sell to a company like Walmart are huge--many small family farming operations in Central and Southern Appalachia don't work on the scale which Walmart is interested. Is Walmart willing to buy directly from farmers in smaller quantities? Probably not. The only way for most small and medium farmers to sell to Walmart is by banding together in cooperative packing, marketing and distribution systems. Whether or not this is something they want to do, can afford, or have the infrastructure for is the troubling question.
New York Times has a good article about the issue HERE.
October 7, 2010
Radical Roots Project Featured in Boone, NC
Here we are at the Appalachian Festival at Frostburg State University |
Featured speakers include Jeff Biggers, Helen Lewis, Ron Lewis, Hywel Francis, MP, William Schumann, Randy Wilson, Mair Francis, and Amanda Starbuck.
Rare film clips from Helen Lewis and John Gaventa’s visits to the Welsh coalfields in the 1970’s will be shown, as well as the new Appalshop documentary as will The Electricity Fairy, a film by Tom Hansell.
For a complete schedule go to: www.appstudies.appstate.edu
Listening stations |
Listening stations in action |
(Oral) History in Kentucky
For those of you interested in any kind of Kentucky history, espcially those interested in oral history, spend some time browsing through the Kentucky Historical Society website. According to the website KHS "packages the state's heritage in resources and educational programming of all kinds--from tours and lectures to hands-on workshops, special events and publications." It's truly a gold mine of information--any of you who are working on oral history projects in KY should check here for an excellent list of funding opportunities. Of the 9,000 oral histories in their collection, those in the Burley Tobacco Oral History Project are especially nice.
The Society is also where Wendell Berry plans to donate his papers after pulling them from University of Kentucky this past June. The following is an excerpt from Charlie Pearl's State Journal interview with Wendell about the papers controversy.
Talk about what has happened regarding the decision to pull many of your personal papers from the University of Kentucky’s archives.
I’m sad about it. The ideal thing would have been for my papers to be there. William Marshall was the archivist when the university made that purchase of my papers before I began to deposit these on loan and he asked at that time if I would donate them. I said I have two children farming and these papers have a value, and if I come to feel that the university is really serving the interest of people like my children who hope to prosper on small farms, then I may consider donating them.
But until they’re secure and I’m assured of the university’s interest in people like them, I’m not going to do it. And I’m not naïve. I was not at all inclined to make an issue of the university’s manifest lack of concern about surface mining in Eastern Kentucky and it’s ecological implications, it’s implications for the forests, for the survival of the wild creatures and maybe preeminently for the rural people there that a land grant university is mandated to look after and help. This form of mining is literally hell for the people who live near those mine sites. I know some of them and I’ve heard the testimony of many others and I’ve seen with my own eyes what they’re going through.
I understood that it was probably too much to expect, even a land grant university, to take an interest in those things. But when the university accepted that ($7 million) gift and agreed to name their basketball dormitory after the coal industry, that meant they had passed over from indifference to a manifest alliance with the coal industry. I don’t think a university ought to make an alliance with any industry. I know that’s going on at other universities, and I think it’s always a breach of intellectual integrity and reputability and a breach of public obligation. That is a public university. It ought not to be allying itself with a private interest of any kind. When that happened, that made it impossible for me to tacitly accept that in terms of my own relationship with the university. So the question I had to answer was whether I wanted to be associated with the university on its terms, and the answer I had to give is that I don’t.
What has to happen before your papers can go to the Thomas D. Clark Center for Kentucky History in Frankfort?
The Historical Society people and (wife) Tanya and I have now sat down together and talked, and they understand my conditions, I believe. They’ve written me a letter that I am now going to think about and probably show to my attorney just to make sure that everything that ought to be talked about and understood has been taken care of.
Do you think there’s a good chance that’s where they’ll go?
I think there’s a very good chance that’s where they will go.
(via: http://www.state-journal.com/news/simple_article/4854154)
Free Concert @ Eastern Kentucky University
Cellist, songwriter and vocalist Ben Sollee will bring his “Ditch the Van” tour to Eastern Kentucky University at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 7, with fellow Kentuckian Daniel Martin Moore as part of this year’s Chautauqua Lecture Series, “Nature’s Humans.”
The concert, free and open to the public, will be held in the Coates Building’s Brock Auditorium. On the two-month tour, presented by Kentucky Coffeetree Café, Sollee and crew have traveled by bicycle from California to the east coast without the use of support vehicles, carrying all instruments, band merchandise, film equipment for documenting, and personal effects on their bikes.
Read more HERE.
October 1, 2010
Coal Ash Pond Failure in Wilmington, NC
WILMINGTON: Monday's near record-setting rainfall took a toll on more than people's nerves driving over flooded roads.
Along U.S. 421 North, a portion of one of Progress Energy's coal-ash ponds at its Sutton Electric Plant failed – although officials aren't sure if Monday's persistent rainfall was the cause.
Spokesman Scott Sutton said crews found the damage, which they initially thought was a sinkhole, late Monday night while inspecting the dam.
The breach in one of the Sutton Plant's two unlined coal-ash ponds comes as federal and state regulators are taking a new look at whether to reclassify coal ash as a hazardous material. The renewed attention comes due to concerns tied to a massive coal-ash pond failure in Tennessee two years ago that buried nearly 400 acres of river, wetlands and some nearby homes in up to six feet of black and gray sludge.
Coal ash is loaded with metals that can be toxic at high levels. While contaminants from the Sutton ponds are leaching into the groundwater, testing has shown the pollution to be slow moving and within the plant's compliance footprint.
Read the full story at the Wilmington Star
September 29, 2010
Doug Elliott: Stories In Our Blood and Bones
Last October as the poplars were turning golden and the days getting shorter, I interviewed Doug Elliott at his home in Union Mills, NC. Doug has to be one of the most interesting people I know (and certainly the only groundhogologist I've ever met). We spent the day talking, mostly, taking breaks to wander the garden, feed the chickens, haul fire wood, tell stories, and play songs. As Doug reflected on his personal history, a life full of twists and turns and wonderful details, I was drawn in like a moth to flame. He inspired me in ways I still think about daily: to learn the language of the forest, to be still and patient and ready for the unexpected, to live deep and suck the marrow out of life. But he also showed me how important it is to know my own story, and to know how to tell it. As he shares in our interview below, a story isn't simply about narrating a particular event, but about recognizing relationships and making deep connections that allow us to reimagine the world around us.
Kirkland: Why stories, Doug? What is it about art and stories that is so compelling to you?
Elliott: We all live in a narrative. When I ask you, 'What did you do today,' you tell me a story. You explain your experience of this day and this world through narrative. For this reason, stories allow us to make sense of the chaos of our lives. And I think we humans have a natural hook for narrative. That’s why some people watch four hours of TV a day--it’s just one story after another. The problem with television is that we're being told a corporate story, a story that drives an agenda narrowly focused on profit.
When I teach storytelling it is really about turning one’s learning experience into a narrative journey. I tend to learn from specific to general. A lot of times traditional curricula focuses on the general and barely gets to the specific. To to me it’s like, “I was out in the woods one day and I saw this thing and you know what it did? It did this. Now why would it do that?” And that’s how the journey begins. You have to start asking other people about it. You have to start researching it. It's then that you start seeing how this thing relates to all the other things around it. You start making connections on much larger levels. You begin to see how it relates to larger mythologies.
That’s how a lot of my stories come about: from an incident, an encounter, a problem, or a question. Just explaining the incident doesn’t quite make a story. You have to see how that incident ties into other stories, or how it relates to someone or something else’s relationship to the world. It’s about connecting the dots. Ideally you would be able to relate it to the big picture and it becomes part of a larger world mythology. Asking questions is one of the best places to start.
(video: http://www.unctv.org)
(video: http://www.unctv.org)
September 28, 2010
Washington Post: About 100 Arrested at MTR Protest
WASHINGTON -- About 100 people were arrested Monday outside the White House while protesting against mountaintop removal mining, temporarily trading their freedom for a chance to highlight what they consider an environmental calamity.
The protesters, arrested after refusing orders from U.S. Park Police to leave the sidewalk on Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House, were taken to a waiting city bus. As police escorted them one-by-one, hundreds of their supporters screamed encouragement from behind the police lines, like fans greeting runners from the sidewalk of a marathon. Most of those arrested went along peacefully, but a few resisted, leading Park Police to drag them to a police truck.
Park Police spokesman Sgt. David Schlosser said a majority of the arrests were for disobeying a lawful order - in this case, to come in compliance with demonstration regulations. A handful of others were charged with crossing a police line, he said.

Among those arrested was climate scientist James Hansen, who issued a statement saying that mountaintop removal "destroys historic mountain ranges, poisons water supplies and pollutes the air with coal and rock dust."
"Mountaintop removal, providing only a small fraction of our energy, can and should be abolished. The time for half measures and caving in to polluting industries must end," Hansen said.
The mostly youthful ralliers started Monday's protest at Freedom Plaza, then marched a few blocks to the White House. They carried signs like "Blowing Up Mountains for Coal Poisons People" and "Mountain ecosystems won't grow back." Some carried small white crosses adorned with messages such as "water pollution" and "corporate greed." The rally, dubbed "Appalachia Rising," was organized by protesters from West Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia and Tennessee.
Read the rest of the story HERE.
(AP Photos/Carolyn Kaster)
September 27, 2010
Desde Appalachia Hasta Potosi
Here's a great tune from Jack Herranen's latest release You're Not Broken. His music is available for purchase on his website - www.jackherranen.tennesseefolk.com. See the post below for more info on Jack.
September 23, 2010
I Have Tales To Tell: Teachings from Don West
"Poverty pays unless you're poor."
- Don West (1906-1992)
I want to tell, America,
About victory —
About sharecroppers, tenants,
Black men and Crackers,
And you must listen
And look
And think deep...
For tomorrow in a new world
You must lift your head,
America —
Proud of yourself,
Proud that a Georgia Cracker
Can clasp the hand of a Black man
And say:
“Brother!”
Look here, America.
Bend your head toward me
And listen.
Make your dreaming eyes to look
For I have tales to tell
And little pieces
Of twisted life
To show...
You must look, America,
And listen
And think deep.
For even I, a Georgia Cracker —
One of your own mongrels —
Am grieved
By looking
At what I’ve seen...
Don West achieved success as one of the foremost southern regional poets of the twentieth century. He was at different times a labor organizer, political radical, preacher, progressive educator, and outspoken spokesperson for human equality in the generation before the civil rights movement. Although he is best known for his literary works, West was also an effective proponent of the Social Gospel, embraced by some of the South’s most dedicated religious reformers.
Born in 1906 in Devil’s Hollow, near Ellijay in Gilmer County, Donald L. West grew to young adulthood in the north Georgia mountains. The eldest son of a farmer, he took pride in the independent spirit that had made his forebears nonconformists who opposed slavery in the antebellum years. This heritage of independence expressed itself in West’s career, during which he often found himself at odds with the folkways and beliefs of the communities in which he lived and worked. Throughout his life he remained committed to a progressive view of ethnic and racial harmony, which linked him with his personal family history.
Imbued with the folk school philosophy, in 1932 he collaborated with Myles Horton to establish the Highlander Folk School in Monteagle, Tennessee. Later in 1964, West and his wife helped to open the Appalachian South Folklife Center at Pipestem, West Virginia, where West worked until his death in 1992.
Read more at the Georgia Encyclopedia.
September 22, 2010
Talkin' Neoliberalism
“The world is not made of atoms, but of stories.”
Spent some time with Jeff Conant, Jack Herranen, Herbert Reid and Betsy Taylor earlier this week. Being great thinkers and doers in Appalachia and beyond, thought I'd highlight some of their work on the blog. Each offer a thorough investigation and thoughtful discussion on the influence of colonialism/neoliberalism on today's social/political economy and highlight resistance movements that are born from decades and centuries of such oppression. Dig in deep here, this stuff is good. Jack has some great tunes and art on his website and be sure to catch Jeff on his book tour--he's at Internationalist Books in Chapel Hill on Thursday Sept. 23 and then heading up the east coast from there.
JEFF CONANT: A Poetics of Resistance
The Zapatistas’ famous “Ya basta!”—enough already!—was the first uttering of a new story: a story about unbinding the ties of official history, uncovering buried seeds of popular resistance, and revealing the glimmerings of a truly insurgent modernity. Combining narrative history, literary criticism, ethnography, and media analysis, A Poetics of Resistance provides a refreshing take on Mexico’s Zapatista movement by examining the means, meanings, and mythos behind the Zapatista image.
The first “postmodern revolution” presented itself to the world through a complex web of propaganda in every available medium: the colorful communiqués of Subcomandante Marcos, the ski masks, uniforms, dolls, murals, songs, and weapons both symbolic and real. By proliferating a profound and resonant set of myths, symbols, and grand historical gestures calculated to reflect their ideologies, organizing methodologies, and cultural values, the Zapatistas helped set into motion a global uprising, and the awareness that behind this uprising is a renewed vision of history. Jeff Conant’s engaging and innovative examination of the Zapatistas’ communication strategies will be an important tool for movements everywhere engaged in creating a world where many worlds fit; in demolishing History in order to construct histories; and in unseating not only the powerful, but Power itself.
HERBERT REID AND BETSY TAYLOR: Recovering the Commons
Providing new practical and conceptual tools for responding to human and environmental crises in Appalachia and beyond, Recovering the Commons radically revises the framework of critical social thought regarding our stewardship of the civic and ecological commons. Herbert Reid and Betsy Taylor ally social theory, field sciences, and local knowledge in search of healthy connections among body, place, and commons that form a basis for solidarity as well as a vital infrastructure for a reliable, durable world. Drawing particularly on the work of philosophers Maurice Merleau-Ponty, John Dewey, and Hannah Arendt, the authors reconfigure social theory by ridding it of the aspects that reduce place and community to sets of interchangeable components. Instead, they reconcile complementary pairs such as mind/body and society/nature in the reclamation of public space.
With its analysis embedded in philosophical and material contexts, this penetrating work culls key concepts from grassroots activism to hold critical social theory accountable to the needs, ideas, and organizational practices of the global justice movement. The resulting critique of neoliberalism hinges on place-based struggles of groups marginalized by globalization and represents a brave rethinking of politics, economy, culture, and professionalism.
JACK HERRANEN: An Artist of the Mountains
Jack was born in 1967 at the foothills of the Appalachian mountains and calls Knoxville his northern home. The descendant of radical immigrant laborers and natural born storytellers, Jack has, in recent years, searched for his own identity through his music and a deeper understanding of his roots. His great grandfather, Jacob “Jack” Nisula, a labor organizer and Finnish immigrant who passed thru Ellis Island, was a close collaborator of T Bone Slim, the dynamic story-teller and lyricist of the the Wobblies (the Industrial Workers of the World). His verbal history of the times has been an inspiration to Wobbly comrade Joe Hill, Woody Guthrie, Haywire Mac, ultimately fueling the creative fires of artists such as Bob Dylan, Utah Philips, Phil Ochs, Steve Earle, Ani Difranco, and Billy Bragg.
A self-taught musician, while working as a busboy across the street from the infamous Ella Guru’s music club (in the Old City, Knoxville, Tn.), he spent his smoke breaks slipping in to listen to such greats as Townes Van Zandt, Nancie Griffith, Dick Gaughan, and Taj Majal. Inspired at the time by writings of legends from Walt Whitman to Pablo Neruda, his songs began to reflect both the rebellious roots of his ancestors and the hard scrabble life of the Appalachian working class, as well as the newly discovered dignity in his heritage of creativity and rebellion and the tattered beauty and grace discovered at the margins of the illusory American dream.
September 10, 2010
WVU's "Pro Combat Uniforms"
After angry environmentalists objected to a Nike promotional ad for a new West Virginia University football uniform, the athletic apparel giant said Thursday it will modify a graphic depicting a mountaintop-removal mine.
The problem environmental activists had with the ad was not the color of the gear -- off-white that appears coated in coal dust -- or the number 29 on the coal-black helmets. It's the depiction of a mountaintop-removal mine behind the image of a player, complete with flat, treeless mountaintop, the sound of an explosion and the image of falling rock. The activists said that ad appeared to be a tacit endorsement of the controversial form of strip mining.
Read more at the Charleston Gazette.
From a Coffee Shop in Anchorage
picture courtesy of the greenhorns
quote from Berry's essay "Think Little" (A Continuous Harmony, 1972)
September 3, 2010
An Appalachian Wedding
Look up at the sky
the heavens so blue
the sun so radiant
the clouds so playful
the soaring raptors
woodland creatures
meadows in bloom
rivers singing their
way to the sea
wolfsong on the land
whalesong in the sea
celebration everywhere
wild, riotous
immense as a monsoon
lifting an ocean of joy
then spilling it down over
the Appalachian landscape
drenching us all
in a deluge of delight
as we open our arms and
rush toward each other
all of us moved by that vast
compassionate curve
that brings all things together
in intimate celebration
celebration that is
the universe itself.
- Thomas Berry
Southern Draft Animal Days, Sept. 17-18
The second annual SDAD will be held at the Blue Ridge Institute at Ferrum College in Ferrum, Virginia on September 17-18. Jason Rutledge, one of my Radical Roots interviewees and director of Healing Harvest Forrest Foundation, is the mastermind behind this one-of-a-kind event. There will be draft logging field demonstrations, round pen seminars, horse pulling contests, a parade of breeds, and hands on learning opportunities of all kinds. Wendell Berry will be speaking at the Ferrum auditorium on Saturday evening. This is a weekend you don't want to miss.
For more info about the event, draft animal logging, and restorative forestry:
Southern Draft Animal Days
Healing Harvest Forest Foundation
An Interview with Jason Rutledge
Here's a short clip of HHFF collaborator and draft horse logging extraordinaire Ian Snider working his team near Todd, NC.
August 31, 2010
EPA Coal Ash Hearings: Come Speak Up!
Right now, communities across the nation are being poisoned as coal companies dump hazardous waste in their backyards. The images show just a sampling of the 588 waste sites across the US and the 12 "high hazard" waste sites in North Carolina. This toxic material is known as coal ash and is the left over waste from burning coal. Many of these coal ash sites are known to be leaking dangerous materials like arsenic, lead and mercury into our drinking water. As a result, communities near these sites are facing an increased risk of cancer, learning disabilities, birth defects and other illnesses.
There are no national regulations and little to no state regulations for storing this hazardous material. This needs to change. We know coal ash is toxic, we know it is poisoning families, communities, and our environment, but it has not yet been classified as hazardous. Until it is, companies can keep dumping it without any of these important safety guards.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency just released proposals for the first ever national regulations for coal ash. One of these proposals would create strong standards for classifying coal ash as hazardous waste. In order to hear from the public, the EPA is holding public hearings across the country. Two are in our neck of the woods: Charlotte, NC and Louisville, KY.
I'm working with Restoring Eden to get as many people at the hearings as possible. Will you show you support by attending the public hearing? If so, contact me (taylor@restoringeden.org) and I'd be happy to talk to you more and send helpful information. You don't have to register to attend the hearing, but if you want to speak, register with the EPA HERE. Tell your friends, family, neighbors, pastors, everyone--the government wants to hear from us about this issue. This is momentous.
The Charlotte hearing is on Tuesday, September 14th, 2010 at the Holiday Inn (2707 Little Rock Road, Charlotte, NC 28214).
The Louisville hearing is on Tuesday, September 28, 2010 at the Seelbach Hilton (500 Fourth Street, Louisville, KY 40202).
Let's take a stand and not allow another Kingston, TN disaster happen again.
August 27, 2010
The "Approximate Original Contour"
Following up on that last post, I figured I should mentioned what the coal industry says about their mining and reclamation practices:
"Mountaintop Mining is a legal, highly regulated, and complex engineered earthmoving process for the surface mining of multiple steep slope coal seams in central Appalachia. This environmentally responsible method employs mining in the most efficient manner for the purpose of electricity generation and/or steel production, thereby strengthening our nation’s competitive economic power and national security."Statements like that and finding development projects like the Mount Olive Correctional Complex pictured above, we should be thanking these guys for how responsible and generous they are to Appalachian communities. After all, according to Walker CAT, life is "thriving on West Virginia's reclaimed mine sites." (This document is a must-read for anyone looking for a chuckle).
MTR Reclamation Study
Another excellent resource coming from the iLoveMountains.org folks proves what they've been saying all along--it ain't happening. Their project, called Reclamation FAIL, compiles information from NRDC about how just a small fraction of 500 Appalachian ridges leveled thus have been reclaimed. According to their study of 410 of those ridges:
- 366 (89.3%) had no form of verifiable post-mining economic reclamation excluding forestry and pasture
- 26 (6.3% of total) yield some form of verifiable post-mining economic development
- Only about 4% of mountains in Kentucky and West Virginia, where the vast majority of this mining is occurring, had any post-mining economic activity.
- Virginia had the highest proportion of economic activity on its reclaimed mountaintop removal sites at 20%.
- Tennessee, which has relatively little mountaintop removal compared to the other three states, had no economic activity on the 6 sites examined in that state.
- Overall, economic activity occurs on just 6% to 11% of all reclaimed mountaintop removal sites surveyed as part of this analysis.
Read more at The Huffington Post
August 23, 2010
Book News: Lifted by the Heart
"If a young teacher came and asked me, "What should I do?" I would answer: "Find 25 good stories--narratives about life. Learn them by heart and tell them. Then your students will revolutionize the world!" If a folkschool teacher knows 25 stories by heart, then he can really teach in a folkschool manner. But my provocative assertion is that there are hundreds of folkschool teachers who know thousands of facts about our wretched societal conditions, but do not know a single story which can lift the heart, which can tell us that life is larger than we thought." - Frederik Christensen
An excellent book called Lifted by the Heart (2009) landed on my desk this week--thanks Mila. The book is edited by Chris Spicer, a rad folk educator who's worked in everything from rural adult education literacy to conflict management with union-based front-line workers. The volume includes essays on schooling, history, poetry, farming, immigration, and cultural heritage by some of the brightest and most influential folk educators of the last century: Myles Horton, Don West, Johannes Knudsen, Frederik Christensen, and Loyal Jones.
For more about Folk Education, People's Education, and Popular Education:
What is Folk Education?
The Highlander Research and Education Center
The Schommunity Wiki
Popular Education News
Sipping Wine with Wendell
Several years ago, Larkspur Press printed a limited number of these broadsides of Wendell Berry's epic poem, "Manifesto: The Mad Farmer Liberation Front." The broadsides are available exclusively in the tasting room of the Smith-Berry Vineyard and Winery in New Castle KY.
The farm and winery, located in beautiful Henry County, is owned and operated by Chuck Smith and Mary Berry-Smith, daughter of Wendell Berry. They've built up an impressive business over the years and offer everything from CSA shares and cuts of lamb organically raised by Tanya and Wendell to community art exhibits, dinners and concerts at the farm. Unfortunately they've sold out of the broadsides, but be sure to check in with them if you're in the Henry County area (north-central KY). A bunch of great music, food, and entertainment is lined up for the fall.
Here's Chuck talking about his grapes:
An Ecological Adaptation of the Book of Lamentations

1. Eichah / Lament for the Earth: Tisha B'Av 2010
By Tamara Cohen
Gone from Appalachia -
her mountaintop glory;
mined by Massey Energy
without compassion.
Children sick from air and water,
stumble weak before King Coal.
All that was precious in the days of our youth,
Earth recalls in woe and sorrow.
Her creatures die with none to help them,
at the hands of Exxon, now BP.
World leaders shrug
and look on helpless.
Our people who respected life,
have come to defile it.
We have stripped Earth naked,
she shrinks back.
Oily waves slap the sand like a soiled hem;
we were heedless of the cost of our appetite.
We have sunk appallingly, there is no comfort.
See, Breath of Life, this misery; how our avarice jeers!
Greed has laid hands on all dear to us.
Your sanctuary plundered by multinationals
full of contempt for Your holy community.
The Earth’s poor cry out as they search for nourishment;
indigenous communities trade resources for food,
to keep themselves alive.
Hashivenu Yahh elecha v’nashuva, hadesh yameinu kekedem.
Let us return, help us repent,
You Who Breathe all Life;
Breathe us, Breathe us,
Breathe us into a new path.
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