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JANUARY
20, 2003
ENVIRONMENT
Religion and
environment movement has growth spurt
STATE
BY STATE
The Coalition on the Environment
and Jewish Life posts a list of state Interfaith
Climate Change Campaigns. The campaigns center on the health and environmental
implications of global warming. Regional COEJL affiliate contacts are listed
here.
The Interfaith
Council for Environmental Stewardship lists Judeo-Christian advisory committee
members around the country. Read the Cornwall
Declaration on Environmental Stewardship from a 1999 meeting in West Cornwall,
Conn.
IN
THE NORTHEAST
CONNECTICUT
Stephen R. Kellert is professor of social ecology at the Yale University
School of Forestry and Environmental Studies in New Haven, Conn. His books include,
as co-editor, The Good in Nature and Humanity: Connecting Science, Religion,
and Spirituality With the Natural World (Island Press, 2002). Contact 203-432-5114,
stephen.kellert@yale.edu.
MAINE
Fred Horch is project coordinator of Maine
Interfaith Power and Light, based in Brunswick, a non-profit organization
working to bring environmentally-friendly electricity to consumers in the state.
Contact 207-729-9665, fred@meipl.org.
MASSACHUSETTS
Timothy
C. Weiskel co-directs the Working Group on Environmental Justice, based
in Cambridge, Mass. The group offers publications
accessible through the web. Contact 617-496-5208, Tim_Weiskel@Harvard.Edu.
John
Berthrong is associate dean for academic and administrative affairs at the
Boston University School of Theology, where he directs the Institute for Dialogue
Among Religious Traditions. His books include, as co-editor, Confucianism
and Ecology (Harvard University Press, 1998). Contact 617-353-3050, jhb@bu.edu.
Religious
Witness for the Earth, based in Littleton, Mass., is a national interfaith
network dedicated to public witness on issues such as climate change and environmental
devastation. Contact co-chairs the Rev. Dr. Andrea Ayvazian, dean of religious
life, at Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Mass., 413-538-2791, aayvazia@mtholyoke.edu;
or Rabbi Fred Scherlinder Dobb of Adat Shalom Reconstructionist Congregation,
Bethesda, Md., who is also on the board of trustees of the Coalition on the
Environment and Jewish Life, 301-767-3333, rabbifred@aol.com;
or the Rev. Fred Small,
a singer-songwriter and pastor of First Church Unitarian in Littleton, Mass.,
978-486-3044, minister@fculittle.org.
IN
THE EAST
DISTRICT
OF COLUMBIA
Rachel Lettre is president of Shomrei
Adamah (Hebrew for "Guardians of the Earth"), a non-profit Jewish
environmental organization in the greater Washington, D.C. area. The group posts
events here.
Contact 202-216-9508, Shomrei_adamah@yahoo.com.
PENNSYLVANIA
Greg Bowman is state coordinator of the Pennsylvania
Interfaith Global Climate Change Campaign, based in Souderton, Pa. Contact
215-723-5513, gregb@mrn.org.
Mary
Evelyn Tucker is professor of religion at Bucknell University in Lewisburg,
Pa., who specializes in religion and ecology. Contact 570-577-3188, mtucker@bucknell.edu.
Religious Studies in
Secondary Schools, a coalition of public and private secondary school teachers,
in partnership with The Forum on Religion and Ecology will hold a workshop
on connections between religion and ecology June 20-26 at Bucknell University
in Lewisburg, Pa. Read more about the RsiSS/FORE partnership here.
Contact seminars@rsiss.net.
NEW
JERSEY
Dieter Hessel lives in Princeton, N.J., is a member of the Center of
Theological Inquiry, directs the Ecumenical Program on Ecology, Justice and
Faith, and co-directs Theological
Education to Meet the Environmental Challenge. His books include Theology
for Earth Community: A Field Guide (Orbis, 1996) and, as co-editor, Christianity
and Ecology (Harvard Center for the Study of World Religons, 2000), and
Earth Habitat: Eco-Injustice and the Church's Response (Fortress Press,
2001). Contact 609-951-0126, DTHessel@aol.com.
NEW
YORK
The Interfaith Center
on Corporate Responsibility, based in New York City, is a North American
association of nearly 250 Protestant, Roman Catholic, and Jewish institutional
investors working to hold corporations accountable to stewardship of the earth,
among other issues. Contact executive director Timothy Smith, 212-870-2295.
Larry
L. Rasmussen is Reinhold Niebuhr Professor of Social Ethics at Union Theological
Seminary in New York, N.Y. His books include Earth Community, Earth Ethics
(Orbis Books; 1996); as co-author, Ethics for a Small Planet (State University
of New York Press; 1998); and, as co-editor, Earth Habitat: Eco-Injustice
and the Church's Response (Fortress Press, 2001). Contact 212-280-1364,
lrasmusn@uts.columbia.edu.
The Catholic
Conservation Center is a web site based in New York that offers Catholics
ways to connect Roman Catholic teaching to environmental causes. Contact site
founder Bill Jacobs, billjacobs@catholic.org.
IN
THE SOUTHEAST
FLORIDA
Richard C. Foltz,
an assistant professor of religion at the University of Florida in Gainesville,
teaches about environmental values, including in the Muslim world. His writings
include Islam and Ecology (Harvard University Press; forthcoming in 2003),
and Worldviews, Religion and the Environment: A Global Anthology (Wadsworth
Publishers, 2002). Contact 352-392-1625, rfoltz@ufl.edu.
Bron Raymond Taylor is Samuel S. Hill Distinguished Professor of Religion
at the University of Florida in Gainesville, where he is helping to launch the
world's first Ph.D. in religion with a "Religion and Nature" track.
Editor in chief for the Encyclopedia of Religion and Nature (Continuum,
2004), he maintains a website
for the study of religions, cultures and environments, and for the study of
grassroots environmental groups, especially radical ones. Contact 352-392-1625
ext. 237, bron@religionandnature.com.
GEORGIA
Georgia Interfaith Power
& Light in Atlanta is a new faith-based environmental organization that
will be officially launched Feb. 19. The Rev. Sally Bingham, winner of the International
Energy Globe Award for 2002 and co-founder of California Interfaith Power and
Light, will speak at 7:30 p.m. at St. Ann's Episcopal Church, 3098 Northside
Parkway (at Moore's Mill Road) in Atlanta. Contact info@gipl.org,
Woody Bartlett at wbartlett@gipl.org,
or Carol Bartlett at cbartlett@gipl.org.
Habitat for Humanity
has a Green Team whose
members across the nation promote energy-efficient, environmentally friendly
construction, encouraging good stewardship of natural resources and raising
awareness of the environmental impact of house building. Contact 229-924-6935
ext. 2426, ConsEnv@hfhi.org.
EarthCare Inc.
is a Tennessee-Georgia Christian organization based in Chattanooga, Tenn. President
is John P. Rossing, pastor of Christ the King Lutheran Church in Dalton, Ga.
Contact 706-278-3979, jrossing@alltel.net.
NORTH
CAROLINA
David Landis Barnhill teaches religious studies at Guilford College in
Greensboro, N.C., and has expertise in religion and environmentalism. He plans
to move in summer 2003 to the University of Wisconsin in Oshkosh. Contact 336-316-2357,
dbarnhill@guilford.edu.
IN
THE SOUTH
ARKANSAS
A new doctor
of ministry program in spirituality and sustainability is being co-sponsored
by the United Theological Seminary in Dayton, Ohio, and the Center
for Spirituality and Sustainability at Hendrix College in Conway, Ark. Contact
faculty mentors Jane Ann Clarke, a United Methodist minister in Newton Falls,
Ohio, with a doctor of ministry degree in ecological theology from United Theological
Seminary, 330-872-1564; Jay McDaniel, a professor of religion at Hendrix College,
501-450-1366 or mcdaniel@hendrix.edu;
and Paul Knitter, professor emeritus of theology at Xavier University in Cincinnati,
513-745-2018, knitter@xu.edu. Also contact
Amanda Moore (Program Research Associate) 501-336-0889 or aem@conwaycorp.net.
MISSISSIPPI
The Coalition on the Environment
and Jewish Life will have its sixth annual Jewish Environmental Leadership
Institute May 15-18 at the Henry S. Jacobs Camp in Utica, Miss. Contact Kirsten
S. Kleinman, 212-684-6950 ext. 210, info@coejl.org.
TENNESSEE
Tennessee
Interfaith Power and Light, which "seeks to involve communities of
faith as faithful stewards of God's creation," is based in Knoxville. Contact
865-637-6055, info@cleanenergy.org.
IN
THE MIDWEST
ILLINOIS
Faith in Place
works with religious and spiritual leaders from the Chicago metropolitan region
on issues of environmental sustainability. Contact project director the Rev.
Clare Butterfield, 773-278-4800 ext. 125.
The Web of Creation,
an ecumenical site maintained by the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago,
provides congregational resources on ecology and religion.
INDIANA
The Rev. Dr. Angelique Walker-Smith is executive director of the Church
Federation of Greater Indianapolis, which participates in the National Council
of Churches' Faith-based Climate and Energy Campaign. Contact 317-926-5371,
churches@churchfederationindy.org.
Read about the Indiana
Faith Based Global Climate Change Campaign.
David Haberman is a professor of religious studies at Indiana University
in Bloomington. He teaches on the subject of religion and ecology, particularly
Hinduism. He is writing a book on India's Yamuna River, from a religious and
ecological perspective. Contact 812-855-8894, dhaberma@indiana.edu.
MICHIGAN
Kim Winchell directs the Michigan
Interfaith Coalition for Creation and coordinates the Michigan
Interfaith Climate Change Campaign (formerly the Michigan Interfaith Global
Warming Campaign), both based in Freeland, Mich. Winchell is an ELCA Lutheran
and in candidacy to become a diaconal minister specializing in "earthkeeping
ministry." Contact kwinch5940@aol.com,
989-695-2402.
Sara Bernstein is program director for the Michigan
Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life. Contact 248-642-5393, mi-coejl@jfmd.org.
The Michigan
Catholic Rural Life Commission is a grassroots group of nuns, priests, farmers,
educators and lay persons that serves as a resource around rural and environmental
issues for the Catholic Dioceses of Michigan. Contact 989-466-9322, director@michigancatholicrurallife.org.
MINNESOTA
The North
American Coalition for Christianity and Ecology, based in St. Paul, Minn.
is an ecumenical organization established in 1986 to encourage the many strands
of Christian tradition to work to "heal the damaged earth." Contact
612-698-0349.
OHIO
Nawal H. Ammar, associate professor of justice studies at Kent State
University in Kent, Ohio, has written about Islam and ecology. Contact nammar@kent.edu.
A new doctor
of ministry program in spirituality and sustainability is being co-sponsored
by the United Theological Seminary in Dayton, Ohio, and the Center
for Spirituality and Sustainability at Hendrix College in Conway, Ark. Contact
faculty mentors Jane Ann Clarke, a United Methodist minister in Newton Falls,
Ohio, with a doctor of ministry degree in ecological theology from United Theological
Seminary, 330-872-1564; Jay McDaniel, a professor of religion at Hendrix College,
501-450-1366 or mcdaniel@hendrix.edu;
and Paul Knitter, professor emeritus of theology at Xavier University in Cincinnati,
513-745-2018, knitter@xu.edu.
IN
THE SOUTHWEST
ARIZONA
Marlyne J. Freedman, director of the Jewish Community Relations Council
in Tucson, is the contact for the Southern
Arizona Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life. Contact 520-577-9393
x103, saz_coejl@yahoo.com.
Hava
Tirosh-Samuelson, an associate professor of history at Arizona State University
in Tempe, has expertise on Judaism and ecology. Contact 480-965-7767, hava.samuelson@asu.edu.
The Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life posts the Harvard Divinity
School publication "Judaism
and Ecology: Created World and Revealed Word," edited by Tirosh-Samuelson.
COLORADO
Eco-Justice Ministries
is an ecumenical agency based in Denver that helps churches care for the Earth.
Contact executive director the Rev. Peter S. Sawtell, 303-715-3873, ministry@eco-justice.org.
Daniel Ziskin is founder of Jews
of the Earth, based in Boulder, Colo. JOTE posts a Sept. 14 Boulder Daily
Camera article "Rethinking
Ritual." JOTE is planning a "Torah Trek" for Feb. 2, a hike
with "eco-Torah" taught by rabbis from Israel. Contact 303-998-0606,
ziskin@jote.org.
Frederick Denny is professor of Islamic studies and the history of religions
at the University of Colorado, Boulder. He is a contributor to the Forum
on Religion and Ecology. Contact 303-492-6358, Frederick.Denny@Colorado.edu.
TEXAS
Bee Moorhead is executive director of the interfaith group Texas
Impact, which is based in Austin, Texas, and promotes environmental conservation.
Contact bee@texasimpact.com.
J.
Baird Callicott is a professor in the philosophy and religious studies department
at the University of North Texas in Denton. His expertise includes ecological
ethics. Contact 940-565-2266, callicott@unt.edu.
Safei-Eldin Abdelhamid Hamed, an assistant professor of landscape architecture
at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, has written about Islam and ecology. Contact
806-742-2894, safei.hamed@ttu.edu.
IN
THE WEST/NORTHWEST
CALIFORNIA
The Rev. Sally Bingham, an Episcopal priest at Grace Cathedral in San
Francisco, is founding director of the Regeneration
Project and its Episcopal
Power & Light ministry. She also co-chairs the California
Interfaith Power & Light campaign. Events are listed here.
Contact 415-561-4891, info@theregenerationproject.org.
Duncan
Ryuken Williams is a professor of Japanese at the University of California-Irvine
who has researched Buddhism and environmentalism. He co-edited Buddhism and
Ecology (Harvard University Press, 1997). Contact 949-824-1603, duncanw@uci.edu.
Target Earth,
Pleasanton, Calif, is a national network of Christian organizations committed
to environmental stewardship. Contact 925-462-2439, info@targetearth.org.
The Religious Campaign
for Forest Conservation is a coalition of churches, synagogues and para-religious
organizations concerned with forest conservation. It is based in Santa Rosa,
Calif. Contact campaign coordinator Fred Krueger, 707-573-316, forest@creationethics.org.
HAWAII
Leslie
E. Sponsel teaches anthropology at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. He
specializes in religion and ecology. Contact 808-956-8507, sponsel@hawaii.edu.
IDAHO
Bernard Daley Zaleha is president of the Fund
for Christian Ecology, a Boise, Idaho-based non-profit that encourages discussion
of religion's responsibility toward the earth; zaleha@pobox.com.
WASHINGTON
STATE
The Rev. James Mulligan, ordained in the Presbyterian Church, is executive
director and co-founder of Seattle-based Earth
Ministry. Earth Ministry is a Christian, ecumenical group based in Seattle
that works with individuals and congregations on environmental issues. Area
events are posted here.
Contact 206-632-2426, jmulligan@earthministry.org.
The Intercommunity Peace
& Justice Center is a northwest environmental and responsible investment
collaborative venture of Benedictines, Dominicans, Holy Name Sisters, Sisters
of Providence, Sisters of St. Joseph, and Jesuits in Seattle. Contact 206-223-1138,
ipjcnw@aol.com.
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