July-August-September
Red Lake Nation’s Path to Solar Energy

Red Lake Nation’s Path to Solar Energy

by Ralph Jacobson. The people of Red Lake Nation, in northwestern Minnesota, had been talking for over a decade about ending their dependence on electricity generated from coal. This is a story about their journey toward renewable energy. Mercury falls into the water...

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Philadelphia Yearly Meeting’s Climate Sprint

Philadelphia Yearly Meeting’s Climate Sprint

At Philadelphia Yearly Meeting’s annual sessions this July, Friends came under the weight of the climate emergency as a yearly meeting priority and accepted and approved the Climate Sprint Report, “Moving Together in the Face of Climate Change,” excerpted below. 
To...

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Sharing Love and Knowledge in the Time of COVID-19

Sharing Love and Knowledge in the Time of COVID-19

An Interview with Beverly G. Ward. “IT’S LIKE PEELING an onion: layer after layer of pandemics and it all makes you cry,” shares Beverly Ward. She’s referencing the built-in injustice of her home state of Florida, where she works as Field Secretary for Earthcare for...

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Pacific Yearly Meeting’s Mutual Aid Experiment

Pacific Yearly Meeting’s Mutual Aid Experiment

By Keith Runyan and Rebekah Percy. WHEN the shelter-in-place order took effect throughout California earlier this year, a small group of Young Adult Friends from Pacific Yearly Meeting organized a mutual aid project with the goals of sharing resources and creating...

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Collective Community Resilience: Thinking Through Climate Change and Defunding the Police

Collective Community Resilience: Thinking Through Climate Change and Defunding the Police

By Sara Jolena Wolcott. ONE OF THE MOST important lessons I learned when working in sustainable development overseas is to listen to the people most impacted by the problems to appropriately co-create viable solutions. Sometimes they would prioritize things that...

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Weeding out Systemic Oppression in Our Garden

Weeding out Systemic Oppression in Our Garden

By Katie Breslin. THIS YEAR, I started a garden at a local farm. I didn’t know what I was doing when I signed up, just the basic principles like make sure the plants have water and to pull weeds, but that was about it. Thankfully friends and my plot neighbors gave me...

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Cultivating the Next Generation of Naturalists

Cultivating the Next Generation of Naturalists

Fayetteville Arkansas Quakers Create Native Plant Garden for Ozark Natural Science Center By Eric Fuselier. The Fayetteville Monthly Meeting recently planted a native plant garden at the Ozark Natural Science Center (ONSC) located south of Eureka Springs, Arkansas....

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“We Had Something, Now We Don’t.” Bolivian Friends Face the Climate Crisis

“We Had Something, Now We Don’t.” Bolivian Friends Face the Climate Crisis

By Emma Condori Mamani. My name is Emma Condori. I am from Bolivia. I was born near Lake Titicaca. Most of my childhood was very beautiful because I was raised in community life in one of the indigenous communities we have in Bolivia, called Aymara. One thing I really...

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Casa Pueblo: Truly the People’s House

Casa Pueblo: Truly the People’s House

By Liz Robinson. THIS STORY STARTS with Hurricane Maria and our Central Philadelphia Monthly Meeting’s decision to select Casa Pueblo as the beneficiary for our 12th month charitable giving. Because of its outstanding reputation, and its amazing hurricane-disaster...

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