Meaningful Movies Virtual Screening & Discussion: Hard Road of Hope

A rectangle featuring two boxes showing two images. In the left box, which has a white background, are two speech bubbles stylized to look like film strips, one in red and one in blue, with the words “Meaningful Movies Project” beside them. Beneath …

4 p.m. Thursday, SEPTEMBER 24, 2020

Release Year: 2020
Running Time: 86 minutes
Director: Eleanor Goldfield

“It’s hard to win around here, it really is,” says Lynn Beatty, a resident of Doddridge County, the epicenter of the fracking boom in West Virginia. A neighbor, Linda Ireland echoes that sentiment: “You feel like there’s nothing you can do. Because you have these gas companies with all their resources. And the state seems to be on their side as well.”

Backbone Meaningful Movies presents its first virtual screening. On Thursday, Sept. 24 at 4 p.m. Pacific/7 p.m. Eastern they are screening Eleanor Goldfield’s “Hard Road of Hope.” This film takes a  journey into West Virginia, artfully exploring the radical history that’s been amputated from the people there and how folks are working to fight coal and fracking.

After the film screening, Eleanor will be on hand for a Director Q&A. Tickets can be purchased for $0-$10 here: https://www.eventbrite.com/x/hard-road-of-hope-a-backbone-meaningful-movies-virtual-film-screening-tickets-118965518067


MORE MEANINGFUL MOVIES: 6 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 24: The Vow From Hiroshima is an award winning film which provides an intimate portrait of Setsuko Thurlow, a survivor of Hiroshima, who has devoted her life to ridding the world of nuclear weapons. Her moving story is told through the lens of her growing friendship with a second generation survivor, Mitchie Takeuchi. Register at  https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-vow-from-hiroshima-screening-panel-discussion-tickets-116246431205. After registering, you will receive a zoom link for the screening and panel discussion.
Release year: 2020. Running time: 82 minutes. Directors: Susan Strickler

Crossing the sea tonight: Practice Lectio Divina @ 6:30 pm

Practice contemplative Lectio Divina tonight:

Make some tea, grab a Bible, come for centering & connection

Open gathering September 23:

6:30-7pm

We will spend some time with Exodus 14: 10-15 crossing the sea, since this Sunday Sept. 27, Rev. Rich will preach on “Path of Faith.”

We will share a couple minutes in mindfulness to begin, and then a few rounds of seeing what phrases stick out to us, and how we connect with this passage, in the midst of all that is going on this week in our world. Our last round of the practice leads us to what God is asking us to do through this text. Give yourself about 30 minutes to connect in this small group community- that always has new folks coming!

Also mark each Wednesday eve, at 6 - 6:20 pm, we do the same, for the upcoming Sunday scripture, before the gatherings at 6:30- 7 pm.

Let Pastor Lauren know if you want to be one of tonight’s 3 readers!

lauren.cannon@keystoneseattle.org

Meaningful Movies Virtual Screening & Discussion: Knock Down the House

A rectangle featuring two boxes showing two images. In the left box, which has a white background, are two speech bubbles stylized to look like film strips, one in red and one in blue, with the words “Meaningful Movies Project” beside them. Beneath …

A rectangle featuring two boxes showing two images. In the left box, which has a white background, are two speech bubbles stylized to look like film strips, one in red and one in blue, with the words “Meaningful Movies Project” beside them. Beneath these words is the website address: www.meaningfulmovies.org. and “Social Documentary Film and Community Discussion. The right box is a segment of a movie poster for the film “Knock Down the House, ” which features the picture of four women clustered together, all looking in different directions, with a faded image of the U.S. Capitol behind them on a blue background.

7 p.m. Thursday, SEPTEMBER 17, 2020

Release Year: 2019
Running Time: 86 minutes
Director: Rachel Lears

When tragedy struck her family in the midst of the financial crisis, Bronx-born Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez had to work double shifts in a restaurant to save her home from foreclosure. After losing a loved one to a preventable medical condition, Amy Vilela didn’t know what to do with the anger she felt about America’s broken health care system. Cori Bush was drawn into the streets when the police shooting of an unarmed black man brought protests and tanks into her neighborhood. Paula Jean Swearengin was fed up with watching her friends and family suffer and die from the environmental effects of the coal industry.

At a moment of historic volatility in American politics, these four women decide to fight back, setting themselves on a journey that will change their lives and their country forever. Without political experience or corporate money, they build a movement of insurgent candidates challenging powerful incumbents in Congress. Their efforts result in a legendary upset.

The film is available through Netflix or on YouTube (https://youtu.be/YCSo2hZRcXk).  Please watch the film on your own, then join the panel discussion with Meaningful Movies in Kirkland on Thursday, September 17 at 7pm.

Special guest for the discussion is Shelley Kloba, Representative, 1st Legislative District.  

To register for the discussion, please follow this link.  You will receive a link to the discussion meeting by return email.


MORE MEANINGFUL MOVIES: 6:30 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 17: Attla tells the gripping but virtually unknown story of George Attla, an Alaska Native dogsled racer who, with one good leg and one outlandish dream, dominated the sport for five decades, becoming a rockstar figure for both indigenous people and white people. REGISTER HEREhttps://kcls.bibliocommons.com/events/5f4e7b45636c1c3a006490e3 
Release year: 2019. Running time: 57 minutes. Directors: Catharine Axleyf

Possibilities for Festival of Hope 2020

Red letters that read “A Festival of Hope” with three pine-looking branches to the right of “of Hope.”

Red letters that read “A Festival of Hope” with three pine-looking branches to the right of “of Hope.”

In an ordinary year, we would already be making plans for our annual Festival of Hope alternative holiday fair and bazaar. Unfortunately, because of the Covid-19 pandemic, an in-person Festival of Hope isn't possible, but Eliza and other Festival leaders are working on some ideas to bring it about in a virtual form. More details to come as they get ironed out, but for now, something to keep on your radar is that Kim has graciously offered to continue her tradition of providing us with pies (up to 30), despite this strange year. These will be offered for our church community only and Kim will deliver to the church and we will handle distribution to our members. Pies are $12, with all funds for the Festival and we need the headcount by Sunday, Sept 27. Please place your pie order by emailing Eliza at: elizapenick@yahoo.com

Also, folks can still buy items from Seattle's Ten Thousand Villages, one of the Festival participants, through their web site. You can check them out, give a donation, or buy some items at https://www.tenthousandvillages.com/seattle

Take 5 for Advocacy: Week of Sept. 14, 2020

Image description: A logo that reads “Take 5 for Advocacy, “ featuring the words “Take 5” in red, with the 5 in a circle of lines that indicate a watch face, and the words “For Advocacy” in green. The words sit in front of a pattern that looks like …

Image description: A logo that reads “Take 5 for Advocacy, “ featuring the words “Take 5” in red, with the 5 in a circle of lines that indicate a watch face, and the words “For Advocacy” in green. The words sit in front of a pattern that looks like a mosaic of stones, with a green cross surrounded by multicolored blocks.

Actions You Can Take This Week

GET UNSHELTERED FOLKS INSIDE: The Washington Low Income Housing Alliance is asking people to tell Gov. Inslee to use emergency resources to help get indoor shelter for people who are unsheltered or living outside. This includes placing people in hotels, unused dorms, and other vacant spaces, in order to prevent the spread of Covid-19. They're also asking people to tell Gov. Inslee that the state should also ensure that everyone who lost their home to fire has adequate shelter, and ensure that low-income households who lost homes are prioritized in the recovery. Protecting people experiencing homelessness is equally important and urgent. Shelter should be made available to anyone without a safe, indoor space, who is living in an area with unhealthy air, not limited to people who have been displaced by the fires. Raise your voice and send your message by clicking here and filling out the advocacy form

RAISE YOUR VOICE ON KALAMA REFINERY PROPOSAL: The time is NOW to give your comments to the Washington State Department of Ecology, about Northwest Innovation Works' and the Port of Kalama's application to build the world’s largest methanol refinery in Kalama. The Department of Ecology will take public comments through October 2 both online and at public hearings, which will be conducted remotely when possible. You can read more about the comment process at the Department of Ecology's web site here, and leave a comment online here. You can also register to participate in the first public hearing, which will be held at 1 p.m. Sept. 17, online here. Future public hearings are scheduled for 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sept. 22, also online. Rich Voget has provided this handout to help guide your comments and make them more effective. He also shared this flier (download here) on the Kalama Refinery and why Sierra Club opposes it, to find out more about the training workshops, and connect with Sierra Club at monthly meetings on the topic every third Thursday on Zoom. Email sept.gernez@sierraclub.org for the Zoom link.


"TEXT BANKING" THE VOTE: Last month some members of Keystone took part in the Environmental Voter Project's "text-banking" day of action, where they sent texts to voters and asked them to commit to voting on Election Day. Our texts were part of the 27,000 that were sent by members of the Pacific Northwest Conference of the UCC on that day. The Environmental Voter Project is inviting folks to do more text banking in the weeks leading up to the election. Every Wednesday, starting on Sept. 16, from 2-4 p.m., folks can send texts to encourage people around the country to vote, with training for those new to the project scheduled for Monday, Sept. 21, and Wednesday Sept. 23. Sign up to join this effort here. For more information, e-mail Roberta Rominger, who is part of the PNC's environmental justice task force, or talk with Pastor Yuki about how you can get involved.