By Darla Martin Tucker
What responsibilities do women, particularly Seventh-day
Adventist women, have toward safeguarding planet Earth? What
connection do religious beliefs have with stewardship of the
earth? And how can women and men show respect for God’s creation
through conservation?
These and other issues will be addressed this weekend during the
conference, “Adventist Women and the Earth: A Response to
Ecofeminism.” The series of talks, workshops and outreach
activities will take place April 24 – 26 at La Sierra University
Church, 4937 Sierra Vista Ave., Riverside.
The conference is open to all who wish to attend. Admission is
free. For more information call 951-785-2470 or visit
http://adventistwomenearth.wordpress.com/. The “Adventist Women
and the Earth” weekend event serves as the annual Young Women
and the Word Conference organized by La Sierra University’s
Women’s Resource Center. La Sierra University is an institution
of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
The weekend kicks off with a 7:45 p.m. program on April 24
titled “Where Does the Accent Go?” presented by LSU Master’s of
Divinity student Jared Wright. The following day’s lineup
includes talks by educators Maritza Duran and Somer Penington.
They will speak respectively at 8:30 a.m. and at 9:30 a.m. with
talks titled “Resurrection and New Life” and “I Came For the
Wildflowers, and All I Got was a Snake.” At 11 a.m., Chris
Oberg, La Sierra University Church senior pastor will give a
talk titled “Going Green is Going Home,” a presentation that
addresses reasons to care for the earth despite certain
religious views predicting Earth’s demise.
At 2 p.m., conference keynote speaker Rosemary Radford Ruether
will give an address titled “Ecofeminism and Theology: A
Comparative Perspective.” “The talk defines different meanings
of the term ecofeminism and discusses why I choose the third
view and compares ecofeminist views of Vandana Shiva of India
and Ivone Gebara of Brazil,” Ruether said.
Ruether is a Claremont Graduate University visiting professor of
feminist theology and a noted theologian whose books include
“Sexism and God-Talk” and “Integrating Ecofeminism,
Globalization, and World Religions.” She has held a long career
as a scholar, teacher and activist in the Roman Catholic Church
and is known as a groundbreaking figure in Christian feminist
theology.
The afternoon’s offerings will include workshops and panel
discussions on ecology and its relation to art, religion, gender
and spirituality. Students will give presentations on the earth
and feminism and on ‘bright green’ environmentalism.
“Adventist Women and the Earth” aims to address our
responsibility to the earth, to explore connections with gender
justice, and to examine religious beliefs as they underpin
individual and collective stewardship,” said Trisha Famisaran,
an LSU alumna, Claremont Graduate University doctoral student
and Women’s Resource Center board member. She will lead the
conference’s paper presentations by La Sierra students Felisa
Samarin-Meier and Ana Cristina Lee Escudero. The students’
presentations are respectively titled “Differentiating Feminine
and Feminist,” and “The Earth is My Mother.”
“We hope to lead out and show how young Adventist women care
about the earth and women and challenge others not only to
recognize this problem but to actively create and practice
solutions that respect the dignity and value of God’s
creations,” Famisaran said.
Conference attendees will have the opportunity to walk a
45-foot-by-24-foot prayer labyrinth in Sierra Vista Chapel,
watch the natural history feature film “Earth” at 7:30 p.m. at
Edwards Corona Crossings Stadium theater on Saturday evening,
and participate in beautification and cleanup outreach projects
on Sunday morning. The latter outreach activities will include
cleaning, plant trimming and landscaping at a homeless shelter.
Conference organizers are seeking donations of cleaning
supplies, flowerpots, gardening supplies, plants and flowers for
this project.
“The conference is including community projects because we feel
that it is important to engage in practices beyond discussion
and theory,” Famisaran said. “Conservation is a very important
aspect of ecofeminism because it calls us to recognize a
different relationship between humans and the environment, a
relationship of interconnection and recognizing the intrinsic
value of all things. The particular community projects that we
have organized offer a small glimpse of what conservation is and
gives participants the opportunity to provide a service to the
community.”
Following is a schedule of events, speakers and participants.
Fri., April 24
7:45 p.m. – Vesper program, “Where Does the Accent Go?”
presented by Jared Wright, LSU graduate divinity student.
Sat., April 25
- 8:30 a.m. - Maritza Duran, Orangewood Adventist Academy vice
principal, will speak on “Resurrection and New Life.”
- 9:30 a.m. - Somer Penington, Redlands Adventist Academy
chaplain will discuss the Global Issues Experience prayer
labyrinth and give a talk titled “I Came For the Wildflowers,
and All I Got was a Snake.”
- 11 a.m. – Chris Oberg, La Sierra University Church senior
pastor will give a talk titled “Going Green is Going Home.”
- Lunch break - Attendees will provide their own lunch.
- 2 p.m. – Keynote speaker and Claremont Graduate University
theologian Rosemary Radford Ruether will give a talk titled “Ecofeminism
and Theology: A Comparative Perspective.”
Afternoon Workshops and Panels
3 p.m. - Ecology, Religion and Gender Panel, with Ruether; John
B. Cobb Jr., professor, award-winning author and co-director of
The Center for Process Studies at the Claremont School of
Theology; Sheryll Prinz-McMillan, executive director of the
Christian Counseling Center in Redlands and a pioneer of
Adventist women’s writings on ecofeminism; and Warren Trenchard,
La Sierra University provost and professor of New Testament and
Early Christian Literature. La Sierra Associate Professor of
Religious and Theological Studies Ginger Hanks-Harwood will
moderate the panel.
4:15 and 5:15 p.m., Breakout Sessions
- Conservation, led by Wendy Walters, LSU alumna and senior
biologist at environmental and land use planning firm, LSA
Associates Inc.
- Art and Ecology workshop, led by Beatriz Mejia-Krumbiein, LSU
art department chair, with Ann Isolde, visual artist and
feminist art movement participant; and France White, Roman
Catholic nun, artist, teacher and peace educator.
- Spirituality and Ecology: Fostering Awareness, led by
Hanks-Harwood.
- Presentation of Student Papers, led by Famisaran.
- Eco-Dome: Building a Bright Green Future, led by John Razzouk,
former La Sierra Students In Free Enterprise president and
members of SIFE’s Environmental Sustainability Team. They will
discuss the SIFE team’s environmentally friendly projects
including construction of demonstration eco-domes on La Sierra’s
campus. The structures are made primarily of earth and mixed
with such elements as cement, barbed wire and polyurethane
tubing. The team will also talk about simple solutions to a
brighter, greener future.
7:30 p.m. – Film screening: “Earth” (Rated: G), Edwards Corona
Crossings Stadium 18, 2650 Tuscany St., Corona. Tickets
available for purchase at the theater.
Sun., April 26
- 9 a.m. – 12 p.m. Outreach projects.