On Sunday, October 23, from 10:00 a.m. to noon, the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Silver City will present "Reel Life Lessons," during their Sunday Service, including the showing of the Academy Award-nominated documentary, "Gasland." We will eat home grown or locally grown food during the second half of the film.

Josh Fox's Sundance film festival winner, "Gasland--Can you light your water on fire?" is warm-hearted and darkly humorous in its telling of huge amounts of water being polluted and wasted on fracking, a method of extracting gas from the ground, developed by Haliburton. This is water that is no longer available for consumption or watering crops. It is water that makes area food production, whether it's on farms, ranches or local gardens, unhealthy, if not impossible.

A local harvest potluck, served during intermission, will make us care, and hopefully believe in possibilities for ending pollution, drought, and illness resulting from fracking. The struggle against hunger and malnutrition in Southwest New Mexico, is a big part of the fellowship's social justice project. The "Reel Life Lessons" program this Sunday, demonstrates that although Unitarians do not have a religious tradition with a creed, they have a
religious movement that weds social justice work to theology. The community is welcome, and bringing locally grown food to share during the movie is just an option. There will be plenty.