Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

November 4, 2015

Crying Earth Rise Up - Screening in Denver Nov. 18, 2015

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STOP URANIUM MINING! PROTECT SACRED WATER! ALLY UP! 
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November 18, 2015
5:30 p.m.

Denver Auraria Higher Education Center, 

1201 Larimer St, (CU Denver Student Commons Building) Room 2500A
(map and directions)

(parking map)

Documentary Film Screening in Downtown Denver

Denver Auraria Campus Screening of Crying Earth Rise Up


"Some day the Earth will weep.  She will beg for her life.  She will cry with tears of blood.  You will make a choice, if you will help her or let her die.  And when she dies, you too will die."
John Hollow Horn

website for the film: www.cryingearthriseup.com
get connected on FB: www.facebook.com/cryingearthriseup
link to trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AJJLn-P0RVw
Join the University of Colorado Denver Native American Student Organization (NASO) and the Auraria Climate Justice Coalition on November 18th for a evening of interactive dialogue, food, music provided by Oyuhpe Singers from the Lakota territory and a film screening of the documentary Crying Earth Rise Up! This event will be a rare opportunity to hear from people on the front lines of the struggle against the ongoing legacies of colonialism. There will be opportunities to engage in a dialogue with filmmakers and land defenders working to protect their ways of life. 

 
This Screening is Sponsored by:
Native American Student Organization
and
Auraria Climate Justice Coalition

contact AurariaClimateJustice@gmail.com
or call Owe Aku IJP at 646-233-4406

In Association with:
Prairie Dust Films and
Owe Aku International Justice Project

When Debra White Plume's drinking water tests high for radiation, she sets out to determine the cause. What she finds alarms her.

A nearby uranium mining operation is extracting ore from deep in the ground by tapping the High Plains/Ogllala Aquifer, a huge underground cache of water covering 174,000 square miles from Texas to South Dakota which supplies drinking water to 82 percent of the people who live within the aquifer boundary. The mine's planned expansion further threatens the aquifer.

Elisha Yellow Thunder intimately understands the dangers of contaminated water. A young mother and a geology student, she unknowingly drank water with high levels of radiation while pregnant with her first daughter, whose severe medical anomalies are life-threatening.

Yellow Thunder scours rock outcroppings near the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, gathering and testing ore samples. Her grief over her daughter's illness and her fears that the health of her people are likewise in jeopardy, drives her to search for answers.

Residents living in Crawford, NE, the town nearest to the mine, have historically supported it for its positive financial impact, but recent questions about the mine's safety are raising doubt about the wisdom of tolerating its continued operation.
The Auraria Campus is a dynamic academic environment shared by three separate and distinct institutions of higher learning:
  - Community College of Denver
  - Metropolitan State University of Denver
  - University of Colorado Denver
The collective student population is nearly 44,000 with an additional four to five thousand faculty and staff.  
Copyright © 2015 Owe Aku International Justice Project, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you are an ally in our struggle to preserve sacredwater

Our mailing address is: chip
Owe Aku International Justice Project
7685 South Olive Circle
Centennial, CO 80112


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