Trending Topics
Mushroom Madness 
Fungi can cure or kill, nourish life, and also decompose it back into soil. Fossil evidence for fungi is limited, but the ability to analyze molecular data has led to revelations about the evolution of this extraordinary family of...
Fool’s Gold: The Myth of Tiburcio Vasquez 
“And still of a winter’s night, they say,  when the wind is in the trees, When the moon is a ghostly galleon  tossed upon cloudy seas,    When the road is a ribbon of moonlight  over the purple moor,    A...
Billions in Flight: Migratory Birds 
Autumn doesn’t officially begin until the equinox on September 22, but all across North America birds are already on the wing—billions of them. Migration times and destinations vary based on the species and variables like weather and food sources—some...
One-Room Schoolhouse 
Back to school. A hundred years ago in Topanga, it would have been on foot—and often barefoot—to the little, red, one-room schoolhouse by the creek in the bend of the dirt road.  Public education in California was still relatively...

Film Night this Friday: Standing on Sacred Ground: Profit and Loss

Loading Events

« All Events

  • This event has passed.

Film Night this Friday: Standing on Sacred Ground: Profit and Loss

December 3, 2021 @ 7:30 pm - 9:30 pm

The Topanga Peace Alliance 199th Consecutive First
Friday Film Night Presents
Standing on Sacred Ground: Profit and Loss”
With indigenous activist Lydia Ponce
Zoom Opens at 7:15, Movie 7:30
Zoom Link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82940547115?pwd=c3lvYkRNZjhZdElnVjJlaUc4QThaQT09
Zoom Meeting ID: 829 4054 7115
Password: Peace2021

Grab your popcorn and find a cozy spot in your home this Friday, December 3rd, as the Topanga
Peace Alliance hosts another virtual First Friday Film Night Film Night featuring the documentary
“Standing on Sacred Ground: Profit and Loss.” We will be joined by indigenous activist Lydia
Ponce.
Our feature film for November present indigenous people telling their own stories—and confronting
us with the ethical consequences of our culture of consumption. They expose the industrial threats
to native peoples’ health, livelihood and cultural survival. In Papua New Guinea, a Chinese
government owned nickel mine has violently relocated villagers to a taboo sacred mountain, built a
new pipeline and refinery on contested clan land, and is dumping mining waste into the sea. In Alberta, Canada, First Nations people suffer from rare cancers as their traditional hunting grounds
are contaminated by massive tar sands excavating and refining projects. We will also show short
films giving updates to the legal cases after Chevron was convicted for polluting indigenous lands
in Ecuador.
We will open the Zoom event at around 7:15. Before the film, we will have announcements
regarding upcoming events and actions for peace and social justice. We will enable video so that
we can optionally see each other if you choose to enable your camera.
After the film we will have a discussion with Lydia Ponce, indigenous activist with Idle No More
Venice and the American Indian Movement SoCal Chapter. 

Details

Date:
December 3, 2021
Time:
7:30 pm - 9:30 pm