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Weekly Communicator


May 26, 2022

Sunday Service



Join us this Sunday at 10:30am in the Sanctuary or via Zoom at

https://zoom.us/j/5264858673


or listen to audio only at UUCFM.org

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This Sunday, May 29, we will be honoring Memorial Day and the courage of those who fight and work for the rights of others. and were killed. We are honored to have guest speaker Joseph Bonasia who is working for our rights to clean water in the spirit of those we honor on this day. We invite you to join us in honoring those who sacrifice for others.


Joseph Bonasia, a retired teacher, is Chair and SWFL Regional Director of the Florida Rights of Nature Network that is advocating a “Right to Clean and Healthy Waters” amendment to the state constitution. He is also a founding board member of the SWFL RESET Center and serves as Citizens’ Climate Lobby’s volunteer liaison to Senator Rick Scott’s office. Read a recent op-ed of his here.

 

Joseph will speak to us about the proposed Right to Clean and Healthy Waters Amendment:

 

Florida’s waters are in crisis. The state executive branch is not enforcing clean water legislation according to environmental laws, legislative intent, and constitutional policy. People suffer. Wildlife suffers. Property values suffer, businesses suffer, and communities suffer. 

 

Hoping for political solutions in a system that favors corporate rights and special interests only leads to further environmental degradation. We need a clear, simple, legal solution to provide our waters the protection they need. Amending the state constitution with a “Right to Clean and Healthy Waters” for all Floridians is that legal solution. It creates a fundamental right that takes precedence over the rights polluters and enables us to hold the state accountable when it fails to adequately protect our waters.

Please send all newsletter articles by 

12pm Wednesday for publication in Thursday's newsletter.


Send articles to newsletter@uucfm.org


**Please do not send requests to the office manager email**

Covid Protocol Update


The efficacy of vaccines and treatments has significantly reduced Covid’s danger for most of us. As a result, the protocols for campus events have been revised: 

  1. Masks will continue to be required in the sanctuary during worship services.
  2. Masks are optional for coffee and other functions in Hobart Hall.
  3. In the library, classrooms, and other small spaces, masks are required UNLESS everyone present agrees otherwise. We’ll continue to be respectful and protective of those of us whose immunity is impaired.
  4. Worship services and UU Dialogues will continue to be available on Zoom.


Although the Covid risk level will continue to fluctuate, I’m sure all of us hope the worst of the pandemic is behind us. We’ll continue to monitor the risk and change the guidelines as needed to protect our congregation.


Please reach out to me with any questions at UUCFMPresident@UUCFM.org.

Namaste,

Mary Studer

President, Board of Trustees

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Welcome New Members


BILL & PEG FELIX

For going on 58 years Peg & Bill Felix have been UU members in

Philadelphia and New Jersey. They have recently moved here to Shell Point in Ft. Myers and are happy to add UUCFM to their UU connections and look forward to being active members. Being involved with UUs have always suited their backgrounds of having Quaker educations and with parents of the Jewish faith, an agnostic, and an Episcopalian minister. Peg & Bill have enjoyed 64 years of married life. Love is always moving forward.

Music Committee Survey


The Music Committee of UUCFM would like to hear from singers, former choir members, players and others who would like to contribute their talents and time to the UUCFM music program! 


The UUCFM music program is looking to expand its offerings to the congregation for Sunday services and other events by bringing the choir back together and adding experienced musicians to the “band”. We have put a short survey together, which can be found by using this link, which asks about specific areas of interest and has room for suggestions for the music program in general.


Please take a few minutes to respond to the survey and let us know how we can continue to make our music program great! You can also reach out to me directly if you prefer - Peter Golbitz, Music Committee Chair, at peter.golbitz@gmail.com.


Thank you and we look forward to hearing from you.

Announcement of Elections at General Assembly


At this year’s General Assembly in Portland, Oregon, delegates will be given the opportunity to vote on candidates to serve on the UUA Board of Trustees. Rebecca Mattis and Beverly Seese, petitioned to be placed on the ballot providing delegates a choice on who will serve as future UU leaders. Please visit their personal campaign websites, RebeccaMattisUU.Blogspot.com and 

BeverlySeeseUU.Blogspot.com to learn about their backgrounds and campaign platforms. They have arranged to hold three Meet the Candidates Townhall meetings on May 25 and June 2.  Details can be found on their campaign websites.

Delegate voting opens June 1.  We encourage you to become informed voters and live into our Fifth Principle, the right of conscience and the use of the democratic process within our congregations and in society at large.

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On Saturday, May 14, 2022, an 18-year-old white supremacist carried out a premeditated fatal attack on a Black community in Buffalo, killing ten and injuring many more. Today, we mourn the ten unique and precious lives of the people murdered in Buffalo – church elders, civil rights activists, grandmothers, parents of small children. We grieve with this community as they reel from this violence and collective trauma.

 

Tops supermarket is more than a grocery store – it is a space that the community created to meet essential needs. The shooter’s plan was specifically designed to target the beating heart of the Black community, taking aim at a nexus of community care, resources, and resiliency. This is the essence of white supremacist ideology – the elimination of not only BIPOC people as individuals, but entire communities and cultures.

 

Given the persistent white supremacist attacks in our nation’s history, it is dishonest and irresponsible to call these “isolated incidents.” We will not cause further harm by calling this a mental health issue. We must refuse the complacency of accepting that this is simply a gun reform issue. This is the expected consequence of a nation that has yet to confront an ideology that proclaims whiteness is superior and treats blackness as less valuable or a threat. Shootings like these are not an affront to America’s deepest values; they are the embodiment of them.

 

In all too familiar moments, we recall these words from the song “Tell It Like It Is” by Tracy Chapman:

 

Say you'll never close your eyes, or pretend that it's a rosy world.

Say you'll never try to paint what is rotten with a sugarcoat.

Say you'll talk about the horrors you've seen and the torment you know,

And tell it like it is.

 

This latest attack is the result of a society that is rooted in white supremacy. This violence begins with people aligning themselves with white supremacy, however, it shows up in our lives. It shows up with believing that white lives should be protected over Black lives–knowing that Black children playing on playgrounds or sleeping in their homes are killed by police without hesitation, while white assailants are taken safely into custody. It shows up with packaging genocidal movements in language like “Replacement Theory.” It shows up when the media calls Mike Brown an “18-year-old man” and the Buffalo shooter a ”white teenager.” Whether it is the lie of a stolen election or calling a deadly insurrection “legitimate political discourse,” we must remember that “those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.” White supremacy, in all its expressions, is violence. And until we collectively commit to eradicating that root structure, this violence will continue.

 

We must keep telling the truth, keep fighting, keep building a shared story and collective power because in our bones–we know another world is possible. As Black movement builder and Director of the Working Families Party Moe Mitchell said this morning, “If you don’t think change is possible, organizing is not your ministry.” We begin with truth-telling and moving together in that truth. Another world is possible if we build it together.

In faith and solidarity,

 

The Side With Love Organizing Strategy Team

 

Adrian Ballou, Rev. Michael Crumpler, Audra Friend, Rev. Ranwa Hammamy, JaZahn Hicks, Rev. Ashley Horan, Susan Leslie, Jeff Milchen, Rachel Myslivy, Nicole Pressley, & Rev. Cathy Rion Starr

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Community Sharing


The Alliance for Fair Food (AFF) is the vibrant, diverse ally network of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW), the internationally-acclaimed farmworker organization transforming human rights in the U.S. agricultural industry. The principal focus of the Alliance for Fair Food is the Campaign for Fair Food, a farmworker-led, community-powered movement that successfully holds major food retailers accountable to the highest human rights standards in their produce supply chains.


www.allianceforfairfood.org

Maasika Mahotsav - Period Festival photos

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UU Dialogues volunteers needed


UU Dialogues needs volunteers to help out with moderating.

We need two people every Sunday, one from home and the other person zooming from the library. Right now we have a handful of people who are working almost every other Sunday. We need two or three or more people to help carry the load! If you come to church every week please consider spending a half hour after service to join our online friends. If you are unable to attend service please consider zooming from home. We need all the help we can get! Thank you for considering helping out. If you can help please let either myself or Mary Studer know.

Warmly,

Carole Latino

Coffee Hour volunteers needed


Two volunteers are needed to help with our coffee hour on Sunday morning. Please contact Dorothy VanHowe in Hobart Hall on Sunday or call 239-560-7238.

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Monday Book Group


The group won’t meet until June 6 due to Memorial Day.  For more info, click here to contact Mary Studer.


Mindfulness Opportunities

 

We have two online sitting practices each week for you. We practice mindfulness and discuss a reading. If you don’t have the books, you're still welcome to sit with us.


The Monday sangha meets at 6:30-7:45 p.m. and is discussing Beyond Mindfulness by Stephan Bodian. Contact Mary Studer for details. 

 

The Wednesday sangha meets between 10:00-11:30 a.m. in coordination with Caloosahatchee Mindfulness. It’s discussing Say What You Mean: A Mindful Approach to Nonviolent Communication by Oren Jay Sofer. Contact Helen Leddy for more information.


Social Issues Book Group


Meeting every other Friday from 3-4:30pm. Contact Helen Leddy helen.leddy@gmail.com or Helen Dixon helendixon9@gmail.com for more information.


Poetry Circle


We read and discuss in detail a variety of poems, often related to our UU experience, usually centered around a weekly theme. Members share their own work for discussion as well, if they want to, but you do not need to be a writer to join. We offer weekly prompts, although there is no obligation to follow them. 


This is an ongoing Zoom group. New members can join at any time, and we really hope you will. Contact Judi Dettorre judidet84@gmail.com or Cat Pivetti joypivet@aol.com for more information. 


We meet every other Tuesday. We will meet from 1pm to 3pm. This a change from the original time.

The Bill Brewer Family Gardens

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UPDATE

   

The gardens have lost two of our younger volunteers, who were assisting with weed eating, mowing etc.  One bed holder tried the push mower and couldn’t start it. We need someone with knowledge of small engines to determine if the engine needs repair. Please contact Bonnie Jean at familygardens@uucfm.org if you can help.


We are now planting beds with summer vegetables, perennial herbs and cover crops. The picture shows a method known as Intercropping, planting a new crop between the existing plants that are nearing the end of their productivity.  This is Blue Kale, intercropped with cowpea. This method keeps the beds filled with plant life that feed the soil life, enhances nutrition and water retention and also insulates the soil from summer’s heat.

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Amazon Smile donates to UUCFM when you do your online shopping by following this special link

smile.amazon.com/ch/59-1160337

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Want to Become a Member?

If you are interested in becoming a new member of UUCFM, please email 

memberservices@uucfm.org.

Board of Trustees

Email: board@uucfm.org


President Mary Studer

President Elect Bill Petrarca

Secretary Lane Cook

Treasurer Pati Maier

VP Worship Lesley Peterson

VP Operations Genelle Grant

VP Programs Karen J. Brown

VP Membership Marge Gonzalez

VP Stewardship Nancy Hutchins





Staff

Lay Minister Albie Johnson - albiej@uucfm.org

Lay Minister Mary Cline Golbitz - mary@uucfm.org

Director of Music Suellen Kipp - music@uucfm.org

Office Manager Denise Greenwood - officemanager@uucfm.org

Building Supervisor  Mickey Kellam - buildingsupervisor@uucfm.org

Teacher  Liza Kellam - lhiz_sierra@yahoo.com

UUCFM

13411 Shire Lane

Fort Myers, FL 33912


Phone: (239) 561-2700 


Website: uucfm.org


Email: uuchurch@uucfm.org


Office hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday 9am-2pm

Thursday 11am-4pm

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