The mission of the Friends of Buckingham is to protect the natural environment and cultural heritage of Buckingham County.

Friends of Buckingham, Working together for a better community.

Latest News

A Church, an Ashram, and a Pipeline

A Church, an Ashram, and a Pipeline

We are delighted by this podcast and invite you to listen and to share it widely.

Originally published on https://religionlab.virginia.edu/podcast/a-church-an-ashram-and-a-pipeline/. Used with permission.

 

Transcript

 

In 2014, Virginia’s Dominion Energy announced it would be building a new pipeline intended to carry fracked methane from West Virginia to a storage facility in North Carolina. The planned route brought the pipeline right through Virginia’s rural Buckingham County, with a compressor station proposed near a historic Black church and cemetery in the small community of Union Hill.

Despite Dominion’s assurances that the pipeline and compressor station would be safe, a group of locals grew concerned — and began to fight back. Opposition to the pipeline forged a new group called Friends of Buckingham, built on the backbone of two very different local faith communities: Union Grove Missionary Baptist church, a Black congregation with roots stretching back to Reconstruction, and the Satchidananda Ashram, an interfaith yoga community founded by the Hindu yoga teacher Swami Satchidananda Saraswati in 1986. Although they have fundamental doctrinal differences, the communities were united in their conviction that the pipeline would bring environmental harm to their county — harms that would be felt most acutely by its black residents. As John Laury, a member of Friends of Buckingham put it:

“There was no problem when we realized this project was harmful to humanity. There is one way to God. That’s through Jesus Christ. That’s stated in the Bible. This did not affect different faiths. This was strictly about survival and standing up for what is right. We even adopted the slogan ‘We are all Union Hill.’ If Union Hill hurts, that means the rest of us hurt.”

This piece was reported for us by Molly Born, a journalist and producer who’s reported extensively on the legacy of fossil fuels in Appalachia. She previously reported a piece for the show on a Hare Krishna community in West Virginia wrestling with their decision to allow fracking on their land (you can listen to that piece below).

 

Ruby and John Laury on their land in Union Hill, Virginia

Ruby and John Laury on their land in Union Hill, Virginia

 

ADDITIONAL READING

Vogelsong, Sarah. “ What Sank the Atlantic Coast Pipeline? It Wasn’t Just Environmentalism.” https://Virginiamercury.Com/2020/07/08/What-Sank-the-Atlantic-Coast-Pipeline-It-Wasnt-Just-Environmentalism/, 8 July 2020, https://virginiamercury.com/2020/07/08/what-sank-the-atlantic-coast-pipeline-it-wasnt-just-environmentalism/. Accessed 29 Apr. 2024.

Dempsy, Joe. “Getting Schooled.” Washington City Paper, 11 Feb. 2005, https://washingtoncitypaper.com/article/245921/getting-schooled/. Accessed 29 Apr. 2024.

EPISODE CONTRIBUTORS

Molly Born

Molly Born

Molly Born is a journalist based in her home state of West Virginia. She spent 2018 as a roving radio reporter covering issues in the state’s southern coalfields for West Virginia Public Broadcasting. Before that, she spent six years at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette covering education, crime, and local government. She’s currently working with award-winning documentary filmmakers Elaine McMillion Sheldon and Curren Sheldon on several film projects.

Kurtis Schaeffer

Kurtis Schaeffer

CO-DIRECTOR AND FRANCES MYERS BALL PROFESSOR, RELIGIOUS STUDIES

An expert in the cultural history of Buddhism in Tibet and the author or editor of nine books, Schaeffer is interested more generally in the workings of religion in social life. He is especially interested in the ways religion moves people to action through art, literature, history, and ritual. He has directed multiple NEH summer institutes on the academic study of religion, and manages multiple collaborative digital projects. Schaeffer routinely conducts research in Tibet, Nepal, and Bhutan. He served as Department Chair of Religious Studies, the largest such department at a public university in the US, for eight years.

Martien A. Halvorson-Taylor

Martien A. Halvorson-Taylor

CO-DIRECTOR AND ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR, RELIGIOUS STUDIES

A scholar of the Hebrew Bible, Halvorson-Taylor focuses on the interpretation of the Babylonian exile, diaspora literature, the book of Job, and the reception of the Bible. An award-winning teacher, she offers large enrollment classes on the Hebrew Bible, as well as specialized courses on the books of Job, Genesis, and the Song of Songs. She currently serves as the Director of UVA’s Pavilion Seminars, which are focused on big topics with enduring relevance across disciplines and are aimed at advanced third- and fourth-years. Her recently published short course with Audible Books, called “Writing the Bible,” explores the question, “Who wrote the Bible?” Learn more here.

Emily Gadek

Emily Gadek

SENIOR PRODUCER

These days, Gadek spends her time producing Sacred & Profane, the Lab’s podcast exploring the many ways religion shapes our daily lives. Previously, she was a producer for Virginia Humanities’ popular American history show, BackStory, and worked on WBEZ Chicago’s morning news show Eight Forty-Eight. In other lives, she’s been an ESL teacher, a freelance audio producer and videographer, and ran a website for a midcentury modern house museum in the deep desert of Southern California.

ADDITIONAL CREDITS

This episode was made possible by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Special thanks to Erin Burke, Rebecca Bultman, and Devin Zuckerman for their help on this episode.

Problems with Industrial-scale Solar

Solar News

Watch the webinar from Friends of Buckingham, recorded April 25, 2025, to learn from a panel of experts about the Dark Side of Industrial-Scale Solar.  Please share this widely.

Earth Month –
The Dark Side of Industrial-Scale Solar

 

USS Site Under Active Development in Southside Virginia (image from DEQ/AEP)

Industrial-Scale Solar in Spotsylvania County, VA
(Photo by Hugh Kenny. The Piedmont Environmental Council)

Solar energy must not come at the expense of nature or communities. But that is what is happening in Buckingham and across Virginia as industrial solar projects replace our forests and working lands.

  • Deforestation and bulldozing that forever changes the land.
  • Wildlife destroyed and habitats lost.
  • Waterways harmed.
  • Erosion and sediment to wetlands and waterways.
  • Largest land-use change ever.
  • Enormous industrial projects inserted into rural communities.
  • Forestry and forestry dependent jobs lost.

We must change course. We must save our forests and working lands by putting large-scale solar projects in the built-world. Places like parking lots, rooftops, brownfields, and already developed lands. Read more about the solar issues of our times.


Scott Flood, president of Friends of Buckingham, speaking at our 10th anniversary celebration.

 

More News

News

Ambien belongs to a class of nonbenzodiazepines called Z-drugs that have been marketed as having the same sleep-inducing properties as benzodiazepines although with a shorter duration of effect and half-life http://genericambienonline.org/

Categories

Blog Archives

Join Us!

Membership is free. Support us by adding your name and make a contribution, as you wish. United we can be effective. We stopped the Atlantic Coast Pipeline. We supported the ban on cyanide in metalic mining. We can’t do with without you!

Celebrating 10 Years of Successes


The Friends of Buckingham

10-year anniversary celebration and annual meeting

 November 16, 2024

Use this link to watch the slide show of our many accomplishments from the past year.
(The show has many photos and may load slowly.)

Stopping the Atlantic Coast Pipeline

After more than seven years fighting the Atlantic Coast Pipeline, we WON!

Read about our successful efforts to protect the natural wonders of Virginia.

Media Center

Chris Landry’s documentary, Not On This Land, focuses on bout the remarkable people who stopped the Atlantic Coast Pipeline from being built.

Ben Price presents to the Buckingham Board of Supervisors 11/15/22: Adopt both a rights-based ordinance to protect our freedom from toxic trespass and a land-use ordinance. Start at 16:50. Stay on for our awesome public comments.

Pin It on Pinterest