OUTRAGE
-- The Gethsemane Monastery is where the Trappist Mystic Thomas
Merton lived and wrote many books including The Seven Story Mountain
and Conjectures of a Guilty Bystander. These were early readings on
my spiritual path which changed my life. Merton built bridges between
Christians, Buddhists, Taoists and Hindus. Now someone wants to run
an explosive pipeline through the land the monastery has been on
since 1824.
The
Sisters and Brothers ain't having none of it.
---Mike
Ruppert
Defiant
nuns and monks refuse to give up Kentucky land for gas pipeline
2
August, 2013
Two
Kentucky Catholic religious orders that collectively own more than
3,000 acres of historic farmland are refusing to give up portions of
their lands for a proposed natural-gas pipeline that would channel
millions of gallons of pressurized, highly flammable natural-gas
liquids through the area. According to the Louisville
Courier-Journal, the nuns of the Sisters of Loretto and the monks of
the Abbey of Gethsemani have denied surveyors permission to survey
the land ahead of the pipeline project and say that they have no
interest in helping it along.
“We’ve
been on this property since 1824,” said Sister Maria Visse, service
coordinator for the Sisters of Loretto. “We feel entrusted with
this (land). It’s a gift. It’s not a commodity.”
The
energy company that hopes to build the pipeline — Williams Co. of
Tulsa, Oklahoma — has repeatedly sent representatives and made
requests for permission to survey the land, all of which have been
summarily denied. The proposed pipeline would run from gas-drilling
facilities in Pennsylvania to the coast of the Gulf of Mexico,
impacting 18 counties in Kentucky.
Visse
told the Courier that she turned down the Williams Co.’s proposal
to use the sisters’ and the monks’ land on the spot and without a
second thought.
“This
is just short-term money that has very dangerous potential long-term
consequences,” Visse said. She worries about the impact of water
pollution on the porous limestone bedrock upon which the community
resides.
Brother
Aaron Schulte of the Abbey of Gethsemani confirmed to the Courier
that the abbey had been approached by the pipeline company, but
declined to give an interview to the paper. The Trappist monks own
about 2,500 acres of property, including the grounds of the
monastery, a guest house and hundreds of acres of pristine woods.
Sister
Claire McGowan, a Dominican nun and director of the New Pioneers for
a Sustainable Future in Springfield, KY, said the project “would
risk much of what makes Central Kentucky dear to us: the beauty of
our landscape, the abundance of good water, the health of our air,
the peaceful quietness of our rural areas, and the general sense of
security from unexpected disasters.”
Williams
Co. spokesperson Tom Droege told the Courier that he couldn’t talk
about his dealings with specific landowners along the pipeline’s
proposed route. He said the company plans to hold a series of open
houses in communities that would be affected by the pipeline.
“With
each landowner we approach,” he said, “we pledge to be a
respectful guest on their land and ensure they are well informed
about what activities are taking place.”
Williams
Co. is currently struggling to bring one of its Gulf coast ethylene
plants back online after a deadly explosion on June 13. The Geismar
Olefins plant in Louisiana had been plagued with safety violations
prior to the propylene explosion that killed two workers and injured
77 others.
Six
months before the incident, inspectors had noted the propylene leak
that caused the explosion at Geismar Olefins, but plant managers
failed to take any action. The company said that it hopes to have the
damage repaired and the plant back online by April of 2014.
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