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Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology

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Home > World Religions > Judaism > Statements

Statements

The Jewish Environmental and Energy Imperative: A Call to Action
Religions for Peace Australia
2018 

Rabbinic Statement
Jewish Veg
2017

Ma’amadot: A Call to Protect Creation
Hebrew College
2015

Statement of the Bilateral Commission Meeting of the Delegation of the Holy See’s Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews and the Chief Rabbinate of Israel’s Celegation for Relations with the Catholic Church
Vatican: Holy See Press Office
2010

Environment - Energy
Women’s League for Conservative Judaism
2008

The Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life (COEJL) Mission Statement
2007

Jewish Faith Statement
World Jewish Congress
2003

Environment – Biodiversity – Social Action
Women’s League for Conservative Judaism
1996

Environment
Women’s League for Conservative Judaism
1992

The Assisi Declarations: Messages on Humanity and Nature from Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam & Judaism
Alliance of Religions and Conservation
September 29, 1986

 

Header photo: “Produce of the Land” ©Galia Goodman

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News

At Yale, new FedEx-supported center to focus on climate change solutions

By Karen N. Peart 
Yale News March 3, 2021

Forum Newsletter (March 2021)

Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology. March 2021. Read our Forum newsletter here.  

Baltimore church converts neglected urban forest into ‘peace park’

By Timothy B. Wheeler 
Bay Journal 
March 2, 2021
More news...

Event Listings

  • Book Launch: Living Landscapes by Christopher Key Chapple
    March 12, 2021
  • Ecological Placemaking Amidst Crises: Formation, Resilience, and Leadership
    March 12, 2021
  • Indigenous Lifeways, Cosmologies & Ecology: Connecting to Past, Restor(y)ing Present & Future
    March 15, 2021
  • Listening to Other Voices: Molly Burhans
    March 18, 2021
  • Hindu Earth Ethics and the Interfaith Ecosystem of the United Nations
    March 18, 2021
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Yale University acknowledges that indigenous peoples and nations, including Mohegan, Mashantucket Pequot, Eastern Pequot, Schaghticoke, Golden Hill Paugussett, Niantic, and the Quinnipiac and other Algonquian-speaking peoples, have stewarded through generations the lands and waterways of what is now Connecticut.