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Newly Released Tim DeChristopher Finds a Movement Transformed by His Courage
Key Excerpts from Article on Website of Yes! Magazine


Yes! Magazine, April 22, 2013
Posted: May 21st, 2013
http://www.yesmagazine.org/planet/tim-dechristopher-peaceful...

Tim DeChristopher, who was released from federal custody yesterday, is best known as the man who disrupted an auction of pristine public lands. But theres more to his story than his role as Bidder 70. Yesterday, after 21 months in federal custody, climate activist Tim DeChristopher approached the pulpit at his church in Salt Lake City, Utah, as a free man. The First Unitarian congregation rose in uproarious applause, tears streaming down more than a few faces. Its good to be home, DeChristopher told the crowd. During his sermon, he said that he had never expected to change the oil and gas industry alone. But I thought that I could change people like you, and I knew people like you have a lot of power. What often gets overlooked in this folk hero tale of a man who went to jail for his principles is that DeChristopher didn't want to be the only hero. And so he became one of the most consistent and strongest voices for direct action and civil disobedience in the movement, urging environmental groups to use personal sacrifice as means of becoming more effective. By showing that people who dont hold positions of authority can successfully confront injustice, his example helped to build the climate-justice group Peaceful Uprising, changed the tactics of the nations most established environmental organizations, and helped shape the mass climate movement, which turned out nearly 50,000 people on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. in February.

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