Unitarian Universalist featuring Last Call at the Oasis

VERO BEACH — January’s Social Justice Film is Last Call at the Oasis at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship on Sunday, Jan. 12, at 7 p.m.

This documentary presents a powerful argument for why the global water crisis will be the central issue facing our world this century. Water is the Earth’s most valuable resource. Our cities are powered by it, agriculture and other industries depend on it, and all living things need it to survive.

But instead of treating our water sources with care, we’ve allowed them to become polluted with toxic chemicals and agricultural and industrial waste. It is very possible that in the near future, there won’t be enough water to sustain life on the planet.

“There is nothing dry about Last Call at the Oasis, an engaging, informative, and fast-flowing documentary exploring the global water crisis. While aimed at U.S. audiences, the film also includes stories from Australia, Asia, South America and, most interestingly, the Middle East, where a water shortage in one region is making allies of political foes,” explained Jennie Punter of the Toronto Globe and Mail.

The public is invited to attend this 2011 documentary from Participant Media, the company responsible for An Inconvenient Truth, Food, Inc. and Waiting For “Superman.”

Pelican Island Audubon Society activists Richard and Juanita Baker will facilitate the discussion after the film which was featured at the 2012 Florida Audubon Society Conference.

The Fellowship’s Fair Trade Corner will be open half an hour prior to the film.

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