Film documents fight over Illinois forest
Shawnee National Forest, the only national forest in Illinois, consists of 260,000 acres of dense hardwood. It spans the width of the state from the Mississippi River to the Ohio River. It’s an ecological sanctuary and a source of natural resources.
The Shawnee became a flashpoint in the early 1990s when the US Forest Service approved a Missouri company to clear-cut timber across more than 140 acres. Environmental activists organized, holding a 79-day blockade and protest in the summer of 1990. It sparked a forest defense movement that is the subject of a recent documentary film called “Shawnee Showdown: Keep the Forest Standing.”
Where to watch
"Shawnee Showdown: Keep the Forest Standing" will screen April 1 at the Environmental Film Festival at Yale
Register here to watch the film virtually
GUESTS:
Cade Bursell
Filmmaker | Professor, Southern Illinois University Carbondale’s School of Media Arts
John Wallace
Environmental Educator and Activist
Sam Stearns
Environmental Educator and Activist
Prepared for web by Owen Henderson
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