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Jane Seymour films drought project on Navajo Nation   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #47129 of 49492 |
http://www.daily-times.com/news/ci_9089321

Actress Jane Seymour films drought project on Navajo Nation

By Alysa Landry The Daily Times
Article Launched: 04/29/2008 12:00:00 AM MDT

SHIPROCK — The Navajo Nation is a long way from the set of "Dancing with
the Stars."

That didn't stop actress Jane Seymour, who danced on the reality show's
fifth season last year, from donning her jeans and boots Monday and
trekking across the desert near the Shiprock pinnacle.

Seymour is the narrator for a documentary on the water crisis in the
Southwest set to air on public television this fall.

"The water problem in the American Southwest is real, and it needs to be
told," Seymour said on camera, with the famous rock in the background. "In
today's modern world, water has been taken for granted, and we've lost
respect for it."

The documentary, "The American Southwest: Are We Running Dry?" explores the
drought conditions in the Southwest and the subsequent economic toll.

Water taps on the Navajo Nation have run dry for decades, and residents of
the country's largest American Indian reservation are no strangers to the
water shortage.

As many as 40 percent of Nation residents live without running water, said
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Lena Fowler, vice chair of the Navajo Nation Water Rights Commission.

"Our water need is basic," she said. "We need it for drinking and bathing,
and sometimes we have to travel 30 miles to get it."

Navajo people living in remote areas on the reservation pay more for water
than anyone else, Fowler said. Residents in remote areas pay for the
gasoline needed to transport water and chlorine drops or other methods of
treating the water before it is safe to drink.

Water shortages and contaminated water also lead to an increase in disease,
Fowler said, but a lack of running water and other infrastructure on the
reservation means schools and medical clinics aren't built where they are
needed.

"It's not just the Third World that has water needs," she said. "Here on
the Navajo Nation, we are not meeting our basic needs."

Seymour called the water shortage a severe crisis that affects much of the
Southwest and stretches across the globe, causing much of the world's
warfare.

"It's inconceivable to me that we can live in this huge area called the
United States of America but amongst us are people who don't have water to
drink," she said. "We need to find a responsible way to share the water."

Seymour is calling on the American public to help solve the water crisis.
She appears in the documentary to help start conversations among citizens,
policy makers and water experts.

Producer Jim Thebaut filmed in locations across the Southwest, including
the Navajo and Hopi reservations. The project also took him to Capitol Hill
for interviews with members of Congress.

The project is the second for Thebaut and Seymour, who teamed up in 2005 to
film "Running Dry," a documentary about the global water crisis.

"It's all part of an overall project," Thebaut said. "It's about the effect
of global climate change, population growth and lack of water throughout
the world."

Thebaut's local shots included footage of Seymour sitting with a group of
students at Mesa Elementary School. The school selected 22 students scoring
the highest in reading to participate in the film.

"I wanted children in this," Thebaut said. "Really, the whole spirit of
this is kids. We need to protect and plan for our future."

The students, who studied the water crisis prior to Seymour's visit,
crowded around the actress on the playground.

"The Jane Seymour the kids relate to is her role in Wedding Crashers,'"
Mesa principal Pandora Mike said. "It was exciting that she was able to
talk about a very serious matter in an educational setting."



Tue Apr 29, 2008 8:26 pm

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http://www.daily-times.com/news/ci_9089321 Actress Jane Seymour films drought project on Navajo Nation By Alysa Landry The Daily Times Article Launched:...
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