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The Mysterious Nabatean Gods of the Ancient Middle East

petra nabateans

They built fortresses and forts like Petra and collected rare rainfall. Who were the Nabateans?

Nabateans were Arabian nomads from the Negev Desert who amassed their wealth first as traders on the Incense Routes which wound from Qataban (modern-day Yemen) through neighboring Saba (a powerful trade hub) and on toward Gaza on the Mediterranean Sea.

The Nabataean Kingdom stretched from the north-western part of  the Arabian Peninsula on the east to the Sinai Peninsula on the west and as far north as Damascus, which was incorporated into their kingdom between 85 and 71 BCE.

The three wise men?

The main source of economic prosperity was the incense trade and the Nabataeans not only controlled trade routes in the region but had their merchant posts as far as Rome.

The economic prosperity was followed by the formation of the pantheon of Nabataean gods, similar to other Semitic people in the area or Greco-Roman deities. However, gods of the Greco-Roman tradition were  anthropomorphic and we all learned about their mishaps and human-like behavior and follies. 

Unlike Greco-Roman perception of Titans and Olympians, the ancient Nabataeans represented their deities in the form of stealea, which were blocks or rocks set upon the end or visual representations curved into a stone. The Nabataeans represented their deities in the form of a tomb fasade, a painted pottery, coins, lamps and jewelry. You can see these majestic carvings up close and personal in Jordan, near the Red Sea. 

petra nabateans Red Sea travel

A desert Zeus?

Some gods, like Dushara, became more significant with the political and economic development of the state, said Professor Robert Wenning, who received his PhD in Classical Archaeology from University of Munster. Dr. Wenning for many years studied the Nabataean sites and religious practices.

He tells Green Prophet: “Being a regional god of the rocky area of Petra and the close by Shara Mountains, Dushara became the city god in the middle of the 3rd century BC when Petra was established as a station on the old incense road from south Arabia to the Mediterranean Sea,” Wenning noted.

Dushara means the “Lord of Mountain” and he was considered a supreme god not only in Petra but other parts of the realm.

Other major gods were: Al Qaum, Al Kutbay, Al Uzza, Manawat, Allat and Obodat.

Al Qaum was a god of war, equivalent to Greek Ares, and he protected caravans and clans.

Al Kutbay was “more intellectual” and he was the patron of learning, trade and writing, and he was the local equivalent of the Greek god Hermes.

Al Uzza was a goddess associated with power and later during the process of Hellenization of the southern Levant she was the Nabataean equivalent of Aphrodite.

Manawat was a goddess of destiny, and consequently during Hellenization she was associated with Nemesis.

Allat was a goddess of fertility comparable to Athena. 

Obodat, who is most probably the deified King Obodas I (96 BC-85 BC), was a god associated with the dynastic cult.

nabatean sculpture
Obodas Theos, a Nabataean god in Petra; Photo courtesy of Robert Wenning

Representation of deities in an abstract form was also practiced among Semitic nomads who dwelled in deserts of the Arabian Peninsula before they converted to Islam in 7th century AD.

Religious syncretism

According to Wenning, in ancient times a specific deity would become the supreme god, like Assur of the Assyrians, Marduk of the Babylonians and Milcom of the Ammonites.

Usually in the ancient religions there is a hierarchic structure in the relations between the deities, Wenning told us. However, “the Nabataean religion preserves only few elements of such structures and does not create a real pantheon,” the scholar highlighted.

After the Roman Emperor Trajan’s incorporation of the Nabataean Kingdom into Provincia Arabia in 106 AD, Dushara remains an important god. His anthropomorphic images became minted in various coins of that period.

The Nabataean belief system was characterized by one supreme god or goddess who meets all requirements of their worshippers, Wenning underlined, adding that a few other deities can be associated to Dushara like Al Uzza, his mother.

“Other deities cover some special aspects or the needs of particular groups. The Nabataean society was complex and Nabataean religion always reflects different local situations,” the scholar explained.

For centuries after the conquests of the Alexander the Great the Greek language was the lingua franca of the Middle East and it remained after the Roman occupation of the area. Even Jupiter was referred as Zeus in the Roman East, and another supreme Nabataean god Odoba (Avdat) was worshipped as Zeus Oboda, Wenning highlighted.

On the other hand, many scholars agree that Qasr Al Bint, a temple at Petra, was a sanctuary of Dushara.

Nabatean gods and goddesses had a range of talents. Some are carved here on the face of a monument in Petra.

“The Egyptian goddess Isis was the most famous female deity in Petra, even more prominent than Al Uzza following the evidence,” Wenning noted, emphasizing the religious syncretism typical for the paganism. One of such syncretists was the Roman Emperor Elagabulus ( 218 AD -222 AD) from the Severan dynasty, whose brief reign was marked by promulgation of the Middle Eastern religion as he took a baetyl of Dushara with him to Rome. However, his reign didn’t end up nicely when he was assassinated by Praetorian guards.

Isis in Egypt, a sun goddess
Isis and the sun.

Inter-religious harmony

The ancient Nabataeans were religiously tolerant and their society integrated other gods and their cults into their own belief system. The Egyptian goddess Isis was very much venerated in the Nabataean Kingdom and scholars speculate that cultic material found at the Temple of the Winged Lions in Petra point to that direction. See below.

Remains of the Temple of the Winged Lions built in 1st century AD during the peak of the Nabataean Kingdom; Photo courtesy of Saeb Rawashdeh

The temple was probably dedicated to Al Uzza and under the Greeco-Roman influence the Nabataeans began to depict their deities in human forms. A ring-seal displaying a nude goddess riding a dolphin, feline statuettes, a feline head made of bronze and”Eye-Idol” blocks highlight religious syncretism that characterized the polytheistic coexistence.

What happened to Nabatean tolerance? 

Unfortunately, modern societies in the Middle East are often religiously intolerant and not only that three monotheistic religions often have antagonistic attitudes towards each other, but within each of them different schools or denominations believe that they are the only chosen one, while the rest are condemned for the whole of eternity.

Professor at Queen’s University Barbara Reeves underlined in her research the harmonious interreligious ties between Roman military stationed at Humayma (some 280 km south of Amman) and the local Nabataean population.

The garrison had around 500 soldiers and controlled the water springs and major roads. The “new harmony” is depicted most clearly in a community shrine where a betyl (standing stone) representing the Nabataean town god stood side-by-side with an altar honouring the Roman garrison’s god, Reeves pointed out.

Furthermore, a rock carving from a cult site in the hills also shows a Roman standard-bearer making an offering in front of both his garrison’s god and a larger-than-life-size gazelle that represents the local god Reeves stressed.

“Their side-by-side placement at the focal point of the community shrine advertises harmony between the town’s Nabataean civilians and Roman soldiers,” Reeves underscored.

Palm oil biofuels push up global food prices

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Palm tree seeds Adjamé Market, Abidjan, Ivory Coast

Remember ten and 15 years ago when everyone was talking about investing in biofuels? Scientists like Helmut were against the efficiency claims… While we love the idea of renewable energy crops for palm oil and sugarcane used in ethanol and biofuels have pushed out food producers, causing an alarming shift to rising costs for food. While we might not feel it in the price of a falafel or hummus, biofuels threaten those people already food insecure.

According to the United Nation’s FAO, world food prices rose for the third consecutive month in December, 2019 as a strong rally in vegetable oil prices drove the FAO Food Price Index to its highest level in five years.

The FAO Food Price Index averaged 181.7 points during the month, a 2.5 percent increase from November and the highest level since December 2014.

For 2019 as a whole, the index – which tracks monthly changes in the international prices of commonly-traded food commodities – averaged 171.5 points, some 1.8 percent higher than in 2018 but still 25 percent below its peak in 2011.

Central Asians not starving but obese and food insecure

The FAO Vegetable Oil Price Index rose 9.4 percent from November, increasing for the sixth consecutive month. The latest upturn was once again driven by palm oil prices, buoyed by both solid demand, especially from the biodiesel sector, and concerns about tightening supplies.

Despite the December increase – which also concerned soy, sunflower and rapeseed oils – the vegetable oil sub-index had over the course of 2019 reached its lowest annual average since 2007.

The FAO Sugar Price Index rose 4.8 percent from November. The rally was in part prompted by rising crude oil prices, which encouraged Brazil’s sugar mills to use more sugarcane supplies to produce ethanol, leading to reduced sugar availability in the global market.

The FAO Dairy Price Index increased by 3.3 percent during the month, led by cheese prices, which rose by almost 8 percent amid tighter export availabilities from the European Union and Oceania.

Israelis for instance are certainly feeling the tightening on dairy products

The FAO Cereal Price Index rose 1.4 percent, driven mainly by wheat prices amid accelerating import demand from China and logistical problems in France due to continued protests in the country. However, maize and rice price quotations remained broadly stable.

The FAO Meat Price Index averaged 191.6 points in December, almost unchanged from its revised November value. The sub-index ended the year 18 percent higher than in December 2018, driven by pig meat quotations both by solid import demand from Asia and pre-festivity internal demand in the European Union and Brazil.

So there are some numbers. If you are working in these industries, good to know. If you are working in biofuels, food for thought. And maybe Hartmut Michel is right. Solar is the only way

How to build a successful NGO (it starts with your heart)

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indonesia canoe fishing
Indonesia is a nature lover’s delight, but locals still poison fish to catch them, and apply other destructive tools such as fish bombing to catch their daily livelihood. One NGO, the first on the island, is working to educate the locals and save the sea. This Green Prophet writer visited and volunteered with Manengkel Solidaritas to find out what others can learn from the process. The take home message is working with heart.
 

In the remote eastern part of the Indonesian archipelago lies the island of Sulawesi. Tucked away in the northern corner of the island is the city of Manado, where Manengkel Solidaritas is based. As the only environmental NGO in North Sulawesi, it’s doing groundbreaking work aimed at conservation of the coastal and marine environment.

The NGO runs multiple projects with themes such as coral transplantation, mangrove rehabilitation, sea turtle protection, waste management, environmental education, and development of eco-tourism. I participated in some of the projects and was impressed with the high impact, the dedication, and the professionalism I witnessed—which made me want to find out more about the organization.

I had an interview with Sella Runtulalo, the leader of the NGO, to find out what are the keys to its success—although Sella humbly states she doesn’t want to call the NGO successful just yet: “The journey is still long and there are still many villages that need help”.

diving Indonesia dive schools coral reef

Manengkel Solidaritas was officially founded in 2015. Sella explains: “North Sulawesi is part of the Coral Triangle and has a very high biodiversity, but there were no local NGO’s doing marine conservation programs at the time. There were only national NGO’s doing the work, without any knowledge transfer to local NGO’s. So in 2015, we decided it was time to create a local NGO, specifically for this region.”

Educating the locals from the “sea” up

One of the main environmental issues that Manengkel Solidaritas has to tackle is a lack of knowledge and education about sustainable practices among local people.

According to Sella, “local people living in the coastal areas have little understanding of how to use their marine resources sustainably.

“They still use destructive fishing tools like fish bombs and poison. There aren’t a lot of programs for environmental education for children. If we want to change the nation, if we want to make a change for the future, we have to start with the children”.

manado indonesia, man in front of mountain

One village at a time

All the NGO’s projects are centered around helping local communities develop, working closely together with the village people. Sella says: “We are not political and we are non-profit: we are working to help local communities. We always aim to provide solutions to the local village’s challenges. We come, we help, we advocate, we work together, and when the local capacity is big enough to run the program independently, it’s time for us to move on to another village.”

Manengkel Solidaritas puts a lot of effort into involving local people in their projects. Sella describes the typical approach as follows: “Initially we do socialization, followed by a workshop on the village level, and then we try to make the people understand why the program that we bring to their village is important.

“We start with the village key persons, and after they understand we hold a village meeting for the wider community, to get their support.”

losari makassar indonesia

Although this strategy is usually effective, creating involvement can be a challenge. Sella recalls a project which Manengkel Solidaritas took over from another organization, only to find out that it has previously been very unsuccessful. “This local community was very discouraged and distrusted NGO’s. It was very difficult to get their trust back. Initially, we had to work alone, but after one year, we got their trust.

“When they saw we were working 100 percent for them, they started to get involved, little by little”. This particular project is now so successful, it will become a government icon. 

Here we have the first key to Manengkel Solidaritas’ success: the commitment to working together with local communities. At the very heart of the organization is a grassroots approach to sustainable development, which empowers local communities to make meaningful changes. The impact of the NGO’s projects demonstrates the profound power of working locally.

Cooperate locally, but get government support

While cooperation with local communities is the basis for Manengkel Solidaritas’ success, cooperation with third parties—including the government, donors, and private businesses—is what enables and sustains its success. As Sella puts it: “We can’t work without support from the government. We can’t work without trust from donors.”

According to Sella, Manengkel Solidaritas’ projects generally receive a lot of support from the government. The government plays an important role in establishing supportive policy, networking, and getting support from third parties. The NGO also works together closely with the government during the execution of projects: it always brings government representatives to local village meetings and integrates its programs into government programs.

Sulawesi. Tucked away in the northern corner of the island is the city of Manado

Sella explains: “The exit strategy for each of our programs is to integrate the program into a government program. Every government, on the village and provincial level, has development programs. We integrate our eco-tourism projects into village business unit programs and our programs for marine protection into programs for marine protected areas on the provincial level.”

This also safeguards the continuation of the programs after Manengkel Solidaritas pulls out.

For funding, Manengkel Solidaritas still depends on support from donors. The NGO managed to establish good relationships with international donors in the past. To get their trust, Sella states it’s essential to work with high dedication and deliver excellent results. “Donors have told us that when they work with us they are satisfied because we deliver results beyond the expectations. If they ask for seven, we give them ten.”

Nonetheless, over the past years, it has become increasingly difficult to get funded by international donors. “They consider Indonesia to be a country already moving forward and have moved their focus to other countries. So the cake is now smaller and every national and local NGO wants a small slice of that cake. This means we can’t put our expectations on international donors any longer and we have been forced to look for other sources of funding”.

Private sector support

Manengkel Solidaritas is now putting its efforts into establishing cooperation with Indonesian companies in the private sector. Currently, three companies have committed to working with Manengkel Solidaritas for the next five to ten years. “Of course we still hope more companies will come and support our work”, Sella expresses. According to her, the most important factor in meeting Indonesia’s future environmental goals is a collaboration between the government, the private sector, and NGOs.

Work with 100% heart

This covers our second key: besides cooperation with local communities, cooperation with local government, donors, and private companies is essential to the NGO’s success. Yet there is a third key—and it’s a factor that keeps popping up throughout our interview. This is what makes up the DNA of Manengkel Solidaritas as an organization and runs like a thread through everything it does.

It’s the NGO’s unofficial motto: ‘we work with heart’.

manengkel-solidaritas sea turtle rescue
Sea turtle rescue

As a manager, Sella highly values strong and solid teamwork and she aims to establish an organizational culture that emphasizes this. “We work as a family here. That’s our strength, our core. If one of us fails, all of us fail. If one of us has a great achievement, it’s an achievement for all of us. We celebrate together, every season, the good and the bad.”

Working from the heart for Sella doesn’t mean compromising on expectations or results: “In the first place, we work with the head.” Sella and her team have high expectations and always strive for the best results. “We have a lot of work to be done and we have a time schedule: we have to achieve on time. We work based on targets. If we have achieved a target we can go home early. If not, we work until late night.”

But Manengkel Solidaritas combines this high level of professionalism with a lot of love for the job. Sella explains: “I really want every one of us to work happily and sincerely because we love our job and not because something is pushing us. This is our home, this is our work, this is our business, and we’re doing it from the heart”.

She continues: “Working in an NGO is different from working in a bank or the government sector, where you come in at eight o’clock, sign your attendance sheet, and then go home at five o’clock—like it’s a machine. We work with people and when we see that a village is successful and can continue independently, the satisfaction is so big. We can see the smile of the people”.

When I ask her what would be her best advice for starting environmental NGO’s, she doesn’t hesitate: “The first thing is to work from the heart. Don’t think about profit, don’t think about benefits, just work with your heart and then the other things will follow. Hopefully!” she adds, laughing.

Green Prophet writer and traveller Krista and some new friends from Indonesia

In the name of love

Manengkel Solidaritas has become successful in just a few years, partly because it emphasizes meaningful cooperation with all parties involved: from local villages to the government and private companies. But the love for the work and dedication to the cause truly make Manengkel Solidaritas stand out. The social media posts of the organization are a reflection of this. They are concluded with the slogan ‘atas nama cinta’. It means: ‘in the name of love’.

Krista Nieuwstraten in indonesia

Next Mediterranean cruise, think of Croatia

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cruise croatia luxury

If you are part of the international jetset you probably already own your own yacht and can take it for a spin around the world. For those of us who live more modestly and in accordance with buy less, experience more, you probably never dream about owning something like a yacht which requires thousands of dollars in upkeep. While every one of us might have had a sail around the world with a lover, kids or best mate, the reality is that sailing is rather hard work and it gets lonely a lot of the time. 

Once when we travelled to Turkey we hired a small sailboat which over 6 days took us all along the Mediterranean where we visited very few people and very pristine beaches and islands. We got our cruise for a song and a dance because it was the last run of the season and the captain was taking his boat home. 

Last summer we spent it on an island in Italy, a big island –– Sicily –– and because lovely out of the way beaches could be reached by car we had no need to hire a cruise boat for more than one day. But after that one day we longed for more. So it got me thinking, where else can we explore in Europe without breaking the bank but at the same time enjoy fabulous nature without having to swim in swarms of plastic?

Croatia has come up time and time again. A number of my friends have spent affordable summer vacations there –– at sea and hiking in the mountains. And if you look on a map, Croatia shares the same beautiful Mediterranean waters as Italy, Spain, France and Portugal. Yachts and luxury cruises are becoming more commonplace and while they are not cheap, averaging about $3,000 to $10,000 a week per person, it’s much less than what you’d pay if you were an Onassis. 

Maybe it’s affordable as a family honeymoon for mixed marriages to bring the kids and grandparents together? Maybe it’s a luxury retreat for the VPs at your business, as a thank you bonus. Maybe it’s a final wish for someone you love who has an illness. Of course the best way to be with those you love is not necessarily doing things on a bucket list, sometimes changing the venue radically can improve the overall experience. I noticed this when I would take my parents on holiday with us in the winter. 

We’d go away for an extended amount of time and the way they got to bond with me and the kids away from the normal routine, away from city life, away from bills and shopping and the routine of every day –– it meant the world to us. And we made memories that will stick with us forever. So there are plenty of ways to spend your inheritance. Enjoying it with people you love is the best way. 

These boats (look at the pictures) are large and expansive. Ask for sailing options only as a means to reduce your carbon footprint and blow where the wind takes you. Usually these kinds of adventures also rely on fresh local, fresh caught food to feel your body and soul. Another reason why on water cruises are a good eco option. Just make sure to ask about the bilge waste, anchoring and coral reefs. 

A whole industry around boats and yachting is about to open around Saudi Arabia and we worry deeply about the lack of awareness there for marine life and environmental stewardship. 

Maybe it’s on your bucket list to feel like a millionaire for a week? A cruise might be the way.

Bhutan – a popular destination for 2020

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bhutan temple in the mountains
At setting a high fee to enter (about $250 a day), Bhutan is able to protect its culture and wildlife. Also a trip to Bhutan might get you kick-started on a spiritual quest – the journey Green Prophets love best.

Bhutan is a small but beautiful country in Asia. It is called the last Shangri-La, and according to Lonely Planet, it is considered the last great Himalayan kingdom. If you have the chance to travel there, you will see why. However, before you do so, there are a few things you should know.

As the title suggests, Bhutan is a trendy vacation destination for 2020. There are several lists online that suggest that, and the reason why has to do with the environment. People all around the world decided to visit countries that strive for environmental perfection. If you think about it, that is excellent news. We should help all small nations that want to be carbon neutral. But why is Bhutan so unique? Because the country is not carbon neutral. It is more than that. Apparently, it absorbs more carbon than it releases.

According to Bhutanese laws, the government has to ensure that more than 60% of the country’s surface is covered by forests. The law is supposed to protect future generations by providing the same clean air as now. Of course, Bhutan is now 70% covered by forests, and we do not see that amount decreasing anytime soon. As a tourist, you will have the opportunity to test the air and see what it is like to take a hike in such a pure environment.

Tourism in Bhutan is limited

Another reason why Bhutan manages to maintain its serene environment is that tourism is not as free as in any other country. In fact, there are rules in place that do not allow too many tourists to enter the country. Officially, there is no maximum number of tourists that can visit Bhutan in a year, but the Bhutanese government came up with a ‘High Value, Low Impact’ policy that is supposed to attract only discerning tourists. Basically, they introduced significant fees for the preservation of the country. During the high season, it costs $250 per day to stay in Bhutan, while during the low season, it costs $200. As a result, Bhutan has 250 thousand tourists per year at most. It is their way of making sure that there is never a crowd anywhere in the country.

To put it simply, the Bhutanese government took a few measures that made a vacation in Bhutan quite expensive. But the initiative is brilliant if you think about it. All the money is invested in this unique society for the bettering of their environment and communities. Yes, they have fewer tourists each year, but the ones that reach Bhutan pay a lot of money, and it is the same as having a lot of tourists that pay less. However, you get to experience Bhutan as a local. There is never a crowded tourist attraction, and that is the beauty of it.

You will need a tour operator

A trip to Bhutan does not mean you can hop on the plane, land, and then go wherever you want on your own. It is government policy that you must use an authorized Bhutanese tour operator or an international partner to book your trip to Bhutan.

You will most likely need a visa

Only the citizens of India, Bangladesh, and the Maldives can get a visa on arrival once they reach Bhutan. If you are not among them, you have to apply for a visa in advance. The tour operator you are using for your trip can make the arrangements regarding the visa as well. Just make sure that you have a valid passport. The tour operator will ask for other documents as well.

Bhutan is indeed committed to the environment, and I guess that that is what makes people want to go there. There is an entire debate on whether Bhutan offers a feasible environmental model for all the countries to follow. While that may be possible for some, we have to be honest about it and admit that not all countries can offer what Bhutan does. Even so, it stands as the perfect example of what a government should do for the environment. High Value, Low Impact.

The Golden Globes Go Vegan!

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Joaquin Phoenix Golden Globes
Natalie Portman was the first A level Hollywood celebrity to make us know that the rich and famous cared about being vegan. She also bought green diamonds. The Israeli-American actress inspired others. Now JOaquin Phoenix has pushed the Golden Globes to serve all vegan meals. Meat is no longer a must.

For the first time in its 77-year history, guests at the prestigious entertainment awards The Golden Globes awards show are being served up a completely plant-based meal. According to a statement from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA), the menu change – which occurred a mere two weeks before tonight’s party, is an effort to raise awareness about climate change.

The decision aligns with the vegan-burger craze sweeping the United States, and heightened public awareness of the negative environmental impacts of the beef industry.  Agriculture and ranching industries are the biggest greenhouse gas emitters after fossil fuel energy production. Farming accounts for more global emissions than transportation.

Natalie Portman’s Vegan Feet

“If there’s a way we can save the planet, maybe we can get the Golden Globes to send a signal and draw attention to the issue about climate change,” HFPA president Lorenzo Soria told The Associated Press, adding, “The food we eat, the way we grow the food we eat, the way we dispose of the food is one of the large contributors to the climate crisis.”

The Golden Globe Awards are accolades bestowed by the 93 members of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association beginning in January 1944, recognizing excellence in film, both American and International, and the American television.

Hollywood heavyweights and climate change activists Leonardo DiCaprio and Mark Ruffalo took to Twitter to cheer what some consider a bold food choice. “Our industry leads by example. Vegetarian food is delicious and healthy and reduces greenhouse gasses about as much as driving electric cars. The HFPA should be commended for this and all the other awards shows should follow suit,” tweeted Ruffalo.

Beverly Hilton
This is what was on the menu, thanks to the Beverly Hilton. Wild foraged mushroom risotto.

The awards show has proven itself adaptable to Hollywood diet trends: the menu long featured fish as an alternative entrée to beef, and went gluten-free in 2015. Steak hasn’t been an option since 2017.

Matthew Morgan, executive chef at the Beverly Hilton where the dinner is held said he understood the revised menu would broadcast a positive message internationally, “It was a little shocking when first announced, because of being very close to the actual Globes ceremony and having already decided on a menu,” he said, “But once we thought about it and the message that it sent, we were really excited about it. That’s something I stand behind myself.”

So what is the chef cooking up for Meryl Streep, Jennifer Lopez, Brad Pitt, and Eddie Murphy? Celebs will tuck into a starter of chilled golden beet soup, followed by king oyster mushroom “scallops” and wild mushroom risotto, along with roasted baby purple and green Brussels sprouts and carrots. For dessert, there’s a vegan “chocolate opera dome” with praline crumble and caramelized hazelnuts. Natural spring water will be served in glass bottles; plastic water bottles are not welcome on the red carpet and ballroom.

“While the intent is good, the impact is likely to be minimal,” the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association said in a statement. “If all livestock in the U.S. were eliminated and every American followed a vegan diet,” greenhouse-gas emissions would only drop by 2.6%, the group said, citing a study from the National Academy of Sciences.

Veganism has evolved from a niche diet, and the award show’s culinary choice is another example of how mainstream it’s become. Fast food chains now offer vegan options, consider Burger King’s whopper featuring  an Impossible Burger patty, and KFC is experimenting with BeyondMeat fried “chicken.” Disney World is adding 400 plant-based dishes to its theme park menus. Reducing or eliminating animal products from our diets doesn’t seem like much of a challenge anymore. 

According to The Economist, there is empirical data to show an American lifestyle change is afoot: a quarter of 25 to 34-year-old Americans (a/k/a millenials) claim they are vegan or vegetarian. 

The Golden Globe Awards recognize excellence in American and international film and television, based on voting by the 93 members of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association.  The event is a major part of the film industry’s awards season, which culminates each year in the Academy Awards.

Qatari Daybreak Unveils An Otherwordly Sky

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elias chasiotis

Have you ever seen a sunrise like this? A self-identified astrophotographer captured images of an annular eclipse on the morning of December 26, 2019.  The dramatic picture have since gone viral, earning a nod from NASA as the Astronomy Image of The Day.

Athens-based photographer Elias Chasiotis was visiting Al Wakrah, Qatar last month to record the eclipse, which was only visible to observers along a narrow band of Earth.  During a full annular solar eclipse the Moon appears completely surrounded by a ring of fire caused by the background Sun.

Chasiotis snapped the sunrise in a series of images that seem to track the Sun rising in two distinct pieces. The NASA website explained, “The dark circle near the top of the atmospherically-reddened Sun is the Moon — but so is the dark peak just below it. This is because along the way, the Earth’s atmosphere had an inversion layer of unusually warm air which acted like a gigantic lens and created a second image.”

This rare phenomenon of atmospheric optics is known as the Etruscan vase effect, referring to an optical illusion where a symmetrical vase is alternatively viewed as a pair of identical faces. The photograph shows the sun as a pair of curved horns emerging from the horizon, which the amateur photographer described on his Facebook page as the most stunning sunrise of his life.

An annular eclipse happens when the moon is farthest from Earth, when it seems smaller and does not block the entire view of the sun. 

Elias Chasiotis

Chasiotis continued to photograph the eclipse as the sun rose, posting the pictures on Facebook where they swiftly went viral. He credits friend and professional photographer Iakovos Strikis with image processing.  Three years ago, the American postal service created bespoke stamps to honor a solar eclipse, perhaps Qatar will snap up Chasiotis’s copyrighted images to do the same.

Elias Chasiotis

The next solar eclipse, also an annular eclipse, will occur in 2020 June. 

All images by Elias Chasiotis

A Sustainable Towel That Cleans You AND The World!

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ocean clean-upCan a website dedicated to crowdfunding new green businesses make a measurable impact on our planet? Park your cynicism and take another look at Kickstarter where simple environmental innovations seek investors  for affordable green products that help us make easy positive change. Meet the Pangea bamboo towel.

Is Pangea the “ultimate adventure towel”? My biggest adventures these days is the schlep up 5 flights to my office, but I digress. The towel is absorbent enough to dry your entire body yet small enough to fit in your pocket. 

Made from bamboo and naturally antibacterial, the towels are super lightweight and biodegradable. And affordable – backing this eco-product starts with a $9 USD commitment. 

The company was founded by four outdoor adventure buddies fed up with finding trash in every exotic zip code they visited. First-name-only Marcos, Wiliam, Juan, and Dean (an American, Aussie, Columbian, and Argentine) met one another just last year and – sharing a passion for the unbeaten path – they teamed-up to explore the world. 

Polution and waste they found in every new destination incited them to start a self-billed “new ecological movement”. They formed a community of volunteers from the travelers they encountered, people who also care deeply about the environment, to clean up sites and responsibly recycle the garbage. (While resident in Jordan, I had a large plastic bag entangle my foot while floating in the Dead Sea, collected a backpack-full of beer cans while hiking sand dunes in Wadi Rum, and scraped up handfuls of cigarette butts from the ancient mosaic floors spattered throughout Um Qais – but I never had the smarts to start a business to continue cleanup.)

This year the superfit foursome seek to expand that movement globally, organizing worldwide cleanups. To fund the effort, they are hawking environmentally-friendly towels for wallet-friendly prices. The products are useful, and the money raised supports continued clean up operations.

For every $10 USD they raise, they will fund collection and proper disposal of 1 pound of trash.  Consider that every year 14 billions pounds of trash is dumped directly into our oceans.  That’s one overloaded dump truck of garbage every second of every day offloading into the sea. 

Buying a couple cool towel products won’t stop expanding global production of plastics or epidemic illegal dumping, nor will it strengthen worldwide environmental legislation and enforcement of violations. But what’s not to love about replacing a few old cotton or microfiber towels while putting some money into localized cleanup events?

This project is affiliated with the Seattle-base nonprofit Pangea Giving, founded in 2002 following the terror attacks of September 11, 2001.

From its founding, Pangea has been a community of philanthropic individuals whose members pool their resources to support people struggling to improve their lives in other parts of the world. Originally called World Venture Partners, the name changed in 2005 to Pangea Giving, consisting of 78 individuals and 24 Circle of Friends. Since 2003, it has partnered with 45 grassroots organizations in 13 developing countries and awarded grants of over 1.5 million.

Whether you’re looking for a novel gift or harboring ambitions of being an angel investor (writ small) – do check out Kickstarter. Enter a search on that site for “environmental” and you’ll get an array of interesting intiatives that may attract your support.

Green Prophet has featured several such projects in the past.  See links below, and tell us in comments about others you may have unearthed.

 

Bedouin folk medicine

Miriam Aborkeek is a Bedouin woman who did not want her family's natural wisdom to be lost. She makes beauty products the old Bedouin way.
Miriam Aborkeek is a Bedouin woman who did not want her family’s natural wisdom to be lost. She makes beauty products the old Bedouin way.

The harsh desert climate created all kinds of models for the survival of humans and their livestock – just look to the Nabateans and how they dealt with very low rainfall in the Levant. In the summer when a temperature reaches 122 degrees (50 degree C) finding water resources and preserving food is of particular importance for Bedouins. Searching for grazing and water, Bedouins – nomadic people – move from one place to another with their sheep and goats far from major towns and roads. Dealing with scorching heat, desert nomads applied inherited skills and innovated the new ones.

Making whole animal cheese

Milk and dairy products are essential part of the Bedouin diet, and to prepare cheese Bedouins put milk into messah, a part of the stomach of a young lamb that has to be dried with salt. The cheese is called laban or labne and it’s still eaten widely today in the area. Messah is like rennet for the Bedouin.

“After it gets completely dried up a small part of it is taken and wrapped in clean sheep wool or a piece of textile. It is then put into a bowl of milk using the fingers for a few minutes, and then the milk will begin to coagulated,” said Professor Fawzi Abudanah to Green Prophet.

Prof. Fawzi Abudanah
Prof. Fawzi Abudanah

Abudanah is a professor of Archaeology at Al Hussein Bin Talal University in Maan (in southern Jordan) and as a child he experienced firsthand some of the Bedouin lifestyle. His family still kept and fed animals in the traditional way.

Keeping meat with cheese

The large textile bag in which jameed (hardened laban or labneh cheese) was kept is used for preservation of meat when cooked pieces are placed inside the bag. Due to a high concentration of salt in jameed (a hard dried laban made of ewe’s or goat’s milk) the meat can be protected from rotting for a few days.

Traditional water cooler using an animal hyde

For water cooling, Bedouins use either goat or sheep skin called qirbah, which is first cleaned and then tanned.

“Leather tanning is common among the Bedouins in southern Jordan,” the professor continued, adding that they get the necessary material for this process from the oak trees at Al Hisheh forest, northeast of Petra.

Hygiene is a serious problem for anyone who spent even two days camping, not to mention people who are outdoors for years. Running water, boilers, different kinds of soaps, refrigerators and freezers, skin creams and perfumes of well – known brands don’t exist in the wilderness.

Natural SunIn and hair rinse for weary nomads and travellers

Anabasis Syriaca for bedouin hygeine

To wash hair, Bedouins make use of a shrub called adhuo or the shnan in Arabic – latin name Anabasis Syriaca as an ash-based soap and the hair goes blond if the washing continues.

However, the shrub should be prepared first: “Shnan should be burned and its ash is then collected and soaked in a pail of water. The liquid is then used for hair washing,” Abudanah underlined, noting that to purify drinking water nomads use flour or alum.

When Bedouins collect water from depressions, ponds and springs a small amount of flour or alum are added to the water in a large basin, after a while the sand and impurities will sink on the bottom.

Bedouin folk medicine by Miriam Aborkeek

Barnooq is another shrub used as a color fixative when wool of sheep has to be dyed for the production of a rug by weaving.

Scorpion immunity for babies! Ancient vaccines in action

In order to boost the immunity of a new born babies, the father collects scorpions, burns and crushes them, and then mixes their charred remains with olive oil. After that the mixture of the olive oil and crushed scorpions are applied on the baby’s body, as Bedouins traditionally believe that it would protect a child against scorpion venom.

The practice is known in other cultures and among indigenous communities where tribesmen give small dose of poison to children in order to improve their immunity and the poison may develop antibodies against stings.

Closing herd wounds with stinging ants

When their animals, sheep, camels and goats have to be operated, a Bedouin treats possible cuts and wounds with desert ants (fire ants?) that are placed on the wound where the stitches would go. Ants stick to the skin and the herder removes their heads, while their body remains closing the wound until they dissolve naturally.

Slow cooking in the ground

Regarding specialty food dishes, they are prepared in so-called Zarb, and that underground cooking isn’t typical for Bedouins from the Wadi Rumm, for instance, but it has been practiced in places as far as New Zealand and the Balkans. It is an old method when food is put on coal and covered for two-three hours. Usually, chicken, goat or sheep meat are cut into equal pieces, marinated, and prepared with vegetables.

For Professor Abudanah, these hacks are part of his heritage and culture, however, some of these old school tricks are not anymore in use due to modernization, tools and new materials.

Read more on the pursuits and woes of Levantine region Bedouin:
Egyptian Bedouin Maimed by Landmines
A Peek Inside the Bedouin Tent
Israel’s Bedouin Go for Solar Energy Power
Barefoot College for Solar Energy in Jordan
See How the Ladies of Lakia Weave Together Tales and Tradition

What are the Health Costs of Israeli Energy Security?

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Israeli naturl gasLast Tuesday, the consortium behind the Leviathan gas production facility declared “an historic turning point in the history of the Israeli economy” when – a decade after its discovery – the enormous offshore natural gas field started production.  A joint press release from operating partners Noble Energy, Ratio, and Delek Drilling said that production is expected to lead to an immediate reduction in domestic electricity prices and the start of exports, “For the first time in its history, Israel is poised to become a significant natural gas exporter”.  But rather than applauding potential low energy costs and increased national energy security, residents living near the gas platform abandoned their homes for a day of peaceful protest in Tel Aviv.

“We don’t want to play Russian roulette with our children’s health,” said Shlomit Valensi, a Homeland Guards member who lives in Dor, a beachfront community adjoining a nature reserve about 15 miles (24 kilometers) south of Haifa. More than 250 cars headed to Tel Aviv for a demonstration outside a government compound, according to the grassroots Israeli Homeland Guards who organized the protest. Greenpeace Israel and at least three other Israeli environmentalist groups supported the event. An estimated 1,000 demonstrators wore masks, others carried signs linking gas production to cancer, demanding that the facility close.

The Mediterranean oil field was discovered 130 kilometers (81 miles) west of the port city Haifa in 2010. It is estimated to hold 535 billion cubic meters (18.9 trillion cubic feet) of natural gas, along with 34.1 million barrels of condensate. Its production facility was constructed 6 miles (9.6 kilometers) offshore. We are afraid to breathe the air,” said Rachel Toaff-Rosenstein, a veterinarian from Zichron Yaakov. “This is something that’s going to change the rest of our lives.”

Opponents assert that the production process will release pollutants as toxic as those released by coal, particularly in the current start-up stage. This was verified by Leviathan documents submitted to the Environment Ministry which indicate pollution may be in higher concentration during the initial phase when flaring can’t be used. The worst-case scenario is that during the two separate days of starting up four wells, the emission level will be similar to that expected in an entire year of normal operations.

Despite protester concerns, the ministry said in a statement released Tuesday, “The effect on the air quality in the coastal area will be negligible,” adding, “According to experts, there is no danger to the public”.

The Leviathan partnership asserts there will be only a few hours of methane emissions, at levels well below limits set by Israel’s Clean Air Act. Methane is a primary contributor to global warming.

“The only environmental impact this platform will have on the shore is a positive one when the natural gas we supply displaces coal in Hadera and Ashkelon and Israel’s citizens benefit from improved air quality and better health,” said Bini Zomer, Noble Energy’s vice president for regional affairs.

Despite government statements that production was safe, Environment Minister Zeev Elkin delayed the start of operations by a week, saying strict pollution-monitoring conditions hadn’t been met. Monitoring equipment was installed on the platform to alert any risk of high pollution, but the Homeland Guards say they need to see how scrupulously it will be used before halting opposition.

Israel seeks energy independence and cleaner domestic sources, twin aspirations that support environmental and economic benefits. The nation also aims to achieve a broader regional influence, transitioning from an energy importer to a net exporter, with recently announced contracts with neighboring Jordan and Egypt. It is anticipated that the European market may also be a viable partner. Is commerce subjugating exploration of renewable energy alternatives and protection of environmental rights?

The Israeli Homeland Guards back development of the country’s gas industry but want to ensure public health isn’t compromised. They cite world-renowned experts whose models show the platform’s proximity to shore is valid reason for concern.

Fossil fuel companies have long clashed with regulators over pollution. In 2015, Noble (a member of the Leviathan consortium) settled with the U.S. Environment Protection Agency, the Department of Justice and the state of Colorado over violations relating to emissions from its operations.

The former head of Israel’s National Cancer Registry said in an opinion commissioned by the movement that the start-up stage may expose the public to a dangerous amount of carcinogens, including benzene, a byproduct of gas production. 

Israel’s environment minister has promised to monitor air quality closely, promising to shut down the platform if there is “an increase in air pollution that is endangering the population.”

While natural gas is set to replace coal as the main fuel for power generation in Israel, it is still far from being a clean source of energy despite being less polluting than coal.

Cast your vote in our comment section: go gas – or – go green?

 

The Mediterranean Sea natural gas purge starts amid protests in Israel

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Leviathan natural gas rig off the coast of Haifa, Israel
Updated in 2019, a picture of the Levithan rig

Israel’s largest energy project, headed by Noble Energy, started production on Tuesday. It is a natural gas well only 10 kilometers or 7 miles from shore, near the coast of Haifa. This is the first step in a multi-billion dollar natural gas export deal with countries like Egypt and Jordan that will start in the next weeks. 

Families with young children and pregnant women were looking for shelter in Tel Aviv for fear that exposure to the natural gas pollution might cause long term damage to their fetuses and children. Risks from release at sea are highlighted in this PDF developed by the EU

But due to Israel’s unusual security constraints –- or threats by Al Qaeda and the Hezbollah –– it had to build its gas rig much closer to shore than deemed environmentally safe by some country’s standards. The recommended distance is about 40 km or 30 miles. 

When the issue of safety was taken to court no one could refute in professional terms why it is unsafe so the judge let it go ahead despite coastal mayors concerns about cancer risks. This article links to a court ruling in Colorado where Noble Energy had to pay fines for polluting emissions. 

Texas-based Noble Energy and Israel’s Delek Drilling and Ratio Oil announced that operations had commenced this morning, and a significant amount of natural gas will be released to the sea. People in the city of Haifa are concerned and some have evacuated for fears over the damage from exposure. 

Polluting the Mediterranean?

Natural gas is a cleaner fuel but it is by no means renewable or environmentally sound. It burns cleaner but it produces greenhouses gases and pollution.

The gas off the Israeli coast began flowing from the offshore rig called Leviathan (means giant sea creature or whale in Hebrew) early this morning. The timing of when to start has been delayed time and time again but the operators needed to start the rig to meet their 2019 timeline. This is now the last day of the year.

natural gas rig leviathan

This new operation now doubles the amount of Israeli-produced natural gas, according to Reuters.  Some $3.6 billion USD went into developing the Leviathan natural gas rig and operations and gas exports are soon to commence. 

“Israel is now an energy powerhouse, able to supply all its energy needs and gaining energy independence,” said Delek Drilling Chief Executive Officer Yossi Abu.

Guide to Israeli Solar Energy Companies

A subsea pipeline will transport the natural gas to Israel and to the consumers, also looking forward to paying less for electricity, currently generated by a mix of fossil fuels, coal and a small percentage of solar energy, about 2%. But paying less might just be a carrot dangling in the sky. Since Israel became more water independent with the installation of desalination plants the consumers in effect ended up paying more for water. 

5 Eco-Friendly Initiatives Businesses Can Launch in 2020

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daniel esty yale lecturer on greening your business
Daniel Esty, a Yale lecturer talks about how to green your business

Is there a better time to turn over a new leaf and start new business ventures than the new year? We don’t think so! Indeed, the start of a new year affords ambitious entrepreneurs the opportunity to try out new things both inside and outside of the office. As such, if you care about the environment, but haven’t found the right time to roll out changes in your business model, then take this opportunity to launch some eco-friendly initiatives now. Here are five ideas to help you get started:

Digitize

One of the simplest ways that businesses can reduce their carbon footprint is by reducing their paper usage. After all, it’s never been easier to use digital alternatives to physical paper. Rather than reviewing and saving files with paper copies, consider using online systems to store and review important documents. Not only is this better for the environment, but it’s safe and convenient as well! (Banking online will also cut down on the amount of paper in your office.)

Encourage Remote Employment

The average American commute is about 27 minutes. This means that millions of workers have to rely on cars or public transport to reach their office on a daily basis. And, as one one might imagine, this contributes to a lot of pollution. Companies that allow and encourage team members to work from home regularly, though, can eliminate at least some of the pollution that traffic causes.

Make Sustainable Purchases

Paper plates, straws, and other disposable items represent a threat to the environment. Thankfully, eco-friendly businesses can do their bit by replacing these purchases with more sustainable alternatives. What’s more, this principle applies to all sorts of different products. Rather than buying cheap barricades that aren’t recyclable and that will need replacing in a few months, businesses can choose instead to invest in durable concert barricades, for instance, that will stand the test of time.

Go Meatless

Meat production contributes to global warming in a significant way. Fortunately, there are tasty and responsible alternatives to meat that companies can offer their team members at lunch. In addition to classic vegetarian options, some food companies are also now developing imitation meat in the form of cheeseburgers and fried chicken.

Partner with a Movement

It’s important for businesses to take steps to minimize their impact on the planet. However, it’s just as crucial for them to use their resources to spread a powerful message about the environment. By teaming up with an environmental charity or eco-friendly organization, businesses can boost their reputation, consumer reach, and environmental awareness all in one fell swoop. Don’t wait another moment –– get on the phone with a charity ASAP. 

Can you power wood stoves with olive wood pellets?

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pellets olive chips biofuel photopellets olive chips biofuel photo
(Example of a pellet stove from Canada, and the chips and pellets they burn).

Pellet stoves take condensed biological matter –– wood or biomass pellets –– to create a source of heat for residential and industrial spaces. They burn slower, for more time and can lower the heating bills. Environmentalists see pellet stoves as a “green” solution.

A group of disadvantaged youths in Israel are taking this concept but are applying it to ordinary wood stoves. They are creating compressed logs of olive tree waste to supply biofuel from olive waste. They are not the first group of Israelis to recycle olive waste, but the social aspect of the project makes it much more than the usual environmental solution.

Here’s Olivebar’s story:

A group of youngsters — many of whom were homeless until they were gathered together by a man named Yossi Sadeh, first in Beit Shemesh, then at the Sde Bar farm, a kibbutz-like framework that’s turned their lives around — are changing the face of energy production.

Their work is to help create Olivebar’s rolls to heat homes in wood-burning stoves which general manager Eli Karniel describes as “ecologically perfect.”

The rolls are made from the waste produced after olives are pressed at Israeli olive presses, known in Hebrew as gefet. The material is rich in oil and superb for heating, but if left behind at the presses to seep into the soil, will destroy ground water and render the soil infertile.

The simple act of collecting it is the product’s first ecological benefit.

But the huge piles of gefet trucked to the factory aren’t enough. While two Tel Aviv entrepreneurs patented the idea of using the material for the stoves, it was entrepreneur Avi Lerber who recognized the potential, bought the patent, and after experimenting with more than 100 substances, found the right one to allow the material to solidify.

From there, he developed a method to make the resulting product into convenient rolls, which have many advantages over wood for heating purposes.

2.5 Times the Energy of Wood

Chief among them is the energy component, with a cube of the Olivebar rolls producing almost 2.5 times energy as a cube of wood. No mice or worms come with the rolls, which are aesthetically wrapped in paper that is recyclable and can be used to light the oven. The smoke released has no negative impact on neighbors or the environment, and the ash left in the stove can be used for fertilizing gardens and plants.

Using the rolls will also fit into recent moves both here and abroad to avoid cutting down trees for energy use. “It’s a totally green product, all natural, without any glues or chemicals,” Karniel says.

“Whereas once it was more economical to buy heating oil, today people are looking for all kinds of alternatives,” Karniel explains. “People went over to wood, but now governments don’t want people to cut down forests, so they’re turning to natural alternatives like ours.”

Once the material is mixed, it’s pressed into rolls at the factory, then taken out to the warm climate of the area around Herodion, southeast of Jerusalem, where it’s easily dried before being packed for shipping.

Karniel is particularly proud of the project’s Biblical roots, with the idea of heating with olive waste mentioned in the Talmud. “We’re going forward to our sources, instead of backwards,” he notes. “It’s a great feeling; you can really feel these ancient writings come alive.”

Arabs and Bedouin were also known to make use of the olive waste for heating.

Heat for the whole family

The product is also most effective in one or two-story homes that can best make use of wood-burning stoves

The piles of drying rolls look a bit odd on the semi-desert landscape, but the boys of Sde Bar love working there, aware that the stuff is at the cutting edge of an energy revolution, Karniel explains. “They’re proud to work in the factory because it helps support their activities, and they definitely compete for the chance to work there,” says Karniel

“It’s also important to note that the olive tree, which is one of the seven species of the Land of Israel, is what’s leading this progress, even in the field of ecology,” he says. “It definitely spurs us on, and we see a great deal of importance in the fact that, thanks to us, we are contributing to our environment both here and around the world.”

A TB vaccine may innoculate you against Alzheimer’s

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vaccine for TB
It was a finding revealed sometime back and then analyzed recently. An old vaccine shows new tricks.

Holidays are a time for family.  Festive gatherings with parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles create memories that last a lifetime.  But when a loved one has Alzheimer’s disease (AD), holidays often become painful reminders of loss and deterioration.  Currently, Alzheimer’s affects one-in-ten adults over the age of 65—a number that is expected to triple by 2030.  The need to find a cure is great.  

Now there may be a glimmer of hope.  A research team headed by Hervé Bercovier, Charles Greenblatt and Benjamin Klein at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (HU)’s Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics has discovered that the Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine, originally developed for tuberculosis and commonly used to treat bladder cancer, may also be an effective treatment to prevent Alzheimer’s.  They published their findings in PLOS ONE

“There’s data reaching back to the 1960’s that shows that countries treating bladder cancer patients with the BCG vaccine had a lower prevalence of Alzheimer’s disease but it hadn’t been properly analyzed,” shared lead author Bercovier.

How pesticides kill your brain

Until now.  Bercovier and his team followed 1,371 bladder cancer patients receiving treatment at HU’s Hadassah Medical Center.  The average patient age was 68.  During follow-up visits, 65 cancer patients had developed Alzheimer’s.  Those who had not received BCG as part of their treatment had a significantly higher risk of developing Alzheimer’s than did BCG-treated patients:  8.9% (44 patients) as opposed to 2.4% (21).  Further, when compared with the general (healthy) population, people who had never been treated with BCG had a 4-fold higher risk for developing Alzheimer’s than did those who were treated with BCG. 

Aging in the brain is revealed by new MRI technique

It’s important to note that the researchers have not developed a vaccine that prevents Alzheimer’s.  However, shared Bercovier “our study is an important step towards understanding the ways in which our immune system is a major player in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s and how the BCG vaccine, which modulates the immune system, may serve as an effective preventative treatment to this crippling condition.”

And that would be the best holiday gift of all.

As Tel Aviv struggles with dockless scooters, helmets and license plates become mandatory

electric dockless scooters tel aviv jaffa
One of Israel’s most well known publicists was killed while riding an ebike (Motti Morel) in Tel Aviv. The city puts stricter regulations on licensing, helmets, recycling and speed. But who will really enforce this? Grandmothers are walking around dazed with blood streaming down their faces. Kids afraid of walking on the sidewalk. Another joke TA?

Just today I saw a french tourist couple doubling on a Wind scooter, in shorts screaming through a busy intersection. Money flew out of her pocket and she went running into a busy street on Hayarkon, stopping traffic as she dove for her wind-strewn money. Tel Aviv and Jaffa is a living hell for pedestrians and pedal-bike riders who use bike lanes. Ask anyone here. And so many of the users are not from here, but are tourists or long-term travellers. As an effort to prevent hit and runs and death by scooter Tel Aviv becomes the first city in the world to require all shared electric scooters to be licensed and helmetted.

bird scooters in Tel aviv
It looks like a dream to coast along the sea, wind in your hair. You know how many people ruin their holidays riding these things?
Doubling on scooters. More common than you’d believe.

The Tel Aviv-Yafo Municipality has issued new regulations for shared electric scooter companies in order to keep pedestrians and riders safe. The new regulations include equipping electric scooters with helmets, installing license plates, recycling used batteries, lowering the speed of the scooters in certain areas, and preventing the usage of scooters in restricted areas.

The regulations enforced by the Tel Aviv-Yafo Municipality are unprecedented and are meant to set an example for other municipalities around the world who are dealing with similar circumstances.

In August 2019, the municipality embarked on a pilot to regulate companies that were renting out electric scooters in the city. These companies had been subjected to a number of conditions and restrictions in order to obtain a permit to operate in the city, which included ensuring availability throughout the city, limiting the maximum number of scooters per company to 2,500 units, allowing parking only in designated areas which have to be marked in the companies’ apps, preventing usage by minors, implementing and activating a service call center, and banning the scooters’ alarms during the nighttime.

How green are escooters? Sifted has found some surprising results

Looking ahead to 2020, the municipality has decided to continue with this pilot, adding additional terms and restrictions with the purpose of increasing road safety and maintaining public order in the future.

Meital Lehavi, Deputy Mayor of Tel Aviv-Yafo for Transportation: “Our main goal is to keep sidewalks as a safe space for walking, as the city’s sidewalks are designed primarily for pedestrians. Tel Aviv is a very walkable city and we encourage people to take advantage of the city’s small size, flat topography and over 300 days of sunshine a year.”