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Single White Light luminAID Seeks Middle East Partner

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luminid inflatable candleThree years of sustainable lighting for fifteen bucks? United Nations Relief Agency, you hearing this?

The LuminAID inflatable solar light was created by a pair of architecture students focused on disaster-relief solutions to the 2010 Haitian earthquake. Their light offers a safe, inexpensive and sustainable alternative to kerosene and oil lamps that’s ideally suited to the Syrian refugee camps swelling in north Jordan and eastern Turkey.

In just two years, they’ve pre-sold 1,500 units in more than 25 countries.

They’ve collected donations to fund over 3,000 lights for NGOs doing work off-grid in countries including India, Uganda, and Laos.

Green Muslim Blogger Muaz Nasir Says Spiritual Connection With Nature Is Key (INTERVIEW)

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rouge park clean up, Muaz Nasir green islam environment civic muslimsWe speak to Muaz Nasir about his faith-focused environmental work in Canada and why the Muslim community can’t afford to sideline climate change

“The environment is something everyone should be concerned about as climate change, water scarcity and pollution are issues that do not discriminate based on faith:” That’s Muaz Nasir’s response to what he likes to call constructive criticism that the Muslim Ummah focus its energies on ‘bigger issues’ rather than climate change.

Personally, I can’t imagine a ‘bigger issue’ then the future of our planet but I completely accept that this realisation hasn’t quite reached the wider Muslim community. Ground-breaking policies such as the Muslim Seven Year Action Plan on Climate Change were impressive but as Nasir points out, but they failed to “develop the necessary research or resources that would push the climate agenda into the mainstream Muslim community.”

As such, any progress has been slow and the product of hard working individual campaigners rather than national policies. Read on for more about the Muslim-environmental movement in Canada, Nasir’s green Muslim website Khaleafa.com and how he getting mosques to ‘Ban the Bottle’ among other green ideas he is working to implement in the Muslim community – ideas which can spread around the world. 

Germany’s EnBW Partners With Turkish Firm To Build 50MW Wind Power Plant

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Tekirdağ Province, in northwestern Turkey, will be the site of several new wind power plants over the next few years.

This has been a big year for wind power in Turkey, with more than 5,000 MW of wind power projects (WPPs) licensed and awaiting permitting. Foreign companies such as Nordex and GE are jumping into the expanding sector with investment and equipment.

Now, Germany’s third-largest renewable energy firm, EnBW, has launched a new WPP in partnership with Turkey’s Borusan Holding: a 50 MW wind farm in Tekirdağ.

Israel to Label All Egg Imports

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organic eggs label, free-range, organic, israel eggs from TurkeyIsraelis are averse to buying egg imports from Turkey, where the hens may not be inoculated against salmonella.

Free from the dilemma of buying the free-range or organic eggs (I own my own coop with eight hens), the Israeli government has decided to make a law that will require the Made-In label on every egg sold in Israeli supermarkets. The public was aghast apparently at the news that millions of the eggs sold on the local market do not originate in Israel, but come from countries such as Turkey which does not control for salmonella. Some 80 million eggs are imported to Israel every year from Turkey, more than half of the 3 percent of all foreign imports and the health inspection on these eggs are limited, according to Haaretz. Some of them are sold under the Tnuva label, which includes pictures of hens out to pasture in verdant fields. Likely the opposite of how these eggs are raised. 

La Alhambra in Spain, is an Arab World Marvel Worth Queuing For

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La Alhambra, Granada, Spain, Sierra Nevada Mountains, Moors, Arab, Architecture, La Alhambra, Alhambra Granada, UNESCO World Heritage Spain, Moorish architecture, Islamic art Spain, Nasrid dynasty, Generalife gardens, Granada travel, Andalusia heritage, Arab world legacy, Spanish palaces, historic fortress Spain, Alhambra palace complex, Islamic architecture Europe, Andalusia UNESCO sitesGreen Prophet travels to the marvel-filled UNESCO World Heritage Site

Around 7pm in autumn, a golden light cradles La Alhambra, a Moorish fortress and palace complex located in Granada, Spain. The reddish exterior walls and the surrounding woods stand with their shoulders square and crowns basking in the glow, as if to show off their undisputed majesty.

Indeed, the UNESCO World Heritage site is so revered that shortly after sunrise, a long line of tourists shuffle slowly through a winding queue at the entrance, waiting for their chance to visit what Salman Rushdie called the Moor’s Last Sigh developed over eight centuries of Nasrid rule in southern Spain.

We did too. Step in for a peak at what we found.

La Alhambra, Granada, Spain, Sierra Nevada Mountains, Tafline Laylin, Moors, Arab, Architecture, La Alhambra, Alhambra Granada, UNESCO World Heritage Spain, Moorish architecture, Islamic art Spain, Nasrid dynasty, Generalife gardens, Granada travel, Andalusia heritage, Arab world legacy, Spanish palaces, historic fortress Spain, Alhambra palace complex, Islamic architecture Europe, Andalusia UNESCO sitesLa Alhambra, which means The Red One,  was originally constructed during the mid 10th century by Badis ben Habus, the Berber rule of the Kingdom of Granada. It sits high above the surrounding city on the hill of the Assabica, and is separated from the neighborhoods on its northern flank by deep ravines and the Darro river.

La Alhambra, Granada, Spain, Sierra Nevada Mountains, Tafline Laylin, Moors, Arab, ArchitectureAlthough the palatial complex and fortress features some of the finest examples of Islamic art, and the architecture’s not bad either, it reveals a haphazard construction process that extended over a period of many centuries.

The 1,530,000 sq ft palace city was renovated by a succession of dynasties from the 9th century to the 16th century, when the holy Roman Emperor Charles V inserted his own palace within the Nasrid fortifications. But during every epoch, particularly during Islamic rule, there was an emphasis on creating a heaven on earth couched within a rather plain shell.

La Alhambra, Granada, Spain, Sierra Nevada Mountains, Tafline Laylin, Moors, Arab, Architecture, La Alhambra, Alhambra Granada, UNESCO World Heritage Spain, Moorish architecture, Islamic art Spain, Nasrid dynasty, Generalife gardens, Granada travel, Andalusia heritage, Arab world legacy, Spanish palaces, historic fortress Spain, Alhambra palace complex, Islamic architecture Europe, Andalusia UNESCO sitesAnd what does heaven look like? Think of the sound of trickling fountains and of rows of roses and orange trees. Think Calliphal horseshoe arches framing views of the valley, of detailed muqarnas (stalactite ceiling decorations) peering down at you from above. Think pretty painted tiles on towering walls. Reflection pools double the magic of the buildings, which feature increasingly finicky arabesques crafted by the Christian, Jewish and Muslim artisans of the time.

La Alhambra, Granada, Spain, Sierra Nevada Mountains, Tafline Laylin, Moors, Arab, Architecture, La Alhambra, Alhambra Granada, UNESCO World Heritage Spain, Moorish architecture, Islamic art Spain, Nasrid dynasty, Generalife gardens, Granada travel, Andalusia heritage, Arab world legacy, Spanish palaces, historic fortress Spain, Alhambra palace complex, Islamic architecture Europe, Andalusia UNESCO sitesCarrying their iPads (the commoners camera of the 21st century?), iPhones and sometimes more sophisticated photographic equipment, visitors crawl through 13 towers, the Alcazaba fortress, the Nasrid palaces, which are the most frequently visited sections of the meandering complex, and the Generalife, which includes a high palace and low sculptural gardens used as a playground for the monarchs of Granada.

La Alhambra, Granada, Spain, Sierra Nevada Mountains, Tafline Laylin, Moors, Arab, Architecture, La Alhambra, Alhambra Granada, UNESCO World Heritage Spain, Moorish architecture, Islamic art Spain, Nasrid dynasty, Generalife gardens, Granada travel, Andalusia heritage, Arab world legacy, Spanish palaces, historic fortress Spain, Alhambra palace complex, Islamic architecture Europe, Andalusia UNESCO sites

We also crawled, stopping at every carved door, marveling at the sheer number of people who flock to the site. It took us hours just to get through the palaces, and then we spent another watching the sun melt into the forest.

And around every corner, down every narrow passage, and in front of every golden arch, we felt so proud of this Arab world marvel. The Moors demonstrated remarkable sophistication as well as a celestial reverence for both nature and god.

La Alhambra, Granada, Spain, Sierra Nevada Mountains, Tafline Laylin, Moors, Arab, Architecture

It made us hopeful too that the parts of the Arab world embroiled in merciless self-destruction will one day emerge with a refreshed sense of purpose, in the same way that the Arabian Gulf countries have awoken from the slumber of their oil wealth into something of a green renaissance, an active and creative response to the climate and resource challenges of the day.

La Alhambra, Granada, Spain, Sierra Nevada Mountains, Tafline Laylin, Moors, Arab, Architecture, La Alhambra, Alhambra Granada, UNESCO World Heritage Spain, Moorish architecture, Islamic art Spain, Nasrid dynasty, Generalife gardens, Granada travel, Andalusia heritage, Arab world legacy, Spanish palaces, historic fortress Spain, Alhambra palace complex, Islamic architecture Europe, Andalusia UNESCO sites

This is what La Alhambra inspires: a look within, a look without. And a desire to make our immediate surroundings a more beautiful place.

All images by Tafline Laylin for Green Prophet.

$9 Cardboard Bike from Israel Going to Market

$9 cardboard bike israel izhar gafni

Could it be a world-changer? A cheap solution to help African kids get to schools and clinics? Israel’s Izhar Gafni (who we interviewed here) had an outlandish idea to create a durable cardboard bike from scratch with raw materials sum totalling about $9. Add in some labor costs and you can get a pretty cheap ride, one worth buying in a world where bike theft is rampant.

When Only a Coke and a Kebab Will Do

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junk food cravings, sushi, kebab, cigarettes

I try to eat as healthy as possible, buying my family whole wheat products instead of white. I also like to bake pita breads (see my recipe), cookies, and make dinner from scratch as much as I am able. As much as I like healthy choices like quinoa and cranberry juice, sometimes there is nothing like some street meat: a greasy kebab and a Coke to satisfy those hunger pangs. And according to a new research project published in Current Biology, there are some natural reasons why certain unhealthy food pairs go well together. It’s the reason why cheese and wine go good together, as well as pastrami and pickles, burgers and soft drinks.

CEBC Maps 150 Clean Energy Projects in North Africa and the Middle East

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CEBC, renewable energy, MENA, Middle East, North Africa, clean tech, clean energyIf knowledge generates power, then the Clean Energy Business Council (CEBC) based in Abu Dhabi’s Masdar City intends to make the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) invincible with a new map of every known renewable energy plant in the region.

Similar to the list of active environmental organizations in Palestine shared earlier this week, this evolving tool reveals the extent to which each country in the Levant, Maghreb and Gulf have surged ahead with energy developments over the past few years, and the CEBC hopes this will inspire greater investor confidence.

Breast Cancer Risk in Israeli Women On The Rise

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breast cancer patient israel
A high use of hormones for IVF treatments may be one reason why Jewish Israelis in special risk category. 

The Israeli Health Ministry stated that 1 in every 8 Israeli women is at risk of breast cancer. The disease is on the rise in Jewish Israeli women, but mortality rates are dropping, according to the Israel Health Ministry. The contradiction is resolved when it’s understood that early detection and greater numbers of women being screened reveal new cases earlier than in previous years, which in turn allows prompt treatment and better chances of recovery. And if natural cancer prevention with herbs sounds unlikely, read our post about turmeric’s amazing anti-cancer properties and another about a folkloric Pakistani herbal tea that’s come under scientific scrutiny.

According to the Israel Cancer Association, about 90 percent of patients can be cured if the disease is detected at an early stage. Breast cancer age-standardized mortality rates dropped from 22.6% in 1998 to 17.4% in 2009- an impressive 30% decrease.

10 Ways Abu Dhabi Leads The Arab Gulf’s Green Revolution

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abu dhabi, water cooling, desert landscape, sustainable city

Abu Dhabi’s stellar efforts to raise green performance across industry sectors position that Gulf state as regional leader in both conceiving sustainable solutions, and more critically, setting them in action. There are some more famous projects like the multi-million dollar zero-energy city Masdar. But this is just the tip of the bucket. Read on for the ten best ways that the United Arab Emirates emirate Abu Dhabi is leading the way for the Middle East. 

Better Place Sells 125 Renault ZEs to Huge Industrial Group in Israel

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Better Place, Renault ZE, electric vehicles, clean transportation, Elco Holdings, BusinessDespite a major upheaval in recent weeks, the electric vehicle company Better Place is pushing forward its business expansion plans with a $4 million deal recently signed with Elco Holdings Ltd.

One of the largest industrial groups in Israel, Elco will purchase 125 Renault Florence ZEs that will be distributed to its subsidiaries Electra Ltd. and Electra Consumer Products Ltd. The first batch of 25 vehicles will be delivered by the end of 2012, while the remainder will be delivered throughout 2013.

Israel’s Tent Protest Movement is Growing Roots in an Eco-Community

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eco-community, social protest, activism, agriculture, tent city, Tel Aviv, Israel, ArsufThe Israeli government may not be taking them very seriously, but a small bucket of social activists who colonized Rothschild Avenue last summer with tents, pop-up massage parlors and peace-preaching posters have yet to give in to the country’s growing income disparity.

Refusing to pay exorbitant prices for shoebox apartments amid the city’s concrete lanes and glass towers, twelve protesters have taken up residence on a former fruit orchard in Arsuf, where they are establishing a small ecological community.

Israeli Eco Artists Dance in Australia

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Dance, Israel, Australia, Sustainable, Eco, Environment, Awareness, Zohar, Spiritual, BalletIsrael’s Vertigo Dance Company made its Australian debut at the Brisbane Festival in September. They performed a piece titled Mana, which means “vessel of light” and comes from the Zohar, the Jewish mystical text. Mana featured eight dancers exploring the contrasts between dark and light, male and female. Both the moon and sun were powerful symbols in the piece, which drew inspiration from the ancient text it is named after.

Five years ago Noa Wertheim, Vertigo’s co-artistic director, and her three sisters created the Vertigo Eco Art Village in Israel’s Elah Valley, overlooking the site where Bible says David defeated Goliath. They live with their families in the village, which has composting toilets, solar-heated showers and a water-recycling system. 

The Arabic Roots of 10 English Words

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Did you realize you speak some Arabic? 

An estimated 175 million native Arabic speakers make it the sixth most-spoken language. As we draw connections between environmental actions in the east and west, let’s look at how some commonalities in language are shared by these cultures.

It’s natural that, over time, some words slide across linguistic boundaries, particularly into modern Castilian Spanish given Moorish rule in Spain from 711 to 1492.

But here are ten Arabic words that infiltrated English.  Current events render some instantly recognizable, but others will surely surprise.

 1.   Ghoul – The الغول (ghul) comes by way of Arabic folklore, specifically mentioned in “One Thousand and One Arabian Nights”.  This desert-dwelling shape-shifter feasts on the dead, with a particular appetite for children.  Just in time for Halloween, “ghoulish” describes a creepy fascination with the macabre.

 2.   Genie – The الجن (jinn) is also a player in “One Thousand and One Arabian Nights.” In the Middle East, genies are thought to emerge from smokeless fires: they enjoy free will and can be horribly bad or Disney-fied sweet.  They can influence human behavior and be obligated to grant wishes.

 3.   Mujahedeen – مجهدين (mujahedeen) are those who bear arms in defense of the faith. Its positive connotation in the 1980s (when the USA supported Afghani freedom-fighters battling Soviet communists) later morphed to connote any Islamist fighters who commit terror in the name of faith.

 4.   Jihad – جهد (ja-ha-da) stems from an original meaning of “making an effort” or “struggle”, particularly in regard to religious rightful action: jihad appears 41 times in the Qur’an.  Modern (Western) interpretation is darker, usually relating to sanctioned opposition to a non-Islamic practice, institution or individual.

 5.   Admiral – أمير البحر (amir-al-bahr) translates to “prince of the sea” and is used in English military parlance to describe highest ranking Navy officers.

 6.   Algebra – الجبر grows from a root that means “he set (a broken bone)”.  It makes a conceptual leap to describe setting two sides of an equation into equilibrium.  The specific mathematics of algebra was codified by 9th Century Persian mathematician Muḥammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi.

 7.   Algorithm – الخوارزمية also comes from al-Khowarizmi, alleged to be a variation on the mathematician’s name, and describing a procedure for solving mathematical problems.

 8.   Ream – رزمة means “parcel” in Arabic and, in English, a pack of paper sheets.

 9.   Hazard – الزهر (al-zarh) means “dice”, which was adopted by the Spanish as “azar” meaning “risk” (recall that Arabs ruled Spain for almost 800 years). The dangerous connotation remains strong.

10.   Alcohol – كهل (kohl) is finely powdered antimony used as eye makeup throughout the Middle East (and by Keith Richards). Riffing on its meaning of fineness and subtlety, Arab alchemists gave the name of al-kuhl to any powder obtained by sublimation (transformation of a solid into vapor, and the reverse process).  Not a stretch to see how it came to be used for other products of distillation.

This is far from scholarly analysis.  Basic info came off a much-copied and anonymously authored “fun facts” sheet circulating at my daughter’s high school, but a quick Google search shows most of the etymology to check out, Insha’Allah.

Mapping Palestine’s Environmental Civil Society – The Good, the Bad and the Uncooperative

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palestine-environment-actors-organisations-heinrich-boll-stiftungA study mapping the environmental actors in Palestine shows a desperate lack of co-operation between organisations and donors keen to play it safe with ‘practical projects’

The lovely people at Heinrich Böll Stiftung had done something that I have been procrastinating about for almost lifetime (well, not quite a lifetime but a good couple of years at least). They have mapped out the important actors and organisations on the environmental scene in Palestine. Exciting, right!? They have painstakingly gone through all those websites, NGOs and institutes with an environmental focus to bring us a clear image of the state of the environmental movement in Palestine. They found that out of 2,245 NGOs registered in the oPt only 104 were environmentally-focused and of these, just 56 were actually still active. More juicy details after the jump.