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Gardening For Fruit With the Kids At Home

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signs for fruitsA few months ago together with three enthusiastic family kids I started a gardening experiment: growing fruits out of the seeds we collected from fruits we ate, just planting it in the backyard. 

We used tomato, watermelon and melon seeds, the kids even made signs for each. Though all seeds sprouted, the watermelon seedling was first to die on us, followed surprisingly by the tomato, which managed to flower and grow one small fruit but stopped developing and died soon after. 

The biggest success belongs to the melon, it kept growing and fast, flowering yellow and even bearing several fruits – one of the flowers which was pollinated by bees kept growing into this strange looking fruit.

MENA Geothermal’s Largest System in the Middle East is Complete

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American University of Madaba, Jordan, alternative energy, geothermal, MENA Geothermal, clean techMENA Geothermal has completed the largest geothermal heating and cooling system in the Middle East and North Africa. Completed in August, 2012, the new and deeply clean energy system at the American University of Madaba (AUM) in Jordan has a total cooling load of 1680 kW and a heating load of 1350 kW, which is enough energy to power both the College of Science and the College of Business.

“It reduces CO2 emissions by 223,638 kg CO2/yr or 47% compared with conventional chiller/LPG boiler cooling and heating systems,” the company’s President and Founder Khaled Al Sabawi told Green Prophet, and the project was constructed using 100% local labor and Palestinian engineering and support staff.

Green Recycling Machines for Light Bulbs and Batteries in Sharjah

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light bulb recycling sharjah

You can get vending machines for the strangest things in the Arab Gulf – even for gold bars. But thinking in a greener direction, the United Arab Emirates is the second country in the world to adopt light bulb and used battery recycling machines to the public. Five reverse vending machines are being set up in Sharjah this week. Used light bulbs and batteries are considered hazardous waste, though just a drop in the bucket of electronic related waste. But bulbs and batteries do contribute to the build up of dangerous levels of mercury when these chemicals seep into the ground.

The city of Sharjah already employs vending machines for plastic bottle recycling and medical wastes through an organization called Wakaya, and the city’s environment agency is planning to award prizes to people for their recycling initiatives.

The initiative is part of Shajah’s Zero Waste for 2015 campaign. Bee’ah, who we featured here is also trying to get commercial properties and malls to use more efficient lighting.

Image via revend 

Deaf Workers in Gaza Open New Restaurant

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deaf workers Atfaluna restaurant gaza

New opportunity opens for the hearing-disabled in Gaza.

About 1 percent of Gaza’s 1.6 million people suffer from total or near-total deafness. Their education is limited to the 9th grade. They must contend with a popular notion that deafness equals mental disability.

The new Atfaluna restaurant near Gaza port  provides income for a 12 deaf workers and aims to dish up a new image of normalcy together with delicious food. In the spirit of rising to a major physical challenge, see also our post about a wheelchair-bound man who rode 130 km. in a solar-powered wheelchair.

Grow Green Reporting Skills with BBC Training in Jordan and Palestine

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writer at computer keyboardCalling all media professionals in Palestine or Jordan:  increase your eco-broadcast effectiveness by applying for some hands-on training by top media pros.  

The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is leading a series of workshops focused on journalism, new media and management for media professionals working in Jordan and the Palestinian Authority.

The workshops are part of the European Union (EU)-funded Media Neighborhood Project, a three-year training program for journalists, editors and managers from broadcast, print and digital media. It aims to strengthen journalistic skills in the areas of media independence and online media; and improve the reporting of  EU social, economic and political policies within the Middle East, Eastern Europe and Caucasus. APPLY NOW>

Applicants must select one of three workshops available in each country:

Natural perfumes inspired by citrus and etrog

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Ayala Moriel, photo updated 2021

Family circumstance and curiosity led boutique and natural perfumer Ayala Moriel from the city of Tel Aviv to the other end of the world on the west coast of Canada. After landing in Vancouver in her early 20s, her sense for Middle Eastern scents helped her create a unique line of natural perfumes for women and men.

Now 36, and considering a move back to Israel, Moriel mainly relies on electronic communication to help her develop custom-made scents from exotic ingredients that evoke the Arab market in the Old City of Jerusalem, or the verdant valleys that lead to the Mediterranean Sea from Israel’s Galilee. A consultation with her artisanal perfume house can start with an online questionnaire, and even a phone interview or personal meeting in Vancouver.

Moriel has also created about 50 signature scents with names like Zohar, Sahlab and Finjan, which I have tested and loved, and is working with companies to help create a commercial line of fragrances to be repackaged under other brands for products such as natural cleaning supplies.

Safe, natural ingredients

Moriel’s perfumes do not contain synthetic musk or odor-enhancing chemicals.

Though aware of the allergenic or toxic effects of synthetic perfumes, Moriel stays out of the politics of this debate in the perfume industry by saying that she works with only natural substances for aesthetic reasons: Natural perfumes have hues and layers much more resonant and complex than synthetic big-name brands at airport duty-free shops and American department stores, she says.

Living between the juxtaposed cultures of Jewish hippies, Druze villagers and Arab farmers helped define Moriel as the exotic, all-natural perfumer she is today.

Born in 1976 in Montreal, at the age of three she immigrated to Israel with her mother and stepfather. They helped found the alternative ecological village Klil, in Israel’s north.

Moriel’s products are favored by established, over-30 women.

“It was like heaven for a little girl because we had so much freedom and loved the nature and flowers around us,” she tells Green Prophet. For a few years, her family lived without electricity.

In her early 20s, she and her husband and baby went to look for new opportunities –– and Moriel’s birth father –– back in Canada. It would prove to be a difficult period in her life.

After a separation that left her alone with her autistic daughter in Vancouver, Moriel turned to burning incense to help her relieve stress and anxiety.

Enjoying it so much, Moriel decided to try making her own incense, but it did not live up to her expectations, smelling like a lit marijuana cigarette. Why not create scents that don’t need to be burned, she reasoned? Her unique brand, Ayala Moriel Parfums, was hatched. That was about 10 years ago.

With orange blossoms as compass

Always looking to her Middle Eastern home for inspiration, this year she returns directly to her Jewish roots by launching a new perfume called Etrog, which distills the hauntingly sweet smell of the citron, an aromatic citrus fruit used as a symbol in the fall Jewish holiday of Succoth.

Citron, or etrog. Warty but with the smell of heaven.

Zangvil is one of her signature scents.

Before committing to a large order of Etrog, or any other scent for that matter, for about $50 Moriel will send a broad sample of scents in the mail –– each bottle containing at least a week’s worth of perfume. Customers can then work with Moriel to choose the right scent.

With winter coming, her perfumes offer an exotic pick-me-up, she says. The definitive lack of scents in chilly Canada pushes Moriel to keep surrounding herself with rich aromas formed in her early memories. She says that the warm, humid climate in Israel contains more fragrances than colder countries, and besides coming to see her growing family in Israel every year she is drawn to the odors.

“I am sensitive to the smells in Vancouver now and can pick up the cherry and linden blossoms. But it’s really the Middle Eastern heat that brings out the best in plants and flowers,” she says.

“And in the spring … there are orange blossoms in full bloom. I try to time my trips back to Israel around this time.”

::Ayala Moriel website

Largest Palestinian Hospital to Get Wind Power from Europe

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Palestine, Palestinian Territory, Wind power, clean energy, Al Ahli Hospital, European Union, HebronA West Bank hospital gets wind powered with 700 kw.

Few things are as deadly as a hospital without power, but a new wind turbine is about to blow away one hospital’s fear of losing theirs. The largest of its kind in the Palestinian territories, Al Ahli Hospital provides care to 600,000 Palestinians living in the Hebron district. With 365 regular beds and a capacity for 500 patients in emergency situations, they can’t afford to lose the energy needed to keep people well.

So in 2009, a project was officially inaugurated to incorporate wind energy into the hospital’s generating mix, and the European Union agreed to fund 80 percent of it; now, following years of planning and mapping, a 700 kilowatt wind turbine is about to be installed. It is expected to start generating 40% of the hospital’s power by the end of 2012.

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.