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Egyptian Library is Sustainable Regional Role Model

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Alexandria, Bibliotheca, Egypt, Library, sustainable, regional, books, role model, history, education, art, public, digital divide

This fall Egypt’s Bibliotheca Alexandria will celebrate the tenth anniversary of its opening. It is one of the region’s grandest and most beautiful libraries. Although it currently holds only one million books there is room for expansion. Bibliotheca Alexandria has shelf space for over eight million books. This library has become a public center of learning and activism. It recently hosted the Natural Sciences Earth and Sun Festival, with public programs about the environment and conversation. The facility’s library for the visually impaired offers monthly computer literacy classes and Braille reading courses.

Bahrain Balances Traditional and Modern Medicine

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alternative medicine, modern medicine, health, Middle East, BahrainBahrain’s health authority has established four directives to regulate the sale and prescription of traditional, alternative medicines. This step was taken in response to concern about the credibility of some businesses. Now the National Health Regulatory Authority (NHRA) will establish guidelines for the sale, use, and advertising of alternative medicines, including services and practices such as ‘cupping,’ known as Hujama.

The NHRA will look to World Health Organization guidelines for guidance to create a list of approved specialties.

Circassians, Israel, Adyghe people, alternative medicine, modern medicine, healthThe Middle East is home to diverse traditions of alternative medical practices.

Sunni Muslims healing with music

For example the Adyghe people, a predominantly Sunni Muslim minority originally from the Northern Caucasus, has a time-honored tradition of musical treatments for healing.

“Adyghes considered that music could treat not only the body, but also the soul. It has a special influence on a person before the beginning of a battle, invoking bravery. In Abkhaz-Adyghe fairy tales there are scenes that the musician could heal wounds of the warriors through tunes, and then the warriors were ready to fight again. Even in the 20th century, people wishing to praise a good player on the harmonica said that he played so well that paralyzed people rose from their bed and began to dance.”

They believe that music penetrates the body and can thus heal a person from the inside. Folk songs are traditionally prescribed to soothe patients with burns or women experiencing difficult births.

Musical remedies were not a substitute for medical treatment but have generally been used the ease discomfort, much like a modern painkiller.

The Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization estimates that over 2 million Adyghes currently live in Turkey and over 150,000 in Jordan, Israel and Syria.

In recent years modern science has discovered the medicinal properties of common spices often used as herbal treatments, including thyme as a topical treatment for acne and cumin as a remedy for a range of ailments.

As in Bahrain, medical professionals in the United Arab Emirates are also perfecting the art of balancing traditional remedies with western medicine. The first western-style hospital in the UAE was a 12-bed facility opened in 1951 with British aid. Today modern hospitals are common place in big cities. But this has not eradicated local traditions. The UAE has recently seen a resurgence of demand for alternative treatments.

“Modern and traditional medicine are complementary to each other,” Dr. Carina Huwari told The National. “Balance them properly and don’t underestimate the body’s natural power to heal. It just needs a little bit of help.”

Image of woman doctor by Michael Jung, via Shutterstock. Image of Circassians in Israel via Andynapso, Wikimedia Commons 

Read more about alternative medicine: 
Natural Herbs for Breast Health and Enhancement
Boost Your Natural Immune System With Medicinal Plants and Herbs
The ABCs of Middle East Spice Medicines, Part IV – Oregano to Rosemary

6 Groundbreaking Art Projects With an Eco-Conscience

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green art, eco-art, environmental art, environmental issues, middle east, egypt, iran, water issues, israel, gulf, red sea, coral, gazaArt has a way of jarring our perspective. Here are 6 groundbreaking projects that are changing the way people in the Middle East relate to their environment.

Just today we read about an Egyptian artist who has spread her creative wings since Mubarak’s fall only to have them clipped again by increasing powerful Islamist groups. Despite such obstacles, or perhaps because of them, there are untold numbers of talented people pushing past the ruins of war and oppression in Egypt, Gaza, Iran, and elsewhere in the Middle East and North Africa in order to expose important environmental concerns. We have put together a list of six groundbreaking projects with an eco-concience that are slowly changing how people in our region relate to the natural world. 

Acre Father Aims to Make His Capital Green

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Akko, Acco, Acre, Israel, recycling, citizen activism, community awareness, eco-art

Ilan Suisa, a father of four from Akko (Acre), aspires to make his ancient hometown the environmental activism capital of Israel. According to news reports he has even changed his name to “Ilan Green-Suisa.”

Over time, Green-Suisa convinced the Akko municipality to place forty recycling bins throughout the city: “Akko won the first place in Israel for recycling,” he said.

With a band of over forty volunteers of diverse ages, ethnicities and religions, Green-Suisa has spearheaded multiple community art projects. One such project collected ceramic shards illegally disposed of by building companies into the port. The grassroots project used these shards to create a mosaic at a local school.

Mohammed Kanoo Shows How Arab Culture Is Never Black and White

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Mohammed Kanoo obama
Mohammed Kanoo’s portraits aim to tease out our biases about the Middle East. Above is US President Barack Obama. 

In his solo exhibition Fun with Fen (fen is Arabic for “art”) currently on display at Dubai’s Meem Gallery, the Bahraini artist Mohammed Kanoo depicts international celebrities dressed in traditional Arab costume. Kanoo’s digitally enhanced photographs are described as humorous commentary on pop culture, but the reactions they provoke may be a bit darker.
[brid video=”134808″ player=”7642″ title=”Mohamed Kanoo Meem Gallery”]
Take a peek at a few images from his gallery and gauge your own response.

Qatar’s GSAS Turns Other Rating Systems Green

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eco-villa qatar QSASStep back, LEED. Back off, BREEAM. Easy there, Estidama: Qatar’s developing a new building standard and it’s called GSAS.

Qatar’s revamped its QSAS green building rating system.  Re-launched under a new name, the Global Sustainability Assessment System (GSAS) is muscling in as Middle East- North Africa’s green standard. Developed by the Gulf Organization for Research and Development (GORD) in collaboration with the University of Pennsylvania’s T.C. Chan Center for Building Simulation and Energy Studies, the original QSAS melded criteria bespoke to Qatar with established green benchmarking systems, creating a performance-based scheme customized to the unique requirements of this rapidly developing Gulf state.

GSAS is self-positioned as the world’s most comprehensive sustainability rating system.

Get Your Blood Tested for Heavy Metals

blood test for heavy metals

If you live in the west or the east, in an economically advanced country or a repressed one, getting a blood test is always a good way to know if you have been exposed to heavy metal toxins. If you live in a large city, you can ask your own doctor about the possibility in testing your blood, but there are also a number of companies that offer mail-in and online results. Try bloodtest.org. This particular company is based in the US, but you can always call them via Skype if you live in another country to see if their nurses can help you understand what tests you might need. 

Saudi Arabian Bus Ride – Mass Transit or Mass Murder?

bus man driving saudi arabiaWeird science that this video clip of bus drifting from Saudi Arabia comes to my attention just as I hop off my office bus in Jordan.

My bus is a small one, seats maybe 24.  It’s lightweight and nimble, one of hundreds cruising Jordan’s roads. Absent a reliable mass transit system, these little buses, which are provided by private schools and employers, serve a critical public service. And although I’m a sucker for public transportation, I do think about the risks.  The route from Jabal Amman to the airport is a straight run on modern roadways, well maintained and with proper traffic signaling.  That’s a good start.

Caged Bear in Saudi Arabia Needs Rescuing

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A black bear in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia has been trapped in a pet shop cage for the last five years. It is overheated, malnourished, and badly requires psychological attention.

It looks undernourished and often is pelted with food by children visiting the shop, a local reporter said.

Activists claim the bear bites and smacks himself and visitors, including school children, regularly pelt him with food.

Emma Johnson, a British nanny, brings daily treats of honey and grapes, according to Arab News, since management only provides bread and water.

Imported into Saudi Arabia five years ago in contravention of CITES regulations, the bear’s owner never came to collect according to Fayfa’s management. Not for sale, the animal is merely entertainment for visitors.

Related: Is bear meat safe to eat?

Overheated and without water

“We are working on the paperwork because many people complained about it and we are trying to send it back to its home country,” Manager Mohammed Wahbi told Arab News. “We tried taking care of the bear but it is a wild animal that breaks everything that we install for him. We offer him milk, bread and water every day.”

Contrary to this claim, reporters found the bear overheated, without water, and with nothing but pieces of bread to eat. It is difficult to say what kind of black bear it is. Some reports claim it is a Sun Bear while others suggest it is a Moon Bear, but images of the anxious and emaciated creature are very difficult to decipher.

In either event, the bear is indigenous to tropical climates in Southeast Asia and Northern India, rather than Saudi’s unforgiving desert, and its normal diet is said to consist of fruit and insects.

The Saudi Wildlife Authority claims it has not received any complaints about the pet shop, otherwise they would have investigated the matter to ensure the animals are kept in a healthy environment.

Petition to save the bear in Saudi Arabia

Saudi animal rights activist Abu Huraira has launched a petition to HRH Prince Bandar, Saudi Wildlife Commission and Fayfa, Saudi Arabia to release the bear into the care of Monkey World Rescue Center in the UK.

Abused bear in Saudi Arabia
An abused bear in Saudi Arabia

“Your Highness Prince Bandar bin Saud Al Saud,” the letter begins. “Saudi Arabia has made advances in all directions, one of them is signing the international CITES agreement to protect endangered animals and prohibit their trade.  The international image of Saudi Arabia as a humanitarian country has escalated, and Islamic values of animal welfare are being promoted.”

The letter goes on to say that because of Prince Al Saud’s progress in protecting wild animals, he should be aware of a black bear that was imported illegally and relies on the kindness of strangers for its survival.

” In fact, this is not an animal that is meant to be a house pet, and it can never become a personal pet – it is an exotic [creature] that should be in a zoo and preserved.”

Please sign the petition and pass it on. In 2024 when we look back at the petition it is not clear if the bear was saved.

Solar Impulse Plane Finally Conquers the Atlas Mountains

solar impulse, morocco, solar-power, clean tech, green transportationPilot Andre Borschberg was forced to fly the Solar Impulse back to Rabat when turbulence made it impossible to cross the Atlas Mountains in southern Morocco on June 14, 2012. But yesterday’s second attempt was finally successful, and the team was welcomed in Ouarzazate by a jubilant crowd. The 683 km journey was completed in 17 hours and 20 minutes at an average altitude of 16, 405 feet.

Despite its long wing span, the world’s first sun-powered plane capable of flying day and night weighs the same as a family car, which prohibits it from entering areas that experience high winds and other climatic extremes. Borschberg told the Associated Press while flying near Casablanca that the Solar Impulse will never replace fuel-powered commercial planes, but instead is designed to showcase what is possible with solar energy.

Women, Rio+20 and the Green Future of the Middle East

overpopulation, reproductive rights, women's rights, family planning, sustainable development, Middle East, futureOn Tuesday thousands of Turkish women and activists sent government ministries a petition protesting the bill proposed by the conservative Justice and Development Party (AKP) that would ban abortions not taking place between the fourth and sixth week of pregnancy. Turkish law currently allows abortion until the tenth week.

With dwindling environmental resources and rampant poverty exacerbated by rapidly growing populations, family planning is a crucial environmental issue across the Middle East.

According to a recent report by The Jordan Times almost 25 percent of births in Jordan are unplanned because of a lack of available family planning resources.

Iraq and Yemen have especially high fertility rates, with the potential to double their populations by 2100. Qatar and Bahrain also have steadily growing birthrates.

Protect your heart With bananas

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bananas heart health

What’s sweet, good for you, and comes in completely biodegradable packaging? Bananas, of course.

Don’t let June’s seasonal fruit distract you from picking up a bunch of firm yellow bananas when you’re out shopping. Bananas are in season too, and considering all the easy, no-cook ways to eat them, it’s a pity to pass them by.

Consider, too, what an incredible superfood the familiar banana is. Bananas are rich in potassium, a mineral essential to keep blood pressure stable and your heart beating peacefully. Potassium is an electrolyte, a mineral important for healthy heart function and balance of water in the body. People on diuretics are often advised to eat a banana a day to replace potassium.

Banana’s high fiber content is another heart-health factor, especially combined with cereal fiber and foods high in magnesium. This wonder-fruit’s natural sweetness nourishes beneficial gut bacteria that help metabolize our food and boost calcium absorption. Think of home-made cornflakes with milk and a sliced banana. A breakfast like that helps make strong bones, moves digestion along, and keeps your heart fit. Not to mention that it’s quick to put together and tastes good.

image-home-made-cornflakes

Bananas are an antioxidant powerhouse with their high manganese, vitamin B6 and vitamin C content. A banana a day – together with an eco-conscious, well-rounded diet and exercise – can help keep the body fit to fight off stroke, cardiovascular disease, kidney failure, osteoporosis and macular degeneration. That’s a lot of nutrition in one sweet package.

Buy bananas green to ripen in your kitchen (in summer heat, this might take only a day or two). But don’t store them in the fridge, because they will never ripen again. Ripe bananas may be refrigerated, but make sure to take them out to reach room temperature again before serving.

Here are some ways to get those delicious, life-enhancing bananas into your life:

  • Blend up a morning smoothie with a banana, almond milk, and some honey or several pitted dates. For pizazz, drop two squares of fair-trade, 70% chocolate into the blender jar too.
  • Add sliced bananas, walnuts and honey to any cereal, hot or cold. Or pancakes. Or simple crepes.
  • Banana sandwiches aren’t only for kids. Make one on whole-wheat bread spread with cream cheese and sprinkle cinnamon over the bananas.
  • Try bananas halved horizontally and spread with a good nut butter for a snack.
  • An elegant, 1-minute dessert, good enough for company: a firm, ripe, peeled banana drizzled with date honey or maple syrup, with sliced almonds scattered over it.
  • Green bananas may be boiled in their skins or peeled, sliced and fried, Latin-American style. But they have less antioxidant properties than ripe ones.

More healthy and delicious foods from Green Prophet:

image-purslane

Coke and SodaStream Trash Each Other in Trademark War

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waste management, trademark law, business, Coke, SodaStream, health, environment

After SodaStream erected a cage full of Coke’s trademark trash in South Africa’s OR Tambo International Airport, the 20th such installation built around the world as part of the Israeli company’s marketing campaign, the powerful soda giant pulled out the big guns and hired litigation lawyers Adams & Adams to demand its removal.

Coke’s lawyers claim that SodaStream, a competitor, is making unauthorized use of their trademark in order to promote their own product and that their potentially damaging advertising campaign exists in contravention of the Authority’s Code of Advertising Practice (ASA) and common law. But SodaStream CEO Daniel Birnbaum refuses to back down. “It will take a lot more than a letter from a lawyer to shut me up,” he said – according to Forbes.

Trashing Coke

The SodaStream slogan depicted on the  airport cage full of coke cans and bottles (in addition to other brands) claims that families who buy their renewable product will spare 5,078 bottles and cans every three years. In five years, one family can save 10,657 cans and bottles, according to a sign attached to a cage full of trash in New York City.

By contrast, one SodaStream carbonator makes 60 or 110 liters, equivalent to 170 or 310 aluminum cans, according to the company’s literature. “When empty, the carbonator is refilled and reused, ready to make more fizzy and tasty soda whenever you want it.”

SodaStream also points out that whereas their product turns ordinary tap water into tasty flavored fizzy drinks (as though such a product is now a god-given right), bottled water companies sold 37 billion bottles in the United States in 2005.  “Bottled water wastes fossil fuels and water in production and transport, and when the water is drunk the bottles become a major source of waste,” the company claims.

Airport traffic and environmental awareness

But the campaign in South Africa has Coke worried, and so they should be. Between 2010 and 2011, nearly 19 million passengers traveled through the Johannesburg airport. That kind of exposure combined with increasing environmental awareness could be a lethal combination for Coke, which has established several waste-reduction campaigns in South Africa.

The lawyer’s letter demands that SodaStream not only remove “the cage,” but that they “undertake in writing to never use the company’s trademarks again or infringe on Coke’s advertising goodwill.

Despite having just 1% of Coke’s wealth and prestige, Birnbaum is staying the course.

“If they (Coke) claim to have rights to their garbage, then they should truly own their garbage, and clean it up. … We find it incredulous that Coke is now re-claiming ownership of the billion of bottles and cans that litter the planet with their trademarks… they should be sued in the World Court for all of the damage their garbage is causing, he said.

How green is SodaStream, really?

Meanwhile, it isn’t so clear that SodaStream’s environmental record is as sound as they would have the world believe. Our own editor-in-chief, Karin Kloosterman, says that “Sodastream has been around for years and is using the environment as a marketing tool. Most people I know buy a Sodastream for a friend’s wedding and the said machine goes out of use after the first canister of gas runs out.”

Daniel Birnbaum, invests in Seedo, Cannbit, was former CEO of Sodastream

It seems very unlikely that SodaStream will win this trademark war, but at the very least, the struggle draws attention to an ongoing debate: should beverage manufacturers be held responsible for reclaiming their waste, or is this up to the consumer?

Let us know what you think in the comments below.

More on Soda and the Environment:

Toxic Kosher Coke Banned During Passover

Heart Attacks in Kids for One or More Cokes a Day?

Vimto’s Moldy Soft Drink Recalled in Dubai

Green Prophet Hasn’t Given up on Egypt

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Egypt, revolution, architecture, green news, rooftop farming, solar energy, Green Prophet

Green Prophet is heading into Egypt and we want to hear about all your growing green projects. Now more than ever environmentalists need to stay the course, to lay the groundwork for a better future so that when the powers-to-be (whoever they will be) finally sort out their mess, we will be ready.

Whether it’s rooftop farming, off-grid solar, fair-trade fashion, or earth-friendly architecture you’re interested in, we’re here for you. Contact me (Tafline Laylin, the Managing Editor) directly at [email protected] and I’ll give your project media coverage. Our international readership, which is growing day by day, wants to know that Egyptians are an eco-force to be reckoned with – even if it doesn’t seem that way now.

If you doubt us, check out the American University of Cairo’s Solar Decathlon team. At the height of last year’s revolution, they managed to push through their groundbreaking SLIDES project, gaining recognition as the first country from Africa or the Middle East to participate in the competition. Or hook up with the Hosny brothers at Schaduf, who are slowly helping low-income folk gain control over their lives again.

Despite the numerous challenges facing Egypt, ordinary citizens are making it easier to live a healthier life and to lighten their carbon footprint. The Sekem organic farm is world-renowned, eco-lodges abound and activists fight tirelessly to make their voices heard above the political din. We’re not going to lie: flying into Cairo at this turbulent time doesn’t sound nearly as awesome as snorkeling in quiet, mostly peaceful Oman, but we believe in Egypt.

And we’re ready to fight for a (much more) sustainable future.

TIGI’s Honeycomb Solar Collector Wins Big Euro Award

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tigi honeycomb

Last Wednesday in Munich, Germany, Israeli solar energy company TIGI Ltd. was among the three winners in the solar-thermal category at the Intersolar Europe Exhibition, an annual forum promoting solar technologies since 1991.

Despite the fact that it is located in the Middle East, Israel is often included in Europe’s competitions and showcases, as with the annual Eurovision Song Contest and some regional sporting competitions.

TIGI won the Intersolar Europe award thanks to its “Honycomb Collector,” a new type of solar-thermal technology, pictured above, that increases the efficiency of the collector while minimizing heat loss.

According to the Israel Export Institute, this would make solar energy a sustainable resource even in less sunny climates, such as places in northern Europe.