Home Blog Page 499

Why I Am Fighting Air-Megeddon

0

jezreel valleyA new international airport is slated to be built in Israel’s pastoral Jezreel Valley. Concerned activist Hadas Marcus explains why plans should be scrapped – for people and the birds.

Perhaps you are not aware of a major storm brewing, one that will affect many people living in Israel. Precious time is running out. If we act immediately maybe, just maybe we can halt the construction of an enormous airport in the Megiddo Junction of the Jezreel Valley. With the Hebrew holidays of Yom Kippur past and Sukkot in our midst, many Jews celebrate our ancient ties to ancient Israel. Nowhere are these bonds to the land more intimately felt than in the fertile Jezre’el Valley. Yet this tranquility may soon be eradicated by the constant blast of jet engines.

Choose The Best Olives for Pickling

1

image-raw-olivesSmooth and heavy – a guide to choosing the best raw olives for pickling at home.

There’s nothing like the sensation of running your fingers through a heap of smooth, heavy, fresh olives. And now is the season. Open markets of the Middle East display stands heaped with the green and purple fruit, perfect for taking home to pickle in your own kitchen (as Green Prophet shows you how to pickle olives in this post). It sounds intimidating, but the process really doesn’t take much work, just a fair amount of time waiting for things to happen by themselves. If you live in Israel or anywhere in the Mediterranean, you may find good raw olives in one of these open-air markets.

So how to pick the best olives? To start with, choose olives that look and feel smooth and heavy. Olives are susceptible to a fungus that’s first visible at the stem end, so check a handful or two before committing yourself to buying. Stir the heap with a finger and notice if there are many rotten or severely bruised olives. If so, move on to the next vendor.

If you’re lucky enough to live where wild olive trees flourish – usually on abandoned land that was farmed long ago – you’ll be able to harvest organic fruit. Otherwise you must ask the vendor if they are sprayed.

foraged olives in Jaffa, bt Karin Kloosterman
Foraged black and green olives in Jaffa by Karin Kloosterman.

If you have no choice but to buy non-organic, console yourself with the fact that the olives will soak in fresh water changed daily for at least a week, if not two, so that much of the pesticide will have been washed out. Brining further penetrates their flesh and hopefully leaches out even more undesirables.

Related: these store bought black olives are dyed with chemicals

There are hundreds of varieties, but most markets offer only two or three, at different stages of maturity.  Green olives are immature. It may take as long as two weeks for them to yield their bitterness, and a month (or more) until the brine has fermented them into tastiness. As immature olives ripen, their skin turns reddish-purple. These demand less soaking and brining time. Black olives are mature and ready to eat soonest.  A batch is ready to eat when its taste suits you – it’s as simple as that.

Experiment with a couple pounds or a kilo of olives in each stage of maturity, or with two different types. Make a note of which you liked best for next year. If you and your family love olives, I can guarantee that no matter how many kilos you pickle, they’ll be gone fast, and you’ll wish you had made more.

More about the noble olive here on Green Prophet:

Photo of raw green olives at Shuk Ramleh, Israel, by Miriam Kresh.

Middle East Meat Consumption Rises With World Demand

2

feed lot cattle texasRising meat demand, rising risks in the Middle East: antibiotics, meat glue and global warming.

World meat consumption is on the rise and this is despite increase awareness of the health risks of eating refrozen meat sold as “freshly cut”, and the dangers of eating an enzyme called transglutaminase otherwise known as “meat glue”. A recent study made by the Worldwatch Institute’s Nourishing the Planet project for Vital Signs Online, has found that world wide per-capita meat consumption increased from  41.3 kg in 2009 to 41.9 kg in 2010 – about half a kilo more per year. Taking all factors into account, including people living on the edge of starvation in the developing world, compared to those living in the industrial world, there is a big discrepancy between the 32 kg per year average for people living in the developing world and an average of 80 kg for those in the industrial world.

Actually, We Can Feed 10 Billion People. Here’s How

3

agriculture, land grabs, organic agriculture, slow food movement, sustainable agriculture, populationEven though it seems like the earth couldn’t possibly handle 10 billion people, an article published in Nature shows that it is possible to feed them all. Read on for five handy tips.

So, all this worrying about the burgeoning population was for nought? We don’t need to be concerned that we are rapidly reaching a population of 7 billion and by the end of the century, we are likely to hit the 10 billion mark? Well, not exactly. Yes, Nature published a handy guide to increasing agricultural yields (hat tip to Nona Willis Aroniwitz from GOOD for breaking it down), but no, it won’t be easy. Feeding 10 billion people can be done, except it will require political will, cooperation, and even a bit of Jobsian self-discipline and self-sacrifice. Step on in for the most succinct five solutions to ending hunger we have ever seen.

Palestinian Women Breaking Gender Stereotypes in Environmental Activism

1

Kayan Feminist OrganizationWhile the political debate on the future of a Palestinian state fails to make any progress towards peace, local grass root initiatives, led by the overlooked Arab women, are quietly making a difference on the ground.

The story of “Kayan” an Arabic word for ”being” offers inspiration and insight on a small but growing movement that is mobilizing women in the region to intervene and take action to restore their environment.

Kayan Feminist Organization was set up 13 years ago by a group of Arab Palestinian women activists who wanted to create a foundation for Palestinian women rights in Israel. Their small office, where five full time staff and two intern volunteers are based, is found in a building in Haifa that is also home to three other women NGO organizations, two Arab and two Jewish.

With support from American and European foundations and women volunteers, their legal and community development teams have been able to advance the status of Arab women in Israel through different programmes.

Some of these include: The Childcare Workers Program (2002-2004) which addresses the violation of female childcare workers’ rights in Arab villages and towns in Israel, the Women Demand Mobility Program (2004-2008) where Kayan was able to facilitate a grassroots campaign that brings public transportation to Israel’s Arab towns and villages, and the Arabic Leaflet on the Law against Domestic Violence (2007).

According to Rafa Anabtawi, the dynamic Community Work Department Coordinator at Kayan, “in the community department, our goal is to remove the patriarchal society assumption, helping women think of themselves as capable of taking on additional roles besides those of mothers and wives and facilitating the establishment of grass root leadership organizations that can sustain themselves”. With the majority of members unemployed and with only basic school level education, Kayan acts as a valuable resource to organize projects, providing network opportunities and in some cases securing the small funds necessary to get the organization started.

The foundation of the Kayan’s program is “Jusur (meaning bridges in Arabic), a framework whereby women are provided with professional consulting, leadership training, and capacity building tools.

An offshoot of Jusur, the Jusur Forum of Arab leadership, helps define common interest and needs and strengthens communication between over 40 women leaders from more than 20 villages and cities throughout Israel. The vision of this forum is to empower women to take on opportunities that influence the existing social and political structure.  The approach is therefore long-term and has resulted in the launch of several grass root initiatives including the first group of Arab women in Israel addressing environmental sustainability.

It all started three years ago in the village of Mghar, an area of 20,000 inhabitants which sits on a hill surrounded by olive groves and farm land. Despite the proximity to Lake Tiberias, Mghar’s residents do not have access to enough water and water shortage is exacerbated by mounting waste problem. When asked why she is so passionate about this issue, village leader Aziza Quwaiqiz-Muadi notes that the need to act comes from a “feeling that the environment should belong to me.”

Rafa adds: “Initially the leaders of this project faced many challenges. The environment is in general not seen as an issue that women should get involved in, but a male or political issue. The leaders for this initiative were able to rally support from the women in the village by explaining the personal relevance of the environmental problems, including the use of water, raising kids to be more environmentally educated, waste management. It is part of our struggle to change the idea that there are women issues. Every issue can be a women issue and women can make a difference like men.”

The programme addressed the environment at three levels. First, through educational campaigns to raise awareness about nature conservancy and environmental issues. Following that they got children involved by targeting schools and teaching children and their parents about the environmental issues at stake and their role in proper water conservation.  Finally, they connected with the local council in Mghar focusing on the issue of access to clean water.

Rafah adds that here again they faced gender-stereotype difficulties. The local authorities could not see the connection between the environmental problem and women and had no confidence in their capabilities.

Another pilot project currently taking place by the now-independent Women and Environment Association is the “Roundabout Project.” The leaders of Mghar have recently obtained local authority approval to help turn the village landmark into a green zone using local material and sustainable practices making their efforts more visible to all.

Although Kayan’s immediate result lies in empowering the Arab women minority at a grass root level, the movement reveals the potential role of women in community building, reconciliation and peace building. By focusing on the environment, a common theme, women in this conflict-ridden region can find an opportunity to make a difference and eventually be heard.

For some, the environment might seem less of a priority given the current political landscape but with the rapid environmental deterioration of the region’s natural resources, this may no longer be a valid argument.  When asked “why nature?”, Elana Rozenman, an Israeli female environmental activist  replied, “In a few years, we are going to end up in such a drought in this region that none of the rest of the conflict is going to matter”.

More women-led environmental initiatives:

Interview with Naqa’a: Saudi Women Fighting for the Environment

The Rising Voices of Arab Women

Eco-Lessons To Empower Women in Abu Dhabi

Interview with Andrew Sell, Founder of Hipcycle

0

"float rope mat"Hipcycle, a new online marketplace for upcycled products, shows mainstreamers that upcycling can be hip.

Shopping local and sustainable is always best, but when you can’t find locally made, sustainably made, or upcycled products around – sometimes the internet is the best way to go.  Online marketplaces such as Etsy, Mideast ecostore Ekotribe, or the Yiuco Marketplace for strictly handmade upcycled, recycled or reused products are all great, but we have not yet seen an online store devoted strictly to upcycled products.  Until a couple weeks ago, when Hipcycle launched its online upcycled store.  Hipcycle currently features almost 300 stylish, affordable upcycled products (check out some of them in the photos below) with the goal of bringing beautiful, useful and eco-friendly products to mainstream consumers.

Turkish Village Goes Off The Grid With A Wind Turbine

1

turkey wind energy“They’re blazing a new path in Turkey” reads the headline over this photo of Akbıyık villagers standing in front of their new wind turbine.

The lights in Akbıyık went out one and a half years ago, when the Turkish Electricity Distribution Company cut off the village’s electricity because of outstanding utility bills that amounted to TRY 33,000 ($18,000). At that point, the villagers faced a choice: pay off the debt and get back on the national power grid, or find a new energy source that they could harness and control on their own.

They chose to stay off the grid and switch to wind power, securing their energy future and making them one of the greenest villages in Turkey.

Eden Vardy Plants a Sustainable T.R.E.E. in Aspen

1

"aspen colorado permaculture"A sustainable T.R.E.E. grows in Aspen, where children learn about real food.

As a child, Israeli-born Eden Vardy wanted to know where his food came from.  And since he grew up in Aspen, Colorado, his food generally came from a supermarket and was probably transported from far away.  As he grew older and learned more about food, the locavore movement, and the environmental benefits of eating local food, he was dismayed to learn about the absence of eco-minded food instruction in Aspen.  After completing his studies (which included a Green Apprenticeship at Kibbutz Lotan in Israel), Vardy decided to do something to educate kids about real food back in his hometown and started Aspen T.R.E.E.

T.R.E.E. stands for “together regenerating the environment through education” and has many programs that try to achieve that goal.

The Green Sheikh: Love Your Children and They Will Love the Planet

1

environmental degradation, environmental education, the green sheikh,

For this month’s column, the Green Sheikh suggests that giving children a sound, stable, kind upbringing in turn cultivates their relationship to nature.

When we are talking about environmental domains, who among us would not be happy to have his body in natural harmony? This naturalness creates self-esteem and satisfaction and generates in each person ideas that may be useful during more depressing periods. On the other hand, echoes can be seen in a person’s behavior, sometimes making him hostile or lonely, when that body is out of harmony. 

Upcycling soup cans into forts and shelter

0
recycled materials, green design, eco-design, sustainable design, israel
A nest made out of soup cans. A great way to upcycle.

We are big fans of reusing perfectly good materials like waste glass, which can be turned into beautiful glasses, and this incredible pavilion in Bat Yam, Israel is a shining example of just how creative it is possible to get. Many Israeli artists love to recycle ordinary objects into beautiful, magical art.

Ecco Ukka turns scraps of material into enviable jewelry pieces, as does Yael Uriely, but this is the first time we have seen the country’s ubiquitous soup cans turned into a temporary shelter.

The Sukkot “environment” holiday happens in October… perhaps our Jewish readers will be inspired to use something similar in their Sukkah huts? Come on in to find out why the artists chose tin cans for the Bat-Yam International Biennale of landscape urbanism in 2008, and why these principles are timeless.

The soup kitchen and the soup can house?

recycled materials, green design, eco-design, sustainable design, israel
Kids love forts, especially those made with unique materials and a story

The folks over at Recycle Art quote Lihi, Roee and Galit – the artists who developed the Soup Can Pavilion:

“The combination of “hospitality” and “public space” implies an inner tension. How can people identify with public space and relate to it as if it were their own living rooms?

“We approach this question by fostering the participation of residents and visitors in the shaping of their environment, thus leaving their mark and presence on the space. The location we chose was an unoccupied lot where the municipality has planted a grove of palm trees, while the lot remains “on hold” for a construction project some time in the future. The palm trees bestow an ambience of fantasy we chose to further emphasize by using shiny tin cans as building blocks; city conservation using a familiar household material in a new context.

“A sense of the exotic and a choice of no-man’s-land, practically transparent to street traffic, sheds a new and different light on the space and reveals its latent potential. After sundown, pavilion visitors will be exposed to the street, the same way urban interiors are revealed for viewing every evening.”

recycled materials, green design, eco-design, sustainable design, israel

If it looks like a lot of work to create a structure of this kind, look again. It’s actually very simple. The hollowed-out cans are linked together and held upright by a system of steel rods. Plenty of light penetrates the entire structure, ensuring that there isn’t too much solar gain. The last thing anyone needs in Israel is a magnet for more heat.

I would be concerned though about climbing kids getting stuck or cut by the cans. Some ideas are best tried as a pilot and maybe left at that.

This is not the first time that the somewhat beleaguered satellite city of Bat Yam has been chosen for an urban renewal project. Not long ago, 72 Hour Urban Action took over with a fast paced urban design project designed to breathe new life into the city.

Now, where to find the cans. Looks like you could find some nearby a falafel or hummus restaurant.

More Recycled Ideas on Green Prophet:

Ecco Ukka Weaves Love, Magic and Recycled Materials into Fabric Jewelry

Lebanese Designer Ziad Ghanem Creates Recycled Couture

Lebanese Man Turns Garbage into Beautiful Glasses

Book Review: ‘The Ethical Tragedy of Climate Change’ by Stephen Gardiner

ethical tragedy climate change coverStephen Gardiner argues that climate change is a combination of the ‘prisoners dilemma’ and ‘tragedy of the commons.’

Stephen M. Gardiner regards climate change more or less as an ethical failure on the part of the human race, something that implicates our institutions’ moral and political theories alongside ourselves as supposedly moral beings.

He employs the well known philosophical perspectives the ‘prisoners dilemma’ and the ‘tragedy of the commons’ to support his argument, demonstrating the idea that while it is individually rational to not to cooperate with attempts to curtail climate change, such a stance simultaneously means that we all suffer as a result.

The Sukkah and The Clouds of Glory

2

image-clouds-of-gloryEver wonder how the ancient Jews lived during their 40 years of wandering in the desert?

When the Jews left Egypt, God commanded that they wander in the desert until the original slave generation had died out, leaving mature younger people with the free man’s mentality. Making and breaking camp often, circling the arid Sinai desert with only an occasional interruption from fractious Philistines, how did that vast community survive?

Cyprus, Israel and Turkey Near “High Noon” Standoff Over Med’s Natural Gas

11

ErdoganTurkish PM Erdogan at the UN: His way or no way

There’s a lot more for southern Cyprus to be alarmed about these days concerning its commitment to explore for natural gas offshore. First of all, there is the environmental factor dealing with undersea drilling off Cyprus, which could be damaging for an island so dependent on industries like tourism. There is also the acute water shortage issue, making Greek Cyprus heavily dependent on desalination for fresh water supplies.

But the most critical, as well as most dangerous problem that southern Cyprus may now be facing is an increasing belligerency from Turkey, which controls one third of this island; and whose proxy government there, the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) is telling the Greek Cypriots that it could become “very uncomfortable”  for them if they go ahead and do the drilling without the TRNC being able to participate as well.

Sukkot, the Jewish Environment Holiday

1

sukkot cardThis week marks the Jewish holiday of Sukkot. Jews will build small huts and live in them for a week.

Sukkot, also known as the Feast of Tabernacles, couldn’t come at a better time than now. After the heaviness of Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement), Sukkot joins Passover and Shavuot as a Jewish holiday which celebrates agriculture and is known as Z’man Simchateinu, the season of our rejoicing. It is the most festive of all the holidays and lasts for seven days and has a direct link to the environment.

Iranian Artists Fight Smog with the Tehran Monoxide Project

1

eco-art, iran, tehran monoxide project, pollution, NRDC, Naomi Klein, David de RothschildIranian environmental activists and artists are getting bolder. Recently, “tree huggers” planted these stumps on a street in the city of Kerman to protest against deforestation.

Sometimes environmental activists are visionary people who take enormous personal risks. Ashley Fruno from PETA was arrested for parading around Jordan covered in nothing but lettuce. Bill McKibben and hundreds of other activists in the United States wanted to get arrested to draw attention to the Keystone XL Pipeline, and an Iranian woman was recently tortured for protesting the degradation of Lake Orumiyeh – a terrible incident that screams: activism will not go unpunished.

But then there are artists and actors. While Iranian “tree huggers” were busy planting tree stumps in Kerman to draw attention to deforestation, a different kind of protest was unveiled at a school in Tehran. Concerned about Iran’s dubious distinction of having the most polluted cities in the world, several artists and an actor launched the Tehran Monoxide Project art exhibit.