
(Modern-day Israelites “glean” at a Tel Aviv market to help feed African refugees in Israel.)
Chapter 25 of the biblical Book of Leviticus relates how God instructed the Children of Israel on how to make of most out of the land when growing crops, and how to care for livestock, and for servants who worked on the land.
These instructions, or laws as many theologians refer to them, were given to a people who were wandering in the wilderness of Sinai – or Arabia, depending on which interpretation one wants to follow – for 40 years, and in conditions too harsh to do much farming – except in some locations such as the Oasis of Paran (now known a Firan).
But in reality, these laws were meant to be followed not just during their wandering, but for centuries – millennium to follow, make a lot of sense, especially from an environmental and hygienic standpoint.
Green building is becoming a fad in Arab countries. We’ve all probably heard of the world’s first c






Global warming and climate change, which we know is