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Man Recovered From Parkinson’s Uses Holistic Regimen

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In 1995, John Coleman was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease and suffered from the loss of speech and the inability to walk 5 meters without assistance. Severely dissatisfied with western medical treatment and prognosis, John decided to pursue other methods, and with the aid of homeopathy, alternative therapies, counseling, meditation and spiritual development, he was completely symptom-free within three and a half years…

stop_parkin_book John is a member of the Australian Naturopathic Practitioners Association and has written a book called, Stop Parkin’ and Start Livin’, a do-it-yourself book on reversing the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease. He carefully avoids the word cure, however:

“I believe we will never find a single cure for any disease. There is no cure for any disease. There are therapies, in both western medicine and complementary medicine, that assist people to recover their health.”

He named his Web site, as well as his naturopathic practice, Return To Stillness. He focuses on helping people find their individual road to complete health, whether from Parkinson’s disease or other affliction. John’s story is covered in Mind, Body & Soul.

 

Girl and Her Parrots Flee Together as Refugees

A young Tamil girl fled to India with thousands of others, leaving everything behind. Everything except her two affectionate parrots. Indian officials finagled legal entry for the birds and welcomed the relief they provided from the normally tense job of screening refugees for terrorist ties. The incredible journey of the refugee parrots, picture and story, featured on BBC.

77,000 Acres of Pristine Forest Purchased for Protection in Guatemala and Belize

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ocelot One of the largest and most intact privately owned forest lands in Guatemala is now protected from development.

The Nature Conservancy purchased two pristine holdings totaling 77,000 acres in the heart of the Maya Biosphere Reserve last month. The two parcels are in middle of the 500,000-acre Sierra Del Lacandon National Park, home to several endangered species such as puma, jaguar, tapir, anteater, howler monkey, ocelot, scarlet macaw and the Moreletti crocodile, which is unique to this region of Central America…

While Sierra Del Lacandon was declared a national park in 1990, these two pieces of land were owned by private landowners and remained privately held. The two properties, called “Naranjitos I and II,” are some of the most biologically diverse tracts of rainforest in Guatemala. They also contain several Mayan ruins and are home to cenotes — water-filled limestone sink holes that provide unique habitat for species found no where else in the world. The Park encompasses large stands of broad leaf subtropical rainforest, unique geological formations, freshwater lakes, mountain ranges and low-lying savanna plains.

“Sierra Del Lacandon is extremely rich in biodiversity,” said Steve McCormick, president of The Nature Conservancy. “It is important that the Conservancy, working with its local partner, was able to protect these two rich pieces of land for future generations.”

The $2.4 million agreement was reached by The Nature Conservancy and its local partner Fundación Defensores de la Naturaleza. Fundación Defensores de la Naturaleza will own and manage the land and the Conservancy will assist in a stewardship role. Fundación Defensores de la Naturaleza currently manages four national parks in Guatemala.

“The conservation of natural resources and cultural heritage is an obligation to us all,” said Javier Marquez, the director of Sierra Del Lacandón National Park for Fundación Defensores de la Naturaleza. “We must continue strengthening the community-based management of the park so that local communities are the principal actors in the protection of their natural resources.”

The Nature Conservancy has helped to conserve biodiversity in Guatemala for the past 16 years. During this time, the Conservancy worked closely with local organizations and in collaboration with communities and the national government.

The park is located within the Maya Forest, a 13.3 million-acre network of pristine forest shared by Mexico, Guatemala and Belize, home to the most significant big cat population in North America, and the largest jaguar habitat outside of the Amazon.

The Maya Biosphere Reserve in Guatemala is approximately 5.2 million acres large. It is a critical centerpiece for maintaining the connectivity of the Maya Forest as well as providing habitat for vast ranges of biodiversity. The Reserve covers a large area once inhabited by the ancient Maya and contains remains of at least 175 Mayan cities. Today, its cultural heritage is a major attraction for tourists and its ecological wealth provides timber and non-timber products that support the local communities.

Guns for Bikes Program in Africa Expanding

This program should be administered throughout the world! … Gunmen in the Democratic Republic of Congo are given bicycles in exchange for their weapons. Ngoy Mulunda, a pastor in the south-eastern Katanga region, says he has been given some 6,500 weapons in the past year, which he has destroyed. (BBC) I want to hear more about this!

Review: Peaceful Warrior Teaches There are No Ordinary Moments

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peacefulwarriorREVIEW

Peaceful Warrior is a must-see new movie staring Nick Nolte, Scott Mechlowicz and Amy Smart opening in a range of cities this weekend.

It’s based on Dan Millman’s popular book, Way of the Peaceful Warrior, a true story about a stellar athlete whose body is crushed by an accident. He meets a spiritual teacher in an unlikely setting and learns how to win happiness and success once again. Millman, a world champion athlete himself, reminds us of life’s bigger picture and our place and power in it….

Conservationists Rejoice at Return of Burrowing Owl

After being thought to have disappeared in Manitoba altogether, the burrowing owl has once again been found inhabiting the province’s grasslands. (The Conscious Earth)

Man Dives into Burning House and Rescues Woman

"A UK man who risked his life to save a woman from a blazing flat has been chosen for a top bravery award." Many people every year save neighbors from fire. Here is just one example. Often they choose not to call themselves a hero, instead claiming it was a natural act that they’d gladly do again. We are all connected at heart and act to save others as if they were ourselves.

He rushed to the building, kicked the front door down and ran up the stairs, choking back the smoke … "There was an air pocket of about 14 inches on the floor so I crawled on my belly to check the rooms. I just kept shouting: ‘Is there anyone there?‘ " (The Lynn News)

UNICEF Launches $150M Recovery Plan Restoring Schools, Clinics Lost in Pakistan Quake

UNICEF will construct 500 permanent schools and some 70 permanent rural health centres in northern Pakistan, the UN Children’s Fund said on Wednesday, where upwards of 10,000 schools and three-quarters of the area’s health facilities were damaged or destroyed in last year’s devastating earthquake. . .

Pearl Jam Pledges $100,000 to Counter CO2 Effects of Tour

In an effort to mitigate their own carbon emissions from day-to-day operations of their 2006 tour, while raising the public’s carbon consciousness, Pearl Jam announced the launch of their 2006 Carbon Portfolio Strategy.

Through this strategy, the band will donate a total of $100,000 to nine organizations doing innovative work around climate change, renewable energy and the environment…

The band’s Web site features an Activism page that promotes green awareness.

“Pearl Jam has made efforts to aid environmental causes before, including donating money to preserve a Madagascar rain forest as amends for damage wrought by their last tour… This time, the band wanted to help out closer to home, guitarist Stone Gossard said. Six of the nine organizations receiving donations are based in the Pacific Northwest, and four are in Washington state.”

(Seattle P-I features a story with interviews)

Photo: CC Flickr by Alive87

New Power Plants To Run On Chicken Droppings

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MN poultry power plantPower plants that burn chicken droppings and turkey leftovers are sure to be welcome in areas like Maryland’s Eastern Shore and North Carolina where disposal of poultry waste is either a foul smelling procedure, when it is "land spread," or an expensive one when the company needs to truck it away. Plans are underway in both these regions for new biomass power plants that will burn the poultry waste while creating usable byproducts and no extra carbon emissions to add to Global Warming…

Florida Crime Rate Lowest in 30 Years

Florida’s crime rate has dropped to its lowest level in more than 30 years. 2005 produced a 4 percent drop in overall crime rate, down for the 14th straight year.

New Agreement Governing High-Seas Fishing in Indian Ocean

Faced with a marked increase in fishing on the high seas, six countries and the EU have signed an agreement covering a vast area of the South Indian Ocean in what a United Nations official has hailed a major step forward in conservation and sustainable fishing. The Comoros, France, Kenya, Mozambique, New Zealand and Seychelles and the EU produced the accord, the South Indian Ocean Fisheries Agreement, following two days of talks last week. It cover areas of the high seas where no such organization or arrangement currently exists…

Low-Income French Families Connected to Internet

France will begin later this year to offer low-income families a computer and an internet connection for only 1 euro a day to help undo the digital divide and provide unprecedented opportunity. (AP)

Silk Could Help Repair Nerves

UK researchers have used strands of silk-like fiber to create a scaffold that prompted nerve cells to grow. The hope is that the silk will encourage cell re-growth across severed nerves, possibly even in damaged spinal cords. The team has tested the silk in tissue culture and in animals – and in both cases the results had been good. (BBC with photo)

At Last, Microsoft to Play Well With Others

Microsoft will provide, free of charge, a translator that will allow Word users to convert files into the "open document format", a standard that can be read by other software, even if it is open source. Finally, we will be able to communicate without the risk of sending someone a page of weird characters that mean nothing… (CS Monitor)

Google is Income-Booster for Global Poor

Google’s AdSense program, which places relevant ads on blog and webites and makes them relatively little money, is putting significant funds into the pockets of poorer people who have ventured onto the internet. (Foreign Policy)

Vitamin Angels Deliver Nutritional Shakes in Earthquake Relief

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vitaminangelShaklee Corporation, the number one natural nutrition company in the U.S., today announced the donation of nearly $600,000 worth of high-protein nutrition drinks — enough for 222,000 servings — to Vitamin Angel’s Indonesian Earthquake Relief Effort for devastated villagers in the Jogyakarta region. Thousands will now receive balanced, nutritious meals thanks to Shaklee’s donation and Vitamin Angel’s unique mission.

The Vitamin Angel Alliance has been addressing the enormous problem of malnutrition around the world since 1994. In 2005 it shipped over 100 million supplements with a wholesale value of $6.1 million to institutions and organizations in over 40 different countries.

The nonprofit Alliance has served Pakistanis after the October earthquake, the Guatemalans left homeless in Hurricane Stan, children in Niger whose parents are dealing with famine there, and now the people in Indonesia. Vitamin Angel helped Americans too, during the Katrina Relief effort, when it distributed more than 18 million vitamin supplements for storm victims. In the past few years, over 37.6 million nutritional supplements have boosted health for people around the planet.

Even discounting disasters, one quarter of the world’s people are chronically undernourished and the absence of adequate levels of essential vitamins and minerals leaves millions susceptible to diseases and death. Medicines often don’t work on the human body that is nutrient-deficient.

Millions of children go blind each year due to vitamin A deficiencies. In a program sponsored by Johnson and Johnson, Vitamin Angel has distributed high-dose vitamin A capsules (and anti-worming tablets) to a million nursing mothers and children in India at a cost of only five cents per child per year, for three years now.

Vitamin Angels may be literally saving the next generation of Tibetans by distributing two million children’s multi-vitamins each month to some of the poorest children in the world.

Founder Howard Schiffer had been working in the natural products and vitamin industry for 14 years when he was asked in 1994 to help provide vitamins to the migrant workers who fell victim to the Northridge, California earthquake. An idea lit up in his mind and he founded the Vitamin Angel. He began tapping his contacts with manufacturers and created a willing Alliance. Wild Oats has joined the cause recently, alongside Rainbow Lite, UNFI, Tishcom, and the NOW Health Group. Make a donation online.

World’s First Anti-Suicide Bomber Dog

K9 magazine reports the electronics firm Samsung has trained, and donated to UK troops in Iraq, the world’s first anti-suicide bomber dog. The three-year-old Labrador was trained in Korea to "detect the specific explosive substances that are used in self-detonating bombs used by suicide bombers." If there could be a whole army of these dogs trained and deployed throughout the Middle East, suicide bombings might become a thing of the past. (K9 )

Gaza Children Flown to Israeli Hospital

Larry Rich sheds some positive light on relations in the Middle East that are hidden from the world’s media. Israeli technology, medical expertise, and human kindness are available and offered to Palestinians in need. He is the Director of Development & International Public Relations for the Emek Medical Center in Israel. . .

I went to our Pediatric ICU at the Emek Medical Center in Afula in search of M.Z. from Gaza. I heard that his baby daughter was flown here receiving special care using a machine that temporarily takes over the functioning of the heart and lungs. Our mobile team with specialized machine, the ECMO, (Extra Corporeal Membrane Oxygenation) is the only of its kind in Israel.

I found M.Z. sitting alone outside on the other side of the building, smoking and looking dazed. Thus our conversation began. After introducing myself and shaking his hand, I asked about his daughter. “She’s only one year and eight months old … and the only one of my eight children who looks like me.” His eyes were red, tired, and reflected great pain.

M.Z. told me how the little girl one day could not breathe and how he rushed her, without incident, from Gaza to Soroka Hospital in Beersheva. After several days there her condition rapidly and seriously deteriorated and that’s when our team flew in.

M.Z. was angry at the fateful turn of events that had befallen his daughter and could only refer to Allah (God) for mercy. He was grateful that our people were doing everything possible to save his child. We began discussing politics and the direction our two peoples were heading. There we were — a Jewish grandfather (me) and a Muslim father of a gravely ill child from Gaza — talking like old friends, almost like family. The mere fact that he was here while our physicians fought to save the life of his little girl is noteworthy these days. Did we solve anything? Politically, certainly not … medically, we are hoping for the best

That first encounter with M.Z. was on a Thursday. The following Sunday I learned from the attending physician, Dr. Merzel, that there was no change in the little girl’s condition. Her name? Hadil.

I again walked across the hospital campus to find her father and this time I found him in the simple room where parents of critically ill children could sleep. The Pediatric ICU is not a happy place and he was not a happy man. The gravity of Hadil’s condition was etched in his face as he murmured over and over, “alhamdulillah”(praise be to God).

In Hebrew we say, “Baruch Hashem” and he flipped between the two languages. We greeted each other with a sincere Middle Eastern hug and kisses on the cheek. M.Z. was alone and it was important to me, in the name of humanity and of my people, to provide him with some personalized contact. “Come, my friend, let me buy you some coffee, something to eat and we’ll go to my office. You need a change of scenery.”

WE ATE AND DRANK TOGETHER
, sitting on opposite sides of my desk and once again spoke as if we had known each other for years. So natural, so right. I then accompanied him back to the ICU where he could be near his daughter. When I left him, we both glanced skywards and opened our hands, acknowledging that Hadil’s fate rested with Allah, God or whatever name we mortals choose to give our Creator.

The next morning Dr. Merzel informed me that Hadil’s condition was extremely grave and that she was not responding. The end was near. With a heavy heart, I walked over to find M.Z. He was not there so I looked into the room to see his daughter, jaundiced, so very small and vulnerable, attached to the ECMO that pumped blood and oxygen through her failing body.

A moment later, M.Z. entered the hallway with his wife who had been rushed here from Gaza, accompanied by his cousin. She could not bring herself to turn the corner to look upon her daughter … to say goodbye. I respectfully stood well off to the side, as did the nurses, as M.Z. encouraged her forward. Tragedy is any parent having to experience such a moment in their lives.

Later, in the hallway, M.Z. introduced me to his wife and cousin. I held her hand between my own and we looked into one another’s eyes. Nothing needed to be said.

Later that afternoon as I was leaving to return home, M.Z. and his cousin stopped me with urgency on their faces. “Please”, pleaded M.Z. “My cousin and wife were only given permission by the authorities to enter Israel for twelve hours. They want to stay with me tonight because the end of Hadil is very near. Can you help us?”

What a macabre situation I was faced with — not really knowing how to attain the permission they needed. I immediately contacted the head of our security who then put me in touch with a uniformed policeman, Reuven, who was stationed permanently at the hospital.

SO BEGAN A MYRIAD OF TELEPHONE CALLS
to first the central police authority and then to the army who was ultimately responsible for any Palestinian entering Israel from either Gaza or the West Bank. The hours were ticking by. If we did not succeed in getting to the right person, then the cousin and wife, when attempting to cross back into Gaza, would be arrested and interrogated as to their whereabouts beyond the time that was allotted them. Such a scenario was incomprehensible to me considering the nightmare they were living.

We had run smack into the steel reinforced concrete wall of military bureaucracy. It was then late in the afternoon and I realized that I was in deep water far over my head. I suggested to the cousin that he take a taxi back to Gaza to avoid his being unjustifiably arrested and that we would find a solution for the mother of little Hadil. They all agreed.

M.Z. later remembered the name of the Palestinian liaison officer at the governmental level in Gaza who helped negotiate matters of extenuating circumstances — but he did not have his phone number. He tried calling a relative in Gaza who might have that number, but his mobile phone could not make the necessary connection. I took him to our administration office where the only international phone line was located. We were successful in finding his relative and in getting that final phone number.

I spoke with the liaison officer who was familiar with the story and he thanked me for intervening on behalf of the family. He also said that he would personally handle the contacts with his Israeli counterpart to guarantee the safe passage of the family when they returned to Gaza. I handed the phone to M.Z. who spoke and shed tears as he thanked the man for his help.

The next day at 9:40 AM, Hadil passed away. With a heavy heart, I walked over to face the bereaved parents. The three of us sat quietly together in their room, as the mother — dazed and broken — mumbled repeatedly: “alhamdulillah, alhamdulillah”. M.Z. cried as we parted with a long hug and kisses on both cheeks. We stared long, hard into each other’s eyes and just nodded.

Our hospital arranged for an ambulance from Gaza to come and take M.Z., his wife, and the body of Hadil back home.

This sad story graphically illustrates a reality of life here that is hidden from the world’s media. Israeli technology, medical expertise, and human kindness are available to Palestinians in need. We were not able to save little Hadil, but we tried.

Larry Rich is the Director of Development & International Public Relations at the Emek Medical Center in Israel, and the author of Voices From Armageddon.

This article is distributed by the Common Ground News Service (CGNews)
First published in Israel21c, June 25, 2006.
Reprinted with permission

Muslims Have Been Integral to Britain Over the Centuries

(CGNews) – The British Foreign and Commonwealth Office Minister is often surprised when he hears people talking as if Britain’s encounter with Islam and the Muslim world is something new, stretching back a mere few years. The truth is that Muslims have been an integral part of Britain and of our way of life, at home and abroad, for centuries. Read Lord Triesman’s essay below:

– David Billings

The British Museum in London contains an 8th century gold coin minted by King Offa of Mercia with Arabic text on both sides. No one really knows why Offa would have inscribed a coin with Arabic text, but it does represent one of the earliest known connections between Britain and the Islamic world.

Contacts continued between an advanced and civilized Islamic civilization and a backward and impoverished West throughout the Middle Ages, with Europe and Britain being the main benefactors, inheriting a rich scientific and philosophic tradition, universities, advances in medicine, mathematics and countless other benefits, which triggered the Renaissance and allowed Europe to slowly emerge from the Dark Ages.

Over the last two centuries, Muslims have settled in the UK in increasing numbers, to the point where there are an estimated two million Muslims in the UK today. The first purpose-built mosque opened in Woking in 1889 and in 1940 the government donated £100,000 towards the building of the first mosque in London –now the Regents Park Mosque — in recognition of the bravery and courage of Muslim soldiers who fought and died for Britain in World War I. Today there are over 1,200 mosques across the UK and Islam is by far the second religion in the UK in terms of following.

TODAY, BRITAIN’S MUSLIMS ARE CENTRAL to our political, business and social life. There is an increasing number of Muslims in the armed forces, in the police and in parliament. For example, there are four Muslim MPs, five Muslim members of the House of Lords, one Muslim MEP (Member of European Parliament) and over 200 Muslim councillors. They are there, in positions of great influence, because of their skills, their talent and their commitment to creating a better and fairer society for everyone.

British Muslims, of course, enjoy the benefits of education, healthcare, democracy, freedom of religious expression, gender equality, tolerance and opportunity like everyone else in the UK. The government’s policy is to help people of non-British origin to integrate into our society, while encouraging them to maintain their cultural identities if they so wish. Britain is a better, more interesting and richer place because of this diversity and to talk of “British culture” these days is meaningless without referring to the broad melting pot of cultural and ethnic influences of which our society consists.

That is why it is so tragic that there are people who want to exploit our differences in order to create religious and ethnic hatred. The fact that the London bombings last year did not lead to a widespread pattern of reprisals and counter-reprisals is a testament to the solidarity and mutual respect within our society. However, this doesn’t mean that there aren’t occasional difficulties in inter-community relations; it is all too easy for misunderstanding and antipathy to develop. We must continue to work tirelessly to minimise such unnecessary tensions and ensure that the tiny minority of racists and extremists does not get a foothold.

There are still difficulties faced by Muslims in the UK. For example, they are statistically more likely to live in the poorer areas throughout the country. However, the government is expanding its efforts across government departments to improve opportunity and tackle inequality in every community. In fact, there has been a jump in university registration by Muslims in recent years, which is a strongly positive indicator of better future prospects.

THE WORLD IS BECOMING A SMALLER PLACE and people of different cultures and religions are having to learn to live together as never before. Of course, this will result in tension from time to time, but this also presents tremendous opportunities. We have a lot to learn from each other and this exchange of new ideas creates the dynamism which pushes us forward intellectually, scientifically and culturally.

Historically, when we look at classical Islamic civilization, this presents a model of how people of a diverse mixture of races and creeds can live together and learn from each other to create a cultural whole much greater than the sum of its parts. Although relationships between the various communities were by no means always harmonious or straightforward, this does provide an early example of a multicultural society, different from but not alien to the one which we aspire to establishing today. This diversity resulted in a creative and eclectic mixture of ideas which gave rise to literary masterpieces and scientific achievements which were far ahead of their time.

Obviously, historians will argue about the exact reasons for the flourishing of this civilization, but it is clear that the inspiration of Islam —a religion which, my Muslim colleagues always stress to me, teaches tolerance and peaceful coexistence— had a major role in creating this progressive model for society.

Lord Triesman is the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office Minister.

This article is distributed by the Common Ground News Service (CGNews)
Originally published in the Jordan Times, June 27, 2006. Reprinted with permission.