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Articles and Book Reviews

The Secret History of the War on CancerSocialAction.com Recommends....
The Secret History of the War on Cancer

By Devra Davis

(Basic Books, 2007)

"If we want the world of the future to be healthier than that of the past, we can start with ending the protection of toxic trade secrets and taking more realistic looks at the combined impacts of modern agents on our lives."
—Dr. Devra Davis

The Secret History of the War on Cancer, by Devra Davis, COEJL (Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life) Board Member and Director of the first-of-its-kind Center for Environmental Oncology at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, vividly portrays, decade by decade, how crucial research on environmental causes of cancer has been kept from the general public. The War on Cancer, largely run by industry leaders that made cancer-causing products or profited from drugs that treat but do not prevent the disease, downplayed or suppressed potentially life-saving research on factors known to cause cancer, including tobacco, toxicity in the workplace, radiation, or the global environment. A portion of the profits from this gripping story goes to support research on cancer prevention.

COEJL's 10 Ways to Fight Global Warming

Global warming is the defining issue of our time. The average American uses enough energy to release about 50,000 pounds of carbon dioxide per year! COEJL (the Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life) suggests 10 ways to help slow global warming—and save money over the long term—by reducing household use of energy. Here are 5 of them. Click on COEJL’s website to view the others:

  • Insulate your home, tune up your furnace, install a programmable thermostat, and keep the thermostat low.
  • Look for the "Energy-Star" label on appliances, indicating certification as a highly energy efficient product. Energy Star, a U.S. EPA program, certifies all major appliances, furnaces, boilers, computers and monitors, and even entire new homes.
  • When purchasing your next vehicle, select the most fuel-efficient model possible.
  • Buy products in reusable or recyclable packaging, recycle all newsprint, cardboard, glass, and metal, and buy recycled products.
  • Advocate for strong governmental action to reduce carbon emissions, including mass transit, stricter vehicle emissions standards, and energy-smart community planning. Join COEJL Action.

Fuel Free: Electric Cars Coming To Israel

"Preventing climate catastrophe is an ethical responsibility rooted in the fundamental values of our religious tradition. Like not doing unto others as we wouldn't want them to do unto us. Like not stealing the resources of the future for our wasteful enjoyment today. Like not destroying God's creation without regard to others who may want to use it. This isn't tree hugging; it's Torah."
—Jay Michaelson, "Thinking Green: It's Not Just a Virtue, It's Your Jewish Duty" (Forward)

Striving to make the country "better and cleaner, with less dependence on gasoline and petroleum," Prime Minister Ehud Olmert recently signed an alternative energy deal with Renault-Nissan to produce electric cars for mass distribution in Israel beginning in 2011. Israel's Project Better Place will construct a national grid of thousands of stations where the cars can be recharged. President Shimon Peres praised the environmentally friendly electric car plan because oil has become the "greatest polluter of our age and the greatest financier of terrorism".

Honest Seth
Successful Entrepreneur Steeped In Jewish Values

Seth Goldman is more than your average successful business man. Although the 42-year-old co-founder of Honest Tea focuses on the bottom line at his 10-year-old company, he also seeks to build communities and create an environmentally healthful product. Honest Tea is certified organic and kosher and makes working with fair-trade farms that practice sustainable farming and demonstrate respect to their workers an essential part of its operations. Avodah (The Jewish Service Corps ) named Goldman its 2007 Partner in Justice honoree, lauding him for rejecting "conventional wisdom that business exists in a moral vacuum." Read more about this remarkable entrepreneur, who works in an eco-friendly building he helped design and who has infused Honest Tea with Jewish social action values.

Low-Keyed, Lo Watt Shabbat

The Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life (COEJL) has a comprehensive list of tips for a Lo Watt Shabbat, ranging from energy conservation and preservation to preparing an eco-friendly Oneg. Plus suggested programs and Jewish texts to further explore the connection between Judaism and the environment. Shabbat—a time to slow down, appreciate nature, and take conscious actions to protect the environment.

Obligation to Go Green: Jews Must Help Save the Environment

The human being was placed in the Garden of Eden to till it and to tend it.
—Genesis 2:15

A major focal point of Jewish social action worldwide is energy conservation and reducing human-caused greenhouse emissions. As Rabbi Steve Gutow of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs points out: "The Jewish community is right to make Israel's safety and thwarting Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons top priorities, but energy independence and global warming are equally important in the long run and deserving of the same level of attention....We are in a battle for survival."

What can you do to help? Check out "Take Action!" ideas from the Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life and "The Heat is on 2008: Making Global Warming a Presidential Priority", where you can sign a petition to the candidates.

What Are You Doing to Stop Global Warming?

Here’s something quick and easy you can propose to your congregation during the Days of Awe: The Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life (COEJL) suggests ordering postcards that can be sent to legislators during the High Holiday season, which state: “I changed a light bulb ...what are you doing to help stop global warming?” Actions Matter.

The Jew & The Carrot: Sink Your Teeth into This Award-Winning Blog

"There will come a day when a carrot, freshly observed, will spark a revolution."
—Paul Cézanne

The Jew & The Carrot, a blog about Jews, food, and contemporary life, recently won the Best New Blog and the Best Kosher Food/Recipe Blog in the 2007 Jewish & Israeli Blog Awards. As the rest of the world is waking up to the notion of sustainable agriculture, local foods, and healthy eating, so is the Jewish community. The Jew & The Carrot, a project of Hazon, provides a lively forum for discussing food issues—joyfully and thoughtfully—and for supporting the emerging Jewish Food Movement.

Thumbs Down!—Get the Ark Ready: Global Warming Could Flood Israel

According to a recent report by the Israel Union for Environmental Defense, titled “The Forecast Is in Our Hands,” Israel will suffer enormously if global warming remains unchecked—from the loss of its sea ports due to flooding to an increase in temperatures and airborne diseases. The solution: Curb greenhouse gas emissions now!

Relating Tisha B’Av to Today’s Environmental Crises

By RICHARD H. SCHWARTZ

Tisha B'Av is a time to consider the devastation brought on by hunger and starvation: An estimated 20 million people worldwide die every year because of hunger and its effects. "The Jewish people must...consider personal and societal changes that will start to move our precious, but imperiled, planet to a sustainable path," writes Schwartz, author of Judaism and Global Survival.

Thumbs Up!—College Leaders Greening Up Their Campuses

More than 280 reps of colleges nationwide joined the American College and University Presidents Climate Commitment, pledging to make their operations carbon neutral. "We want to galvanize a national commitment to the issues related to climate change," said David Shi, president of Furman University in South Carolina, one of the colleges promising to go green. ACTION ALERT: The Shalom Center is urging "Seven Lights for the Green Menorah," seven practical policy changes—personal and at governmental levels—to avert global scorching.

A Tree Grows in Israel:
Replanting a Forest in Honor of Coretta Scott King

African Americans and Jews joined together to dedicate the replanting of a section of a forest in northern Galilee, destroyed by Hezbollah rockets during last summer's war, in memory of Coretta Scott King. Speakers praised King as a social activist, proponent of equality, and friend to Israel. "We are continuing a legacy of repairing damages of war [2 million trees were destroyed in the Biriya Forest] and keeping alive the hope for peace," said Israeli Ambassador Sallai Meridor, who was joined by members of the Congressional Black Caucus. Reforestation is derived from the Jewish belief in tikkun olam—repairing the world. The Jewish National Fund is collecting donations for the Coretta Scott King Forest, which will hold at least 10,000 trees.

Recycling in Israel is Picking Up

By SIMONA KOGAN

Prince Charles, who this year won the Global Environmental Citizen Award, insists that society has a responsibility to future generations and that it must take care of our habitat, including what we do with our garbage. After all, solid waste produces three percent of greenhouse gas emissions. Israel is finally recognizing this major environmental issue by implementing recycling programs. Simona Kogan, an American writer living in Israel, investigates recycling in Israel: its successes, failures, and plans for the future. It's a problem that simply can't be buried.

Becoming Part of the Solution Instead Part of the Problem:
Hillel Students focus on safeguarding the environment

Hundreds of Hillel students from across the country met in March 2007 at the Spitzer Hillel Forum on Social Justice to learn how to advocate effectively, once back at their college campuses, on life-threatening environmental issues and Tikkun Olam, repairing the world. Hillel's president emphasized the power of one person to instigate change, while another speaker asserted: "The country and the world needs you now!"

Environmentalists Score a Green Victory in Jerusalem

Thanks to eight years of grass-roots advocacy by the Society For The Protection Of Nature In Israel (SPNI) and a coalition of 50 groups plus individual supporters, Israel’s National Planning Board overwhelmingly rejected a proposal for 20,000 residential units on the western hills of Jerusalem. Had it passed, the construction project would have meant the irreversible loss of 6,000 acres of open space, already a scarce natural resource in Israel. Read all about this major victory for environmental activists in The Jerusalem Post.

An Acorn That Acted Like a Tree:
The Green Zionist Alliance at the World Zionist Congress

JERUSALEM, June 23, 2006 — Delegates from The Green Zionist Alliance made a large impact at the 35th World Zionist Congress, held recently in Jerusalem. With just two delegates out of 350 worldwide delegates, the GZA was able to generate important and historic results for Israel’s environment.

Environmental Justice and Jewish Values

From RELIGIOUS ACTION CENTER

As Reform Jews, our concern for environmental justice is clearly derived from our deep concern for justice, civil rights, and a clean environment. Our tradition has always championed equal protection under the law, regardless of one's economic status or racial background. As the Torah teaches, "do not subvert the rights of your needy" (Exodus 23:6); "do not favor the poor or show deference to the rich" (Leviticus 19:15). This is because all humans are created b'tzelem Elohim, and, since we are all equally God's children, we should all equitably share in the bounty — and travails — of the earth. Some other texts that support our environmental justice efforts include:

"The human being was placed in the Garden of Eden to till it and to tend it."
–Genesis 2:15

"You shall not stand idly by the blood of your neighbor."
–Leviticus 19:16

"The land must not be sold beyond reclaim, for the land is Mine;
you are but strangers resident with Me."
–Leviticus 25:23

"Therefore choose life, that you and your descendants may live."
–Deuteronomy 30:20

"The advantage of land is paramount; even a king is subject to the soil."
–Ecclesiastes 5:8

A Jew's Obligation to the Environment

From WASHINGTON INSTITUTE FOR JEWISH LEADERSHIP AND VALUES

Upon creating the first human, the Holy One said, "Do not corrupt and destroy My world, for if you destroy it, there is no one to restore it after you."

Are There Too Many Jews in the World?

By RABBI LAWRENCE TROSTER

Debates over Jewish continuity have assumed that the Holocaust, low Jewish birthrates, intermarriage, and assimilation have left too few Jews in the world. But based on consumption levels, is the assumption true?

But Is It Jewish?: A Reflection on Environmentalism and Judaism

By RABBI KENNETH L. COHEN

"Eco-consciousness is Jewish because it underscores the charter given to us at Eden, to exercise wise stewardship over nature. But if the mandate given to Adam and Eve was once a matter of noblesse oblige, it is now a matter of survival."

Is Animal Experimentation Ethical?

By ERICA BROWN

This lesson plan from BabagaNewz challenges students to use current events and Jewish texts to debate the ethics of experimenting on animals.

Israeli Environmental Activist Wins Prestigious Bronfman Prize

Dr. Alon Tal, creator of the Arava Institute of Environmental Studies, a multi-disciplinary program in which students from Israel, the Palestinian Authority, and neighboring Arab countries study side by side, was awarded the Charles Bronfman Prize in Jerusalem. The $100,000 prize is intended to honor “those who, through their achievements and potential for making a difference, have distinguished themselves as leaders of the future.”

SHATIL initiates Arab Forum for Environmental Justice

Responding to requests by numerous Arab environmental organizations and activists, SHATIL, the New Israel Fund’s Empowerment and Training Center for Social Change Organizations in Israel, initiated the development of an Arab Forum for Environmental Justice; goals include awareness raising and education, establishment of an Arab Follow-Up Committee for the Environment and development of a moral environmental discourse for the community of Arab activists and general public.

Wednesday Wilderness Wisdom—Getting Untangled

Need a little wilderness wisdom on Wednesdays? Then sign up for this unique blend of environmentalism, Torah, and tikkun olam by contacting Rabbi Howard Cohen, BurningBushAdvenures@verizon.net, whose Burning Bush Adventures (BBA) uses awe-inspiring wild regions as classrooms to explore Jewish life, text and wisdom.

Book Review: Torah of the Earth

Reviewed by JONATHAN GRONER

If environmentalism glorifies nature, does the movement constitute modern paganism, foreign to the essence of Judaism? This question and others appears in a two-volume anthology that is at times incisive and repetitive.

Book Review: Trees, Earth and Torah: A Tu B'Shvat Anthology

Reviewed by RABBI FRED SCHERLINDER DOBB

This book is a great reference for Jewish environmental teachings and what has been called the "Jewish Earth Day."

The Way Into Judaism and the EnvironmentThe Way Into Judaism and the Environment

By Jeremy Benstein, Ph.D.
Jewish Lights Publishing (January 2007)

"The Way Into Judaism and the Environment brilliantly articulates a mandate of Jewish activism that is rooted in Jewish tradition and speaks to the broad range of issues we face in our twenty-first-century global village. The book moves seamlessly between Jewish texts, theology, and modern scientific thinking....A much needed resource to the field of Jewish environmentalism."
—Rabbi Marla J. Feldman, Director, Commission on Social Action of Reform Judaism

Dr. Jeremy Benstein is associate director of the Heschel Center for Environmental Learning and Leadership, dedicated to creating a sustainable society in Israel. "To retain our moorings in a period of rapid change and bewildering trials, it behooves us to return to the Source, and to the sources, and to reformulate age-old guidance to meet new threats and opportunities," writes the author. Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life fellow Daniel Orenstein, reviewing the book in the Forward, asserts that The Way Into Judaism and the Environment makes clear that "addressing mounting local and global environmental challenges is a distinctively Jewish responsibility."


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