Friday, September 15, 2017

Animals that Paint

For sale on eBay: Original paintings by Oakland Zoo animals


By  

Oakland’s arts scene just keeps getting hotter. Even its zoo animals are getting in on it.

A giraffe, otter, chimpanzee, elephant and other creatures at the Oakland Zoo have created vivid and colorful paintings that the zoo is auctioning to raise funds. The framed paintings, which include photos of the animal artistes at work, are for sale on eBay.

Styles vary from the minimalist, tri-color masterwork by Drew, a squirrel monkey, to the rainbow blurred fantasia by Scrat, a large lizard. All the animals’ works are in the impressionist school, although each artist has highly unique expressions.

Bidding opened Friday. By Tuesday, no piece had more bids than a Seurat-like work by a Madagascar hissing cockroach who goes by the moniker Nameless. His piece had received 11 bids, driving the price to $77.

Bidding ends Sept. 14. All proceeds go to the Zoo’s conservation efforts for animals in the wild.

Amy and Jennifer the lemurs work on their collaborative painting.
Ben the giraffe paints his work of art.
Ben's finished product.
Woody, a Nigerian dwarf goat, adorably painting with his hooves.
Woody's finished product.
Drew the squirrel monkey, with an assist from a few friends, works on his painting.
Drew's finished product.
Ginger, a North American river otter, painted this work.
Scrat the chuckwalla paints.
Bernie the chimpanzee, who turns 21 this year, and his finished works.
A Madagascar hissing cockroach uses its legs to paint the canvas.

The Cincinnati Zoo has a similar animal-painting fund-raising program:


Elephant Artists!


Brush in Trunk Package includes:
  • Custom Elephant Painting featuring the colors of your choice.
  • Two, high-quality photos of the artist creating your one-of-a-kind work of art.
Money raised through the sale of artwork helps the Zoo support the International Elephant Foundation.

Rhino Rembrandts!


Support rhino conservation by purchasing original works of art by Seyia and Faru and buy our very own “Rhino Rembrandt”!

These one-of-a-kind masterpieces make wonderful gifts for rhino enthusiasts and nature-lovers alike, and are perfect, unique gifts for that “person who has everything.”

Proceeds from painting sales go directly to rhino conservation. Your generous contribution will help ensure that all rhino species and the wild places where they live will be ours to share for generations to come. Learn More >

Animals that Paint on YouTube


YouTube has quite a few clips on animals painting. A compilation of animals is Amazing Animals that Paint! (2:25). A particularly fascinating clip is The Truth about Elephant Paintings and gives a history on elephants painting. Basically, the first elephant documented to be given paints was in New York in 1940, and gradually this idea spread. Thailand which has numerous elephant painting programs now didn't incorporate the painting elephant in their tourism programs until 1977.

I first became aware of elephants painting from the 1996 book When Elephants Weep, the Emotional Lives of Animals by Jeffrey Masson. An amazing book, and a very high recommend. In one particular story an elephant was noticed to be picking up chalky pebbles in its zoo enclosure and doodling on the ground. A proactive keeper noticed the behavior and introduced paints to the elephant, which was a huge success! So big in fact that the other elephants wanted a piece of the action. The book is a collection of stories that researchers, anthrozoologists, scientists, etc have archived because they couldn't explain the unusual or unprecedented behavior of animals they witnessed. Masson dug through archives to uncover spectacular stories and then wrote them up from a psychological perspective. I love these kinds of books, and if anyone knows of others along this theme, please let me know!

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

The Moon by Whale Light

The Moon by Whale Light … and Other Adventures among Bats,Penguins, Crocodilians, and Whales by Diane Ackerman. Diane Ackerman, one of my recent favorite authors, paints herself as a glorious animal-lover and –researcher. Her book The Moon by Whale Light is an insightful look at some of what I at first thought a most random selection of animals. Well, actually after reading the book I still think the animal selection is random but her deep zoological perspectives of the animals is not random but in fact astute, learned and is a wealth of behavioral comments gleaned from field research carried out with long-term professionals. Each of the four chapters dedicated to (1) bats (mammals), (2) crocodilians (reptiles), (3) whales (cetaceans), (4) penguins (aves) explores the animals’ use to man and man’s relationship with them. She also offers many intriguing and little known behaviors and knowledgeably creates the animals in their own highly structured and functional society, a perspective that few humans consider possible for “the lower species”.


So I have collected just a few thoughts on each of the animals, but this book is a jewel for animal-lovers. I so very highly recommend it!

On Bats

Merlin Tuttle, the world’s authority on bats, says, “Bats are among the gentlest of animals. They’re really shy and winsome creatures who have just had bad press.”

Bats are a natural pesticide. They eat 150 tons of insects every night. (Bracken Cave, San Antonio, TX) In fact, bats eat so much food in one evening of foraging that they weigh 50% heavier after one night of dining. An example of their insect gluttony, little brown bats of a common North American species catch as many as 600 insects in an hour.

Bats fly with their mouths open so they can echolocate, but which people mistakenly attribute to a snarling demeanor. They are not snarling, they are not mean, they’re just trying to not bump into anything.

Big brown bat
Picture taken from "The Why Files: The Science behind the News" in its feature "Stopping the Slaughter of Bats"
Bats are extremely tidy, comb themselves thoroughly, and do not gather a mess of nesting materials for their homes like birds. They provide excellent tender care of their young as well.

Cave walls are typically around 57F, but bat babies need to maintain body temperature of around 102F as they are born hairless (these cave conditions are the equivalent of a human lying naked on a cement floor). Therefore, caves chambers that have little moisture and shaped to retain heat become nurseries and babies cling from the ceiling packed with hundreds of other babies waiting for their mothers to return from their hunts and wrap their wings around the young. If bat nurseries are disturbed, the bats must move further back in the cave, where it is likely colder and many babies die. Only one young is raised per year so bats are at risk of not maintaining colony numbers if disturbed.

Even a person passing near a bat which is hibernating causes the bat to raise its body temperature in order to make a retreat if necessary, but this seemingly harmless elevation costs the bat 10-30 days of stored fat.

Bats are rapidly declining due to people not understanding them and killing them off. They have been victims of bat shoots, poison, attacked by flame throwers, napalm-bombed from the air, and dynamited. They have ultra-sensitive hearing and even the blast of a cherry bomb in a cave could kill their ultra-sensitive hearing and confuse a whole cavern of bats so that they can no longer use echolocation, and thus die.

Bats were once as numerous as the passenger pigeon. Old-timers remember when gray bats filled the night sky and now officially they are on the endangered list. The free-tailed bat has declined as much as 99.9% in some places. Its biggest colony went from 30 million to 30 thousand in just six years!

What people don’t realize is that bats are ESSENTIAL for maintaining the balance of nature! They fertilize bananas and maintain the wild strain which is disease-resistant. They plant the rain forest. Of the 3000 or so strains of peaches, which all started in China, bats were the seed dispensers and the pollinators. Bats pollinate many fruits, and bats and bees the the world’s greatest pollinators. Without them, earth would struggle to exist.

On Crocodilians

All crocodilians have a third transparent eyelid (or nictitating membrane), or goggles of a sort, so they can swim underwater. Their pupils are football-shaped and stay vertical to the horizon no matter what angle the head turns. Even if the gator tilts its head straight up, the pupil floats like a gyroscope, so vision isn’t distorted.

While mammals are extravagant with their energy, reptiles are extremely energy efficient and don’t expend energy unless they have to as they take their energy from external sources. Their inferno must be stoked carefully and kept at a precise temperature. If the temperature is incorrect, they cannot digest their food, but their efficiency is shown in their need for only three or four good meals a year.

Alligators have about 80 teeth (and crocodiles 70) and loose teeth throughout their lifespan. New teeth push up through the socket to replace old ones and an alligator, whose lifespan parallels a human’s, might have as many as 3,000 teeth. [Fun trivia: colonials used to fill up alligator’s teeth, which are hollow, with gun powder.]


A large gator, swinging its tail to counterweight the enormous head, stretches its head out of the water, gulps air then lowers itself in the water to make a sub-sonic boom when it bellows, making the water dance high around its body. Researchers note that alligators are responsive to the pitch of b-flat; when hearing b-flat tones, they go nuts with bellowing.

A mother alligator lays 35 or so porcelain eggs, which are incubated for about 65 days. Crocodilians do not have sex chromosomes; their gender is determined by the temperature at which they develop, and 2-3 weeks after the egg being laid, ambient air temperature determines the gender: 94+F produces males, 86-F produces females. Most often an entire nest is one gender, but in some cases, the top 2-3 eggs might be different based on their exposure to a different air temperature.

The first year is tough for an alligator. Yearlings are about 2 feet long and three-quarters of them die because they are eaten by fish, frogs, wading birds, to name a few. As they gain size, this risk is minimized, but then two- to three-year-olds are chased by adult alligators to protect territories and families, and a three-year-old which is about three and a half feet becomes a wanderer. In most reptiles, especially crocodilians, reproduction depends on size, not age, and some crocodilians might reproduce at 6 years of age while others at 15 for some males or 18 for females who develop later. By 30, a male alligator in the wild shows signs of senility, loses its teeth which aren’t replaced, becomes mottled and rough-skinned, and may even go blind. However, a male in captivity may grow as old as 90.

On Whales

If you ask someone to draw a picture of a whale, he/she will likely draw a sperm whale with its bulbous head made famous by Melville’s Moby Dick, but whales come in many shapes, sizes and colors … with 77 species of whales and dolphins inhabiting earth.


Whales are divided into two groups—toothed whales (Odontoceti from the Latin for “tooth” and “whale”) and baleen whales (Mysticeti, from Latinized Greek for “whale”). Toothed whales include sperm whales, dolphins, and orcas/killer whales. They have a single blowhole, echolocate like bats, have teeth for holding prey like fish, squid and shrimp but despite teeth, swallow their food whole. Baleen whales have paired blowholes—nostrils in fact. They graze with their mouths wide open, and the baleen with smooth outer edges and bristly inners catches the krill, plankton, and schools of fish while water passes on through. Other species with baleen have throat pleats and open their mouths even wider to swallow prey when the water is pressed to the top of the mouth and wrung out.

The Right whale, a Mysticeti, got its name from the age of whaling when a whaler would see a whale and ask if it were “the right one”. The Right whale floated when killed instead of sinking, didn’t struggle in battle, and was extremely valuable for its baleen. Now the Right whale is one of the rarest whale species (only 3,500 remaining) due to human greed. Never have humans caused an animal with widespread distribution across the globe to come to extinction, but they sure have come close in the case of the Right whale.

The Gray whale of the North Atlantic became extinct by the end of the 1700s because of Basque whalers, but the Grays in the North Pacific were “discovered” in the 19th C and called devilfish; they were furiously hunted and in self-defense killed several men and smashing boats in the hunt. Now they are known for “the friendly whale phenomenon” which started in 1977 when a friendly whale near Baja California allowed itself to be patted by passengers on a whale watching boat. Since then, friendly whales have sought out boats, and on occasion rammed them and then rolled over to beg for belly rubs.

Blue whales make loud, low-frequency “songs” that can travel up to 500 miles in deep sound channels before disappearing into background noise.

A Humpback has paddle-like flippers and a huge tail with markings as unique as fingerprints, but its most arresting feature is it sings complicated, beautiful songs and varies them as it continuously sings.

When a whale exercises in warm equatorial waters, it can die of overheating. A whale is like a house with a too-large furnace and too few radiators. If it races too much for its food, it can become hot and can virtually blow up. Even after a whale is killed in the Antarctic, it must quickly be hauled aboard and cut up, for if it takes too long to drag the whale back to the ship for evisceration or is left in the water too long, its bones will be charred by the heat of its internal decay.

Most sperm whales live close to the equator and so dive to unimaginable depths to get to freezing water to cool off. They feed on squid and large fish, sometimes swallowing a whole shark. In the depths of the ocean and swimming under extreme pressure among luminescent fish, no wonder the sperm whales seems magical.

A mother whale is virtually 97% water, lives in water, sounds in water which travel through water and ultimately to her unborn who hears her, but because there is no air in the womb, the baby cannot speak back until it is born one year later.

On Penguins, those feathered dinosaurs

Penguins have no land predators, so they do not fear people. Just the opposite, they are curious and alert and allow their babies to waddle around and freely explore.

Penguins do NOT live at the South Pole, which is about 800 miles from the closest body of water and an altitude of almost 10,000 feet. Nor do they live with Eskimos and polar bears in the Arctic.

There are 17 types of penguins on earth, and while all penguins are essentially black and white, their head markings are what make them most easily identifiable.
·      Adelie penguins (named after Adelie Land near the Antarctic coast of Australia that was named after the wife of a 19th C French explorer) have black heads with chalk-white eye rings—like little men in tuxedo suits.
·      Rock-hoppers have lively red eyes, long yellow and black head feathers resembling an outgrown crew cut, and thick yellow satanic eyebrows that slant upwards.
·      Chinstraps get their name from the thin black “strap” across their throats; their amber eyes are outlined in thick black and look Egyptian.
·      Emperors have black heads, a tawny stripe on their bill, and a bib of egg-yolk yellow around their necks and cheeks.
·      King penguins, the most flamboyant of all, display a large velvety-orange comma on each cheek, which melts to a radiant yellow, and on either side of their bills, a comet of apricot or lavender darts toward their mouth.
·      Fairy penguins are tiny and blue-headed.


Click to enlarge
Photos taken at Sea World just outside of Honolulu, Hawaii (a horrible place to visit -- the focus is on making money, e.g. $140 to kiss a dolphin and $18 a photo (and you can't take a camera in with you to get your own photo))
The black and white of penguins has very specific purposes. First, for protection—black backs make them less visible from above and white breasts make them appear like a reflection of water from below. For heat—if the penguin is cold, they turn the black towards the sun and warm up but turn white towards the sun if they are hot. An interesting study showed that when penguins were tagged with silver, they were quickly eaten by leopard seals which were attracted to the flash of the silver, so black tags were then used and the penguins were no longer at a disadvantage for becoming a targeted lunch.

Only 4 penguin types live in the Antarctic and only 2 live there exclusively. Most live in slightly balmier climates—on sub-Antarctic islands like South Georgia or the Falklands, along the coast of South America, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand, and one species even lives in the Galapagos near the equator, but penguins do not and have never lived north of the equator. The ocean currents aren’t favorable for carrying them that far north.

Penguins come in a broad range of sizes. The Emperor penguin is the tallest and stands over five feet tall, weighing as much as 100 pounds while in contrast the smallest penguin, the fairy, weighs only 2 ½ pounds and stands a mere 12 inches tall.

Penguins waddle around and are believed by many to be flightless birds, but they do fly—they fly through water, and gracefully too, at speeds up to 15 miles per hour. They porpoise to breathe in just enough air to keep the lungs from collapsing and dive to great depths, with their pulse going from 100 beats per minute to only 20, and because they take only one shallow breath in their porpoise-move, they don't get the bends.

Penguins don’t have binocular vision like humans do, so they turn one eye to an object and then the other. Although they see well underwater, long vision on land isn’t necessary.

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Loving Hummingbird's to Death: Death by Nectar

Loving Hummingbirds to Death

A Rufous hummingbird flies in for a quick snack, trusting that the nectar offered is safe to drink.
Hummingbirds are easy to attract to a backyard garden, a cinch to keep well fed, and a joy to watch. These sparkling jewels of summer are easy to love. But if you don’t take proper care to provide healthy nectar and clean feeders, they’re also an easy bird to love to death.
Hummingbird feeders must be kept clean and free from mold and fungus, or the tiny hum-buzzers you so enjoy could develop a serious and deadly fungus infection starting in your hummingbird feeder in as little as three days! This infection causes the hummer's tongue to swell, making it impossible for the bird to feed. Starvation is a slow and painful death.
And in the case of the mother hummingbird feeding her young, the fungal infection is passed to her babies — who will also die of starvation.
Fermented nectar creates liver damage, which will also cause death, so pay attention to the care of your feeders, keep them out of direct sun which increases fermentation and spoilage of the nectar, and when you go on vacation, take down your feeders or leave the feeders in the care of a trusted neighbor.

A Cautionary Tale

“The General”
Vickie Miller, of Chehalis, recently experienced the heartbreaking loss of an Anna’s Hummingbird she called “The General.”
“The General patrolled our backyard every day for over a year and a half. One day he came home with a swollen tongue and we knew he had a fungal infection,” Miller said. “We watched our beautiful General die within 24 hours.”
Good practices for keeping a hummingbird feeder:
  • Keep your hummingbird feeder very clean (scrub them with hot water between fillings)
  • Change the nectar frequently in warm weather, as in every 3 days (and if in direct sunlight every day or every other day)
  • Between fillings, scrub every nook and cranny--do NOT use soap as it leaves a residue. If you feel soap as necessary, rinse with vinegar or bleach water to remove the soap residue and then rinse thoroughly.
  • Inspect the feeder carefully for black mold, and if any is present, soak the feeder in a solution of 1/4 cup bleach to one gallon of water for one hour. Scrub with hot water and rinse thoroughly.

  • If you see a neighbor with a dirty feeder, Miller said, “Please, tell them about The General and his fatal fungal infection.”
Sick Anna's hummingbird with swollen tongue ... there is no hope for this creature.
Source

The Basics of Hummingbird Care

Providing a feeder with a perch helps the hummingbirds preserve precious energy while dining. Keep your hummingbird feeder in the shade. I keep my feeder on a swiveling hanger that I can move into the sun to get a good shot at them with my Nikon, and swing back into the shade when I’m done.
There are several easy-to-clean feeders available at local feed stores and online.
The Dr. JB’s brand is one I have seen recently. It has a wide-mouthed glass jar that is not only easy to fill, but easy to scrub clean. The base of the feeder of that brand comes apart so you can reach into every nook and cranny to scrub away the mold and fungus.
The Aspects HummZinger brand is also carried locally. The Farm Store (Chehalis) carries a hanging feeder and a window mounted feeder, both have lids that lift up for easy cleaning.
I have a More Birds Diamond Hummingbird Feeder, purchased from Kaija’s Garden and Pet (Chehalis).
To clean your feeder, flush the feeder with hot tap water and use a bottle brush to scrub the sides of the glass jar. Do NOT use soap; soap will leave a residue behind. (If you just can’t help yourself and must use soap, a bleach or vinegar and water solution rinse will remove soap residue.)

To make nectar
, mix one part ordinary white cane sugar to four parts water. (Do not use store bought mixtures, do not use honey or any other kind of sugar — just ordinary white cane sugar.) Bring to a quick boil, stir to dissolve the sugar, then let the mixture come to room temperature before you fill your feeder.Inspect the feeder carefully for black mold. If you see any mold growth, soak the feeder in a solution of 1/4 cup bleach to one gallon of water for one hour.
The boiling water will help slow fermentation of the nectar, but as soon as a hummingbird beak dips and drinks, the microorganisms carried on the beak will be transferred into the nectar.
If the nectar becomes cloudy, it has spoiled and needs to be replaced. A sugar solution can spoil in as little as two days. If your feeder is hanging in the sun or outside temperatures are high, the nectar may start to ferment in just one day.
Put out only as much nectar as your birds will consume in two or three days. If you mix up a large batch of nectar, you can keep the rest in the refrigerator for up to two weeks.

__________________________________________

If you don’t have the time or energy to commit to their scrupulous care, consider planting a hummingbird garden instead.

Thursday, June 8, 2017

The Zookeeper's Wife

The Zookeeper's Wife is a war story about Warsaw under siege and the Jewish holocaust. Jan Zabinski, the zookeeper, and his wife Antonina ran the Warsaw zoo, but when the animals were shot for sport by a German zookeeper Lutz Heck after selectively taking the preferred and rare animals (European bison, Przywalski horses which had only been "discovered" in 1879, and a few others) for Nazi selective breeding, Jan and Antonina stayed on at the zoo to assist in the running of a fur farm for making fur coats for the Nazis. [Under the Third Reich, animals became noble, mythic, almost angelic -- including humans, of course, but not Slavs, Gypsies, Catholics, or Jews. Therefore, breeding programs were for the selected animals and medical procedures and experiments were for the undesirably "humans". The subjects of Auschwitz's operating doctor Mengele could be operated on without painkillers, but a remarkable example of Nazi zoophilia was that a leading biologist was once punished for not giving worms enough anesthesia during an experiment.]

The zoo, despite its loss of wild animals, was a cover for hiding Jews right under the invaders' noses. In the course of the war Jan and Antonina managed to save 300 by hiding them on the zoo grounds, which were, by the way, right next to a Nazi compound. The Jews referred to as "guests" were given animal names that reflected their character and their cage of domicile. This naming method also prevented slip-of-the-tongues or prevented people who overheard their talk from guessing the truth of what really was going on at the zoo. The people who lodged in the lion's cage were, therefore, called the lions. "Pheasants" often came in the night and lodged in the pheasant house, only to fly a few days later when their trail wasn't so hot. 


During the five years of the war, 860,000 Poles were uprooted and resettled; 75,000 Germans took over their lands; 1,300,000 Poles were shipped to Germany as slave labor, and 330,000 simply shot. With ingenuity the Polish Resistance sabotaged German equipment, derailed trains, blew up bridges, printed over 1,100 periodicals, made radio broadcasts, "illegally" taught in schools and colleges (attended by 100,000 students), aided Jews in hiding, supplied arms, made bombs, assassinated Gestapo agents, rescued prisoners, staged secret plays, published books, held its own law courts, and ran couriers to and from the London-based government-in-exile. At the height of the war, 380,000 soldiers with Jan Zabinski among them comprised the military wing of the Home Army.

Jan was the leader of an Underground cell, and he used the delivery of hay and fodder for the animals as a way to bring in and pass on explosives and other counter-intelligence equipment, which Antonina never knew about until after the war. He poisoned pigs, butchered them, and then arranged the meat to be eaten by German soldiers. During one month in 1943, his cell derailed 17 trains and damaged 100 locomotives! Antonina basically knew that he was part of the resistance but not that he led parts of it so actively, often narrowly escaping capture or death. Antonina would only learn of his great exploits after the war and Jan's return from a POW camp. Jan figured that Antonina had enough stress on her plate with taking care and protecting her very young son, and of course ensuring the meals, shelter and safety of her continue flow of "guests".

In the earlier part of the war Germans established food lines for the starving people of Warsaw. They calculated a calorie-feeding system for the differing races who stood in three separate food lines based on race. The Germans received 2,613 calories of food per day, the Poles 669, and the Jews 184. German Governor Frank who controlled all matters in Warsaw declared, "I ask nothing of the Jews except that they disappear."

According to German figures, Germans shipped 316,822 people from Warsaw to concentration camps between early 1942 and January 1943. Many were shot in the ghetto so the death rate was actually much higher. Aided by friends on the Aryan side, tens of thousands escaped the ghetto, but some who stayed, such as Kalonymus Kalman Shapira, the ghetto's Hasidic rabbi, revealed a tigerish struggle with faith as was discovered after the war by his discovered diary. How could anyone reconcile the agony of the Holocaust with Hasidim, a dancing religion that teaches love, joy, and celebration? During World War II, 30-40% of the world's Jews were killed, but more specifically 80-90% of the Orthodox community was wiped out; this was the group that kept alive the ancient tradition of mysticism and meditation traced back to the Old Testament world of the prophets.

In 1941, Governor Frank decreed everyone must have an identity card complete with serial number and fingerprints. For two years, Polish offices responsible for making the cards stalled. Meanwhile, they along with Underground offices and greedy opportunists were able to set up a system for making fictitious identity cards. Hordes of people suddenly seemed to have lost their records (born in Russia, born to Muslim Poles, records burned in a church fire), so needed to reissued identity credentials. By 1943 it was commonly known that 15% of all identity cards and 25% of all working papers had been forged.

After the war and his return from the POW slave labor camp, Jan was forced to retire from zookeeping at the age of 54. Times were hard after the war and anyone who praised pre-war independence or resistance during the war (and especially for someone who fought in such a war) were judged to be dangerous. Jan retired from zookeeping but still devoted to zoology, he focused on writing and ended up writing 50 books on the lives of animals and conservationism. He also spent much time writing and researching the pedigree of the European bison that had been returned to Warsaw by Lutz Heck, which turned out to be good since Germany was bombed right afterwards killing its bison herd. Antonina, after the war, stayed in contact with the former "guests" who were spread among many countries. She and Jan never left Poland, but their hearts remained bound with all of the many people they helped save.

(Fascinating source article)
Some of the 300 "guests were Irena Mayzel, Kazio and Ludwinia Kramsztyk, Dr. Ludwig Hirszfeld (a specialist in communicable diseases), Dr. Roza Anzelowna from the National Hygiene Institute, the Lemi-Lebkowski family, Mrs. Poznanska, Dr. Lonia Tenenbaum, Mrs. Weiss (wife of a lawyer), the Keller family, Marysia Aszer, journalist Maria Aszerowna, Rachela Auerbach, the Kenigswein family, Drs. Anzelm and Kinszerbau, Eugienia "Genia" Sylkes, Magdalena Gross, Maurycy Fraenkel, and Irena Sendler, among many others. All 300 "guests" survived the war except Kazio and Ludwinia Kramsztyk (cousins of renowned painter Roman Kramsztyk), Dr. Hirszfeld (specialist in infectious diseases), and Dr. Roza Anzelowna and her mother. They were arrested by the Gestapo a few months after leaving the zoo and were summarily killed.


Tuesday, May 23, 2017

Perspective: Earth, Planets, the Sun

Seeing earth in relation to some of our nearest planet-neighbors makes us feel rather large, proud of our somewhat superior size, proud of the space we occupy in space.


Until we put our prideful size up against some of the larger planets, and even the sun, and our pride diminishes quite rapidly for we realize that we are relatively nothing ... despite us in our arrogance, not quite literally but figuratively, acting like the universe revolves around us, our desires, our needs, our goals. In size comparison, our pride can sure deflate quite rapidly. Our arrogance only can take a minute breath in space ... there's just so much more out there!




And then we put our tiny little planet with its millions of people with greatly inflated prideful ethnocentric egos next to the brightest star in the sky, Antares which is more than 1000 light years away, and we gulp as we pale at the comparison and insignificance of ourselves.


Now, to go a step further into the vastness of space and realize our less than insignificance in the grand scheme of revolutions and the organized display of brilliance above ... We look through the Hubble telescope at the ultra deep field using an infrared view and we see "countless" numbers, a vastness that our tiny eye with the aid of our most powerful scope can only manage a flickering glimpse of. There in that eyepiece are entire galaxies billions of light years away ... and we know that this is only a shadow of the vastness of the universe! In relation, we are next to nothing!


Even when we focus a look at the darkest region in space, we realize that the size there cannot possibly compare to our grain-of-sand-in-space volume. We ... are ... infinitesimal.


And yet, Someone knows how many hairs are on each of our heads, and the workings of earth are so important to Him that not a single sparrow dies apart from His will. (Matthew 10:29-31)

That makes little tiny us feel pretty darn special, and yes, very important in God's eyes!

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Here is a 2:33 minute YouTube clip [Star Size Comparison HD] 
of the moon, planet, and keynote stars, all in relationship to amazing size.  

Monday, April 24, 2017

Unbowed: Wangari Maathai (1940 - 2011)

Wangari Muta Maathai, born in Nyeri, Kenya (1940) ultimately became the first woman in East and Central Africa to earn a PhD (1971). She also became the first woman in her region to be a chair of the Department of Veterinarian Anatomy and to be an associate professor (1976). Seeing a political deficit and unmet needs by politicians, she entered politics and became an active member of the National Council of Women of Africa (1976-1987), which was where her idea of empowering women while rehabbing the environment was conceived, the birthchild of The Green Belt Movement. Over the years, she assisted women in planting more than 20 million trees on farms and schools and church compounds, and by 1986 the Movement had become a Pan African Green Belt Network. 

She became internationally recognized for her persistent struggle for democracy, human rights and environmental conservation. On several occasions she addressed the UN on behalf of women. She authored articles, books, served on boards of several organizations, and in 2002 was elected to parliament with an overwhelming 98% of the vote. Subsequently she was appointed by the president as Assistant Minister for Environment, Natural Resources and Wildlife in Kenya's 9th parliament. 

In 2004 the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Wangari Maathai "for her contribution to sustainable development, democracy and peace."

Her book Unbowed: A Memoir (2006, 2007) documents some moments that gave her a solid foundation of family and nature and which were fundamental in raising her awareness of a large escalating environmental problem ripping across the environment that had been so untroubled in her youth.

As the story goes, the name of Kenya was named by the explorers Johan Ludwig Krapf and Johannes Rebmann, when they encountered the awe-inspiring 17,000-foot-high mountain known today as Mount Kenya. "What do you call that?" they asked of their guide, and thinking the two were asking about the gourds he had in his hand, the guide answered, "Kii-nyaa", and thus the name of the mountain and the country became known by the colonial name and not the Kikuyus indigenous name of Kirinyaga, or Place of Brightness. Today the country of Kenya still feels the tug of conflict in their development and concept of self caused by the colonial and the indigenous ideas.

Before Wangari went to school, in her area the colonial government decided to establish commercial plantations of non-native trees. She remembers huge bonfires as the native fig trees went up in smoke. By the mid-1940s the British had introduced many exotic tree species to Kenya—pine in the north and eucalyptus and black wattle in the south. These trees grew fast and strong and contributed to the newly emerging timber business, but they eliminated local plants and destroyed the natural ecosystem. While the old trees had pierced deeply into the earth and allowed other trees and shrubs to thrive in their shadows, the new trees eliminated local plants and didn't retain the rainwater. Eventually, rivers and streams either dried up or were greatly reduced.

The native fig trees were strong trees, burrowing deeply into the ground, breaking through rock and into depressions and ultimately hitting water. It was known that wherever a fig grew, water would be found. Communities had great reverence for these trees and they were never used for fire wood. These trees held the soil together, reduced erosion and landslides. These trees brought life-sustaining water. 

In the early 1970s Wangari realized that many ticks were affecting livestock. While gathering ticks from many places and going out in the rural areas, she noticed the people did not have good food but were eating the colonial flours and processed foods and because there was not enough firewood for cooking and preparing food, the crops were in drought because of loss of trees, the cattle were not well watered and certainly not the land. After looking at the people and the environment, she came up with the idea to give women jobs by planting trees, which would bind the soil, retain and collect water, be a home to birds and provided fruit and food for the people. Trees would heal the land and regenerate the vitality of the earth.

And thus began her journey of planting trees ... to foster a strong relationship between people and their land once again.

"I'm doing the best I can."

Wangari Maathai closed her book with a story she heart from a Professor Suji in Japan. One day a massive fire broke out in a forest and the animals, with flames coming closer, fled the forest, all of the animals except one, a tiny hummingbird who said, "I'm going to do something about the fire!" And she flew to the nearest stream and in her tiny beak scooped up a drop of water and flew to the conflagration, dropping her water droplet, and then flying back to the stream. The other animals watched in horror and dismay, "Why are you doing this? You cannot begin to put out the fire!" And the little hummingbird turned briefly to them and said, "I'm doing the best that I can!" 

Wangari Maathai encourages everyone to work towards a better and greener world. She encourages everyone to plant, even if it's just one tree, just one tree at a time.

Thursday, March 16, 2017

The Sewing Circles of Herat

Christina Lamb, author of The Sewing Circles of Herat (2002), was named Foreign Correspondent of the Year by British Press Awards, What the Papers Say Awards, and the Foreign Press Association for her reporting on Afghanistan and Pakistan. She is also author of the bestselling Africa House and Waiting for Allah. The Sewing Circles of Herat is an outcome of her correspondent travels to get first-hand interviews and to search out the core meaning for the wars and conflicts in Afghanistan and Pakistan. 


Meaning of the book title

The inspiration behind the book title is from a secret study and discussion society for educating women in the Taliban-controlled city of Herat, Afghanistan. Herat was once a great city famed for its culture — architecture, calligraphy, poetry, all in the romantic language of Persian. Women in war-controlled Afghanistan were forbidden education, forbidden a job, forbidden to walk alone or be seen in public unless with a male family member and unless also they were completely concealed from the eye under a black robe. But the women with small baskets of scissors and thread disguised books for studying underneath, and the Golden Needle was not where they were to sew but instead where they were to study. These women, though forbidden personal expression in public, defiantly kept their spirit and educated their minds in secret. They were suppressed, but they still retain some control.

One meaning of the Taliban

In Pakistan, Christina asked a silver-haired lawyer-politician what he thought of the Taliban and why they preached such an extreme form of Islam. "Talibs used to be figures of fun," he said. "Pashtun is a very egalitarian society with no caste or class system. It's not like Sindh with its waderas or Punjab with its feudal lords. In my 61st year of life, the only class that I can say we have always looked down on in Pashtun society is the Talib. When I was a child the Talibs were used for begging. 'I'm a Talib,' and we'd say 'poor darling' and give them bread."

"Referring to the Taliban as 'poor darling' was not just a recognition of their straitened circumstances. There was a more sinister side. The madrassa boys were not only separated from their mothers and all females at an early age but were taught to stigmatize women and that the mere sight of an ankle or a varnished fingernail would lead to damnation. In Pashto, women are referred to as tor sari which means black-heads until their hair turns grey and they become spin sari or white-heads, and they are seen as something to be covered, locked away and beaten."

"We're talking about a society where in my village a boy and a girl kissing is an unpardonable crime seen as worse than murder. The inevitable result is sodomy. It's the done thing in Pashtun society because of women being shut away in houses. A good-looking boy would have dozens of attempts made on him. I was a very handsome youth and had lots of problems but fortunately our family name and standing protected me. These Talibs have no such protection and it starts with the kind of people who run these seminaries. We used to say 'Oh God, he's a Talib,' and that meant he's a sissy or he's available."

"Over a period of time they must become very angry people. And very frustrated, mostly against women, coupled with the hurt of a childhood trauma you can never get rid of and never, never talk about. It must leave a permanent scar." (p 104-105)

Saving paintings in the National Gallery, Kabul, Afghanistan

While Christina was in Kabul interviewing Afghanis after the Taliban had left Kabul, she received a message to go the National Gallery of Kabul. There, she met the doctor who was also 'the painter'. When the Taliban had come to Kabul, they began systemically destroying all cultural items that contained images of humans and animals. Dr. Mohammed Yusuf Assefi heard that 8 of his paintings with humans and animals and which had been hanging in the Presidential Palace had been destroyed, so he knew the paintings in the museum and other national treasures would likewise be destroyed. Bravely, he decided to do his part in saving them. 

He walked boldly into the museum and said that he had been commissioned to restore the paintings. In actuality, over the oil paintings he used water color to paint images or obscure images - for example, he transformed a swan into a shadow on a pond, and a boat with a rower into simply a boat floating with a cargo of sacks. His transformations were risky and he would have been killed if he had been discovered, but his strategy was to move paintings continually around so no one would notice the horse that was there no longer, or the birds that had suddenly flown from the painting.

In total he repainted 80 in the gallery and 42 in the Foreign Ministry. It took him 3-4 days per painting and a year to disguise all the ones in question. It only took a few moments to wipe the watercolor paints away and bring back to vision the real story underneath, he said, as he wiped a pot of flowers by a canal transforming them into a peasant woman carrying a burden on her back.