November
28 marks the first day of Hanukkah 2013. This eight-day Jewish holiday
celebrates the miracle of a small jar of oil that lasted for eight days
while the Maccabees reclaimed the Temple of Jerusaleum. Green Hanukkah Hanukkah customs include lighting the nine-branched candelabrum (one candle per evening and the ninth candle known as the shamash), spinning the dreidel, gift giving and eating special food like potato latkes. This year a number of Jewish communities are incorporating green into their Hanukkah celebrations with enviro-friendly products and using the lighting of the menorah as a reminder to conserve resources.
Changing the light In the U.S. a national climate change campaign, A Light Among the Nations (subtitled How Many Jews Does it Take to Change a Lightbulb?) launched in 2006 by the Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life (COEJL) and the Jewish Council for Public Affairs (JCPA) encourages each household to change one light bulb each night of Hanukkah, switching from regular incandescent and halogen light bulbs to energy-efficient, cost-effective compact fluorescent light (CFL) bulbs.
Reflect on our resources Rabbis Arthur Waskow and Jeff Sultar of the Philadelphia-based Shalom Center have started also the Green Menorah campaign. "We invite people to light their menorah each evening and dedicate yourself to making the changes in your life that will allow our limited sources of energy to last for as long as they're needed, and with minimal impact on our climate," said Rabbi Waskow.
The green menorah Start off your Hanukkah celebrations with a enviro-friendly menorah made from recycled glass from Vertige, fashioned by the Quebec designer Jacques Rivard. Those with a predilection towards industrial art will enjoy the hand assembled 'Man-orah' created from left over steel pipe stock by designer Alyssa Zukas. The Femenorah version is adorned with genuine Swarovski crystals and is available at Not Schlock Big Cartel.
Continue reading.
Global
temperatures have been rising. The 12 warmest years since temperature
records have been kept in 1880 have occurred since 1998. Every decade
since the 1970s has been warmer than the previous decade. Glaciers and
polar ice sheets are melting far faster than the projections of climate
scientists. There has been a major recent increase in the number and
severity of severe climate events, including heat waves, droughts,
wildfires, storms, and floods.
Washington,
DC – The Jewish Council for Public Affairs (JCPA) and the Coalition on
the Environment and Jewish Life (COEJL) today applauded the
Environmental Protection Agency’s release on Friday of a revised
standard limiting carbon dioxide emissions from new power plants.