And despite the war some still find joy in following our feathered friends.
News of the world environment
NEWSLETTER | MAY 17, 2024
Birds Still Sing in Gaza
Mandy and Lara Sirdah of Gaza City are birders. Those twin sisters, now in their late forties, started photographing birds in their backyard almost a decade ago. They began posting their pictures on social media, eventually visiting marshlands and other sites of vibrant bird activity in the Gaza Strip. They’re not trained biologists, but their work documenting the birds of Gaza was crucial to the publication of that territory’s first bird checklist in 2023.
If it weren’t for the Israeli occupation — and now the full-scale war that has killed more than 34,000 people, 72 percent of them women and children, and damaged or destroyed 62 percent of all housing — Gaza would be ideal for birding. Like much of the Middle East, the territory lies under one of the world’s great flyways for millions of migrating birds. Its Mediterranean coast attracts shorebirds. Wadi Gaza, a river-fed ravine and floodplain that snakes its way across the middle of Gaza, is home to more than 100 bird species, as well as rare amphibians and other riparian creatures. In other words, that strip of land is a birder’s paradise.
Or it would be a paradise.
Israel’s military campaign in Gaza has caused death and displacement, stoked unrest around the world, and sped up a version of ecocide. But, as Rebecca Gordon writes, even amid this devastation, life persists.
READ MORE
Image by Omar Chatriwala
SUGGESTED READING
On Hope in Hard Times
Hope, writes philosopher Kathleen Dean Moore, “is wild. It is stubborn. It is driven. Hope uses all its strength and wile and never gives up, knowing that if it stops trying, it will drown.” (Terrain)
Hawaiʻi’s Traditional Salt Farms
The salt ponds of Hanapēpē represent an ancient practice that is under modern threat. But efforts are underway to hold onto tradition. (Modern Farmer)
Buy a Lawn, Save Some Water
Through turf buyback and other conservation measures, one county in Utah aims to radically reduce per capita water use by 2030. (Reasons To Be Cheerful)
The Future of Energy
What happens when David Roberts, one of the nation’s foremost energy thinkers, interviews an energy guru? A lot of good wonkery. (Volts)
Not a subscriber yet?
You can get 4 issues of our award-winning print magazine delivered for $20 ($25 for international addresses) by clicking this secure link.
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE
Earth Island Journal is a nonprofit publication. Our mission is to inform and inspire action. Which is why we rely on readers like you for support. If you believe in the work we do, please consider making a tax-deductible donation to our Green Journalism Fund.
DONATE TODAY!
Did a thoughtful friend forward you our newsletter? Keep up with the latest from Earth Island Journal!
SIGN UP TODAY
Follow
Follow
Subscribe
You are receiving this email newsletter because you signed up on our website.
If this newsletter was forwarded to you, you can sign up to the email newsletter here.
Support our work by subscribing to our quarterly print magazine.
Copyright © 2023 Earth Island Journal, All rights reserved.
Our mailing address is:
Earth Island Journal
2150 Allston Way Ste 460
Berkeley, CA 94704-1375
Add us to your address book
No longer want to receive these emails? Unsubscribe