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Illegal Immigrant Rescues Boy in the Desert, Jeopardizing Own Freedom

“A 9-year-old boy whose mother died in a car crash in the Arizona desert was rescued by a man entering the U.S. illegally, who stayed with him until help arrived the next day.” (cbsnews) Thanks to Kim S. for the link!

Relentless Advocate ‘Greens’ Rural China, Village by Village

"She has traveled Yunnan Province village by village showing locals how conservation can make economic sense – and save the region’s prized golden monkeys." (CS Monitor) Thanks to SG for the link!

Church Meets $1 Million Katrina Goal

"Parishioners at Fountain Baptist Church in a New York City suburb reached their goal this month: to raise $1 million for communities hit by Hurricane Katrina. It is one of the largest amounts ever raised by a single U.S. church." (AP Wire)

Pastoral Minister Has Led Prayer Services for Inmates for 20 Years

"She’s the Mother Teresa of the King County Jail, holding prayer services three times a week for 20 years, taking a bus from her tiny home to the downtown jail, and personally visiting with 35,000 individual inmates." One man said, "If I didn’t have this service, I’d sit and dwell… I come here, and the whole day is 100 percent better." (Seattle Times)

Scotland Set to Smash 30% Recycling Target

"Scotland is within touching distance of its 2008 target on recycling – more than a year ahead of schedule." (Scotsman.com)

Massive New Rainforest Reserve Opens to Protect Congo Apes

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bonobo.jpgA new nature reserve in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) will become the world’s largest continuous protected area for great apes, particularly the endangered bonobo species, the most human-like of all the apes. Larger than the state of Massachusetts, the new reserve encompasses 11,803 square miles of tropical rainforest, extremely rich in biodiversity and will protect both the bonobo and okapi, a rare forest giraffe found, like the bonobo, only in the DRC.

Stem-Cell Advance Opens Up the Field

The Christian Science Monitor reports: "This week’s announcement that two teams have genetically reprogrammed skin cells so that they take on the traits of embryonic stem cells suggests it will be possible for scientists to advance stem-cell research without the ethical and political difficulties of harvesting them from unused human embryos. "This is enormous," says Jesse Reynolds, a policy analyst at the liberal Center for Genetics and Society. "I can’t think of another development "that has been this big.""

More Cash to Beat School Bullies in England

"An extra £3 million is being put into anti-bullying schemes in England where older pupils are trained to step in to resolve conflicts and help victims." (BBC) Thanks to Andrew N. for the link.

Canada to Protect Northern Forest and Tundra

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Forest red pine Wolf LakeCanada announced Wednesday it is acting to protect two large swaths of boreal forest and tundra in the Northwest Territories from development — a total of almost 10 million hectares (24M acres) 

EU Says China’s Progress on Toy Safety is Encouraging

China has made considerable progress in taking actions to ensure the safety of toys and other exported products, the European Union (EU) consumer chief said on Thursday.

I’m Giving Thanks for You Today!

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pumpkin_pile.jpgHappy Thanksgiving to my beautiful American readers! (We are giving thanks for our international readers from Australia, Norway, England, New Zealand, Germany, Japan, India, Ireland, and even Congo — along with too many other locations to name. See photos and messages from dozens of our readers around the globe and see where they live on this Good News Network interactive map ! I love you all — and hope to see you on the map, in print, in person and through the airwaves. May good bless on this Thanksgiving day and into the future… from geri, who feels supported, like the top pumpkin on a huge pile. (photo: Ashville, NC)

Tired of Dry Thanksgiving Turkey? Cook it Upside Down

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mom-andy-chefs.jpgI just gave my Aunt Jane a full-proof recipe for roasting a turkey that will produce juicy breast meat every time. She was relieved to hear of such a solution, saying, “They hate my turkey — it’s always so dry.” If you, too, are looking for a better turkey recipe, check this out: I have been serving a wildly successful Thanksgiving meal for my extended family every holiday for 15 years, and one of my secrets is roasting the turkey upside down… (photo: Geri and her son both love to cook!)

Plan Transforms Toronto Brickyard into Green Spaces

The site design for Toronto’s Brick Works, a unique project that involves restoring nature in the city while incorporating heritage buildings and an art component, was unveiled Tuesday. 

Sober California Drivers Rewarded With Turkeys

"300 sober drivers who successfully pass through a sobriety checkpoint somewhere in Salinas will be getting a turkey today." (AP via Yahoo)

India to Expand Coverage of Pension for Poor

The government said it could afford to spend almost 38 billion rupees ($1 billion) on an expanded pension plan for India’s elderly poor and would begin to do so in March. (Reuters)

Humpback Whale Rescued off Rhode Island

Officials from Rhode Island’s Mystic Aquarium freed a 30-foot juvenile humpback whale from entanglement in a fishing net Monday.

Surfer Dude Stuns Physicists with Theory of Everything

SCIENCE – "An impoverished surfer has drawn up a new theory of the universe, seen by some as the Holy Grail of physics, which has received rave reviews from scientists." (Daily Telegraph) I love physics! Thanks Andrew.

Anti-Bullying Software Begins Trials With 900 Students

To coincide with National Anti-Bullying Week (19th-23rd November), the new European software, FearNot!, begins a six-week trial in the UK involving 600 school children from Hertfordshire and Warwick. 300 pupils in German schools will also be introduced to the interactive role-play software designed to tackle the problem of bullying. (Innovation Report) Thanks to Andrew N. for the link.

Thanksgiving: A Seasonal RItual Tying Us to the Earth

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autumn gourdsI love celebrations that serve to remind us about important aspects of our lives. Mother’s Day and Father’s Day celebrate two of the most important people in our lives while Earth Day reminds us to take care of the planet we depend on for our survival. But seasonal celebrations are too often overlooked in our modern, fast-paced urban world. With the days getting shorter, the kids back in school and most everyone back to work; autumn is a time when we start spending more and more of our lives indoors. We flick on electric lights, fire up the furnace, turn on the TV and often forget about our biological roots and our connections to nature and the seasons…

I remember visiting a First Nations Reserve while I was on a tour for Wisdom of the Elders, my book about the conjunction of ancient traditional knowledge and ideas from modern science. Ushered into a longhouse where there were only a handful of people, I was welcomed with an apology. Apparently, the poor attendance was due to a community celebration of the sap flowing through the trees. In fact, they have a couple of dozen days a year when the community acknowledges such important seasonal events as the first snowfall, the last ice, the first buds, and so on. I was so impressed with their recognition of the seasonality of events and the kinds of things that mattered to them.

Twenty-seven years ago, when my daughter Severn was born, my wife Tara and I wanted some way for her to grow up recognizing that much of our food is seasonal. We both love cherries and so we decided that each year at cherry time, we would travel to the Okanagan Valley to pick cherries. We camp along the way, and when we get to the orchard we gorge on cherries till we’re completely stuffed. (What a shock the first time to discover that my pee turned bright red!). It has become a wonderful ritual that we look forward to every year and the anticipation is half the pleasure.

After a few years of this annual ritual, we realized that many of our friends in First Nations communities up the coast of British Columbia don’t often get fresh fruit, so we began sending boxes of cherries to them. Last year we picked more than 700 pounds and sent dozens of boxes! The bonus to this ritual is that each year, our friends reciprocate with halibut, herring eggs, salmon, crabs, and much more. And most importantly, our children understand and revel in the seasons and food.

To me, this kind of celebration of nature’s bounty and the sharing of it with friends and family is what Thanksgiving is all about. It’s one of those few formal events that provide a ritual celebration of our biological nature – in particular our need to take animals and plants for food. And it allows us to enjoy the company of those we love while reflecting on the things that matter.

Like that First Nations community, I think we ought to have more times when we acknowledge the seasons and the changing world. I’ve seen different communities that celebrate peaches, blueberries, strawberries and many other fruits and vegetables. Years ago, Sweden decided to celebrate one of its most important resources – water. For a week, communities have events around water and they cap it with a prestigious Water Prize which a Canadian, David Schindler, won the first year.

Given how much we depend on the cycles of nature for our survival, it seems odd that we choose to suppress rather than to celebrate them. We should indeed be celebrating the wind, the forests, our fish, our soil, the sun, and so many more things that matter so much in our lives. And at this time of the year, Thanksgiving provides a welcome moment to reflect on Earth’s productivity, abundance and generosity. Happy Thanksgiving.

Take the Nature Challenge and learn more at www.davidsuzuki.org.

How Chocolate Can Save the Planet

"Chocolate can be good for the soul, and healthy for the body, too. But the environment? How could chocolate help with global climate change?" (Listen or read at NPR)