Showing posts with label biodiversity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label biodiversity. Show all posts

Monday, 24 August 2009

The Special Month of Ramadhan

The month of Ramadhan is upon us, and for Moslem friends, it means a special time of fasting and prayer. Ramadhan is the ninth month in the Moslem calendar. The Moslem calendar is lunar-based and its first year began in the year of Prophet Mohammed's Hijrah (meaning "emigration", and alternatively found as Hijra, Hejira, Hegira) to Medina (Madinah).

Prime Minister Dato Seri Najib Tun Razak on his blog, wrote:
Ramadan can be a time of great spiritual growth and brotherhood, just as Malaysia can be a country free of poverty if we are committed to making it happen.
(Source: 1Malaysia.com.my, Have A Blessed Ramadhan)

On Fasting

The act of fasting during the month of Ramadhan is obligatory upon all Moslems. One such injunction to fast is as follows:

"Oh ye who believe,
Fasting is prescribed to you
As it was prescribed to those before you
That ye may learn self restraint".
- Sura Baqara verse 183
(Source: My Sinchew.com, 22nd August 2009. It's Ramadan)

The typical day of a Moslem's life during Ramadhan can be divided into two portions: Fasting, and non-fasting. Many Moslem friends I know have woken up in the middle of the night to take their meal of "sahur" before commencing the fast. Fasting begins upon the break of dawn. (Source: Islam Online, Do Not Miss Your Sahur) MUIS (Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura) states on its website that "Fasting starts with Subuh, not Imsak nor Syuruk." (Source: Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura, Frequently Asked Questions.)

According to Adil Salahi, in the above piece "Do Not Miss Your Sahur", fasting among Moslem communities differs from that of the Jews, in that fasting for Jews begins from the moment they wake up, right to sunset, when the fast is broken. The Jews do not have an equivalent to sahur. But you should know that Moslems are encouraged to defer their meal of sahur until the last possible minute. (Source: Islam Online, Do Not Miss Your Sahur) I suppose this statement will dispel any ideas of an extra-early sahur (some creative people might imagine that it's possible to extend supper right to sahur).

During the hours of fasting, Moslems are encouraged to put effort into following the teachings of the Qur'an. They are told to avoid as much as possible from thoughts and acts which are obscene, impure, sexual, etc. (Ref: Wikipedia, Ramadan.) MuslimConverts.com, a website geared towards Muslim Converts, says that the following are forbidden during the hours of fasting: food and drink, sexual intercourse, and masturbation. (Source: MuslimConverts.com, Ramadan 2009 Special)

Fast is broken at sunset. In countries where the hours of the day have become longer, sunset falls at a later hour. The fast, as a consequence, is broken at a later hour as well. According to KIVI TV:

Ramadan, the Muslim holy month, will begin in August for the first time in 33 years this year. Moreover, it will be creeping deeper into summer for each of the next seven years because the Islamic lunar calendar is roughly 11 days shorter than the international solar calendar. That means Muslims in the U.S. face longer, hotter days of religious devotion because of longer, hotter summer days ...
(Source: KIVI TV, 22nd August 2009. Longer, hotter days strain Islamic holy month.)

This means that people would be breaking fast later, and sleeping later, as a consequence. It may mean that performance will have to suffer as a form of trade off. But Moslems frequently remind themselves that the Battle of Badr was fought with warriors from the Moslem side fasting throughout the month of Ramadhan. (Source: MuslimConverts.com, Ramadan 2009 Special.)

What happens if the fast happens to be broken? From the KIVI TV website again:

... the longer, hotter days re-emphasize another element of the Ramadan season: God's forgiveness. For Muslims who break the fast, they can make up the day any time before Ramadan the next year.

According to the Jamiatul Ulama (Council of Muslim Theologians), Johannesburg, there are ten (10) valid grounds for not observing the fast.

VALID REASONS FOR NOT OBSERVING THE FAST
There are ten valid reasons on account of which one is allowed not to observe the Fast and they are as follows:

1. Being on a journey;
2. Sickness;
3. Pregnancy;
4. Suckling;
5. Intensity of hunger and thirst;
6. Weakness and old age;
7. Risk of life;
8. Jihâd;
9. Unconsciousness;
10. Insanity.
[Source]

Prayers

During this month, Moslems will be praying for extended periods of time throughout the night. These are known as "terawih" prayers.

Further Reading
I found the following post on the Ramadhan Blog and it was quite good: Benefits of Ramadhan (We Need Ramadhan).

A simple question and answer format explanation of Ramadhan fasting from a Moslem's perspective is found at Examiner.com's Answers to common questions non-Muslims ask about fasting in Ramadhan (Source: Examiner.com, 23rd August 2009).

Wikipedia's page on Ramadan is also quite instructive.

Finally, for Moslems in particular, The Islamic Workplace's Ramadan 101 + Ramadan Duas from Qur'an and Sunnah is quite an eye-opener. But if that doesn't get your attention, perhaps the link to various free e-book downloads at The Islamic Workplace might!

Friday, 26 June 2009

International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture

Not many people know this, but under the Food and Agriculture Organization, set up under the auspices of the United Nations, a treaty known as The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture was signed in 2001 to allow participants to share their plant genetic resources and to share in the profits. The preamble to the treaty states that "all countries depend very largely on plant genetic resources for food and agriculture that originated elsewhere" (source). The considerations in the preamble also state that:

  • " ... plant genetic resources for food and agriculture are the raw material indispensable for crop genetic improvement, whether by means of farmers’ selection, classical plant breeding or modern biotechnologies, and are essential in adapting to unpredictable environmental changes and future human needs ..."
  • "Affirming also that the rights recognized in this Treaty to save, use, exchange and sellfarm-saved seed and other propagating material, and to participate in decision-making regarding, and in the fair and equitable sharing of the benefits arising from, the use of plant genetic resources for food and agriculture, are fundamental to the realization of Farmers’ Rights, as well as the promotion of Farmers’ Rights at national and international levels"
  • "Aware that questions regarding the management of plant genetic resources for food and agriculture are at the meeting point between agriculture, the environment and commerce, and convinced that there should be synergy among these sectors"
The full text can be downloaded in PDF format here: http://www.fao.org/docrep/011/i0510e/i0510e00.htm.

Data on the FAO website shows that Malaysia is a party to this Plant Treaty. Malaysia's accession took place on the 5th of May 2003. (source) Notably absent are Korea, Japan and China: Why? Regionally, Philippines, Thailand and Indonesia are parties to the treaty but Singapore is not. Cambodia, Myanmar and Laos are also parties whereas Vietnam is not.

A press release by the FAO, First fruits of plant gene pact, dated 1st June 2009, states:
  • The Treaty established "a global pool compris(ing) of 64 food crops that make up more than one million samples of known plant genetic resources."
  • "... whenever a commercial product results from the use of this gene pool and that product is patented, 1.1 percent of the sales of the product must be paid to the Treaty’s benefit-sharing fund."
  • "... agricultural biodiversity, which is the basis for food production, is in sharp decline due the effects of modernization, changes in diets and increasing population density."
  • "About three-quarters of the genetic diversity found in agricultural crops has been lost over the last century, and this genetic erosion continues."
  • "It is estimated that there were once 10,000 types of food crops. Today, only 150 crops feed most of the world's population, and just 12 crops provide 80 percent of dietary energy from plants, with rice, wheat, maize, and potato alone providing almost 60 percent."
Plant diversity is necessary for us to secure our future. The threats would seem to come from pests, fungus, predators and other such destroyers. When the majority of crops are genetically alike, they are all susceptible to the same enemies. Today a propagation technique known as micropropagation offers the ability for growers to cultivate thousands of plants from a single source, essentially cloning the source plant at a manifold increase compared to normal propagation techniques using division of roots and transplanting cuttings of shoots. The resulting plants are all susceptible to the same types of pests because they are genetically alike, being clones from the same source. The following reports illustrate the gravity of the problem:

  • LA Times, 2009 June 14th: A 'time bomb' for world wheat crop. "Crop scientists fear the Ug99 fungus could wipe out more than 80% of worldwide wheat crops as it spreads from eastern Africa. It has already jumped the Red Sea and traveled as far as Iran. Experts say it is poised to enter the breadbasket of northern India and Pakistan, and the wind will inevitably carry it to Russia, China and even North America -- if it doesn't hitch a ride with people first."
  • Popular Science, 2005 June 19th: Can this fruit be saved? "Until the early 1960s, American cereal bowls and ice cream dishes were filled with the Gros Michel, a banana that was larger and, by all accounts, tastier than the fruit we now eat. Like the Cavendish, the Gros Michel, or "Big Mike," accounted for nearly all the sales of sweet bananas in the Americas and Europe. But starting in the early part of the last century, a fungus called Panama disease began infecting the Big Mike harvest. The malady, which attacks the leaves, is in the same category as Dutch Elm disease. It appeared first in Suriname, then plowed through the Caribbean, finally reaching Honduras in the 1920s. (The country was then the world's largest banana producer; today it ranks third, behind Ecuador and Costa Rica.)Growers adopted a frenzied strategy of shifting crops to unused land, maintaining the supply of bananas to the public but at great financial and environmental expense-the tactic destroyed millions of acres of rainforest. By 1960, the major importers were nearly bankrupt, and the future of the fruit was in jeopardy."
Another organisation set up by the United Nations, the Global Crop Diversity Trust, seeks to preserve and conserve world food crop diversity for the purposes of world food security. From its mission statement:
  • "The conservation of crop diversity is neither technologically complicated, nor, considering the importance of the task, expensive. The varieties of many of the most important crops can be simply stored as seed in freezers."
  • "Currently, with no secure funding, many of the world’s 1500 genebanks know neither what is being stored on their shelves, nor even whether the seed is alive or dead."
  • "Providing the backdrop to the Trust's action is an international consensus on the importance of this issue. Nations of the world have adopted a number of international agreements recognizing the need to conserve crop diversity and confirming the important role of collections maintained in genebanks. Among these are the Convention on Biological Diversity (1992), the Global Plan of Action for the Conservation and Sustainable Utilization of Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (1996); and the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (2001)."
  • "Achieving the Millennium Development Goals, the priorities for development agreed by all members of the United Nations, will require crop diversity to be effectively conserved, and the Trust directly contributes to three of the goals: to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger (Goal 1), to ensure environmental sustainability (Goal 7) and to develop a global partnership for development (Goal 8)."
The Trust is also building a vault in Svalbard, Norway, to store seeds which will preserve the world's natural resources. The "Arctic Seed Vault" is supposed to have been completed in 2007. From the website:

"Permafrost and thick rock will ensure that even without electricity, the samples will remain frozen. The vault’s construction has been funded by the Norwegian government as a service to the world community."


The official site for the Svalbard Global Seed Vault can be accessed here. The history of the Svalbard Vault can be accessed here. However it may be noted that the permafrost is at danger of melting, given the trends of global warming.

CICERO (Centre for International Climate and Environmental Research - Oslo) set up by the Norwegian government reported in this article dated 12/12/2002, The permafrost on Svalbard and in Norway is thawing. Another CICERO article, dated 28/4/2009 is also of interest: Artic communities challenged when temperature rises. On 9/1/2009 the Environmental Directorates in Norway reported that "temperatures in Norway appear to be following the same trend as the global mean temperature".

The Online Etymology Dictionary traces the origins and variations of the world "temperature" as follows:
  • 1533, "fact of being tempered," also "character or nature of a substance," from L. temperatura "a tempering, moderation," from temperatus, pp. of temperare "to moderate" (see temper). Sense of "degree of heat or cold" first recorded 1670 (Boyle), from L. temperatura, used in this sense by Galileo. Meaning "fever, high temperature" is attested from 1898.
The European Research News Centre published, on 02/10/2001, an article titled The Permafrost Is Melting.

It is without a doubt that the world's temperature is increasing. While the sustainability of agriculture may depend on conserving biological diversity in the long run, another issue which must be examined is agriculture in a changing climate. Perhaps nations like ours will one day be discussing dryland agriculture, i.e. the art of agriculture in desert areas.

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