Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Dimona eliminates Tigers in semis

Dimona holds on for a thrilling extra inning victory
Jerusalem Post Sports

Dimona scored four runs in the top of the eighth and then held on for a thrilling extra inning victory to eliminate the Tigers in the Israel Softball Association semifinal on Monday night.

Pitchers Yarone Ben-Israel (6 K's) and Goose Gillett (3 K's) were locked in a scoreless pitching duel through five.

In the sixth, Tabie Ben-Israel scored on Amithan Ben-Israel's single after stealing second and third, but the Tigers answered in their half of the inning when Shlomi Mor Hayim singled in Ilan Spira.

In the extra eighth inning, Dimona unloaded. Akhaziya's 2-run single made it 3-1 and RBI hits from Elyaeed BenIsrael and Amithan stretched the lead to four.

The Tigers, not to be outdone, tallied three on RBI singles by Hernan Guinguis, Gil Nehemkin and Avi Shamir, but Yarone bore down to fan Guy Bender, representing the winning run, to end the Tigers' season.

KNN: "Go Judeans!!!!!!"

Monday, June 15, 2009

Communicators Press Launches New Web Page

Visit Communicators Press new user-friendly web page
KNN-DC

Order your books and audio visual materials online!!!!!

This collection of books and audio visual materials is dedicated to the truth, not according to the words of men but according to the universal principles that govern the earth.

Communicators Press specializes in publishing and distributing spiritually uplifting works by renowned scholars and thinkers around the world. The TRUTH is knowable...look no further.

Click Here to see CP's new web page: http://www.africanhebrewisraelitesofjerusalem.com/CP-Israel/index.htm
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Friday, June 12, 2009

Shabbaht Shalom from the Village of Peace!

KNN-Dimona, Israel

The Holy Hebraic Shabbaht commences weekly at the setting of the sun each Yom Sheshe (6th day or Friday) and ends at sunset on Mohtsai Shabbaht (Saturday evening).


This day is set aside each week to allow our minds, bodies and souls to totally rest, be repaired, restored and rejuvenated.


The sunset time at Kefar HaShalom (the Village of Peace) this Yom Sheshe, (Friday) June 12th is 7:33PM.


Please click here to find sunset times for your area.


Shabbaht Shalom. (Have a peaceful, restful Sabbath.)

Thursday, June 11, 2009

The Future of the State of Africa

Africa is enormously rich in potential
by Kofi Annan, Graca Machel and Michel Camdessus
The Huffington Post


Africa's potential is often overlooked. Yet the continent abounds in untapped natural and human resources. The United Nations, for example, estimates that there are over 800 million hectares of unused, cultivable land that could provide the basis for a green revolution in food production -- land which could be used to tackle food shortages in Africa and in other continents.

The remarkable progress that Africa has made in the past decade is also not widely recognized. Across the continent there are numerous success stories. We have seen the spread of free and fair elections, an increase in school enrollment rates and determined efforts to combat malaria. The boom in mobile phones has transformed communication and helped business.

The tragedy is that when millions of Africans believed their countries and continent were finally on the right track, their hopes are being dashed by problems whose roots lie elsewhere. While the global crisis and climate change are creations of the North, it is Africa which is worst affected and least able to cope. The social and political consequences are profound.

Yesterday, the Africa Progress Panel, on which we sit, launched its 2009 State of Africa report in Cape Town. We recognize that the roots of the development crisis often begin outside Africa. But the reality is that the main responsibility for tackling the challenges Africa faces lies with its own leaders.

This does not mean that the rest of the world can walk away. Africa's international partners have a critical part to play in supporting the continent's progress, and share responsibility for tackling imported problems. They also have an interest to do so: social tension and political instability in Africa have clear international costs and consequences.

At a time when other financial flows are dropping, G8 and donor countries have an even greater responsibility to honor their international aid commitments and to ensure that global deals, whether on trade, climate change, intellectual property, illicit drugs, crime or migration, are supportive of Africa's development needs. Aid, effectively used, can leverage other financial flows, strengthen capacities and meet urgent social and humanitarian needs.

But without bold, focused and sustained leadership from African Governments, outside assistance won't safeguard the continent's people or protect the progress already made.

Big problems create the opportunity for big thinking. Africa's leaders, who have already shown what can be achieved, now need to redouble their efforts to guide their continent through these challenges.

They also need the active participation of their citizens. Accountability of leadership is paramount. Holding those in authority to account is a tradition and practice that has long roots in Africa's culture. But in many parts of the continent, it is frayed. There are too many instances of corruption, growing inequality in wealth and opportunity, and the abuse of power.

Alongside determined and accountable leadership at the national level, a strong, united position on the global stage is vital. A forcefully negotiated common African position on climate change, for example, is needed for Copenhagen Summit. We have already seen how effective unity can be. The meeting of African leaders in London ahead of the G20 Summit ensured the needs of the developing world were not forgotten. It played a major role in the G20s funding pledges, including the $100 billion for international development banks to lend to the poorest countries.

Clear-sighted African leadership, supported by effective international partnership, can turn the challenges Africa is facing into an opportunity. The APP believes that Africa can take the lead in pioneering a new, low-carbon development model. The take off of the mobile phone in Africa ended the need for an expensive network of landlines to be put in place. In the same way, the continent can make use of its vast solar, hydro, wind, thermal and biomass resources to drive forward its renewable energy sector, leapfrogging the outdated, fossil fuel based system.

The scope for investment in Africa's infrastructure, agriculture and communications are vast. So are the benefits it could bring. The spread of financial services to the poor has shown the potential for innovative investments. A drive for investment in these sectors will not only create jobs and increased trade in Africa, but also create markets for developed countries in these difficult times.

Africa is enormously rich in potential. Amidst the gloom, there is an opportunity to be seized. If we have the courage and vision to rise to the challenge, it will benefit the 900 million people who live on the continent and create a valuable growth platform for the global economy.

Kofi Annan, Graca Machel and Michel Camdessus are members of the Africa Progress Panel (www.africaprogresspanel.org)

Wednesday, June 03, 2009

The KOY Office of Environmental Affairs Presents

The Renewable Energy and Sustainable Living Summit at the Village of Peace in Dimona, Israel

Summit Agenda

Yom Shleshe (Tuesday) June 9, 2009

Opening Prayer

Welcome/Overview
Rofeh Yehoshua

Health & Ecology
Rofeh El-Rahm

Cultural Application / Recycling
Ahk Yehuda HaCohane

Solar Cooking
Ahkote Baht Ammi
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Sustainable Building
Sar Ehliel

Sustaining the Yah Idea
in the Environment-
Sar Yadiel
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Eco-Cleaning Products & the Environment
Moreh Khashaviyah

Eco-Friendly Housing Concepts
"Greening the Kifar"
Ahk Michael
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Closing Prayer

ECO FRIENDLY DOOR PRIZES

For more information, please contact
Ahtur Keymah at keymah777@aol.com and/or
Ahk Yehuda HaCohane at pmhg2005@yahoo.com

African Hebrew Israelites Lifestyle Promotes Lowest Carbon Footprint Among Developing Nations

Reduce Your Carbon Footprint By Improving Your Diet
By Stephanie Richards, R.D.,M.P.A.
Wellness Solutions

Excerpts added by
Ahtur KeymahKNN Staff

So what’s a carbon footprint, and what does that have to do with the food you eat? When fossil fuels are burned, carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere. Greenhouse gases are the primary cause of global warming, and each year the average American household emits, through heating the house, cooking food, running appliances, etc., 55,000 pounds of carbon into the atmosphere. The amount of carbon dioxide we leave behind is referred to as a carbon footprint.

There are many choices we can make each day to help reduce our individual carbon footprint.

One choice people can make is to switch to a more vegetarian-based diet, which is also known to help prevent chronic disease, diabetes, hypertension and certain types of cancer. Consider this:

- Per person in the U.S., an animal based diet requires 4,200 gallons of water per day. A vegan diet requires 300 gallons of water per day.

- Nine times more energy is required to produce protein from animal foods as compared to plant foods. It takes approximately 28 calories of fossil fuel energy to produce one calorie of meat protein for human consumption and 3.3 calories of fossil fuel to produce one calorie of plant protein from grain for human consumption.

- For each pound of animal food produced, a farm field will lose about five pounds of topsoil. As the soil erodes, so do the minerals in the soil, thus making our food less nutritious.

The African Hebrew Israelite Community maintains a vegan diet and grows most of its own organic produce, citing Genesis 1:29,

"And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat.”

They practice abstention from alcohol, other than wine that they make themselves, and both illegal and pharmaceutical drugs, so as to stay within the cycles of life. The group also owns and operates a chain of vegan-vegetarian restaurants throughout the world. Adult members exercise three times a week, and are advised to have at least one full-body massage each month for its health benefits.

In 1998, doctors visited the community in Israel and found that only 6% of the members suffered from high blood pressure, compared to 30% of African Americans. Furthermore only 5% of their members were obese, compared to 32% of black men and half of black women in America. The doctors concluded, "These changes in lifestyle might prevent chronic disease in American blacks, but would be hard to achieve without the unifying power of community, spirituality, and concern for the environment."

If you want lower your carbon footprint, try eating more vegetarian meals each week. It is important to become responsible global citizens. By making small changes to your diet, you will be helping not only yourself, but also the planet that nourishes you and all those you love.

Monday, June 01, 2009

Concentrated Solar Power Could Generate 25% of the World’s Electricity by 2050

The reaction creates steam that turns turbines and generates electricity
Written by Ariel Schwartz
CleanTechnica.com

A new study from Greenpeace, the European Solar Thermal Agency, and the International Energy Agency’s SolarPACES Group has shown that concentrated solar power (CSP) could generate a quarter of the world’s energy needs by 2050–and create thousands of new jobs and prevent millions of tons of CO2 from being released.

CSP uses mirror to focus sunlight on water. The reaction creates steam that turns turbines and generates electricity. Unlike photovoltaic solar panels, CSP only works in places with reliable sunny weather, such as parts of the southern U.S., North Africa, Mexico, and India.

Sven Teske, co-author of the study, estimates that current investments in CSP ($2.8 billion) could grow under a moderate scenario to over $11 billion by 2010 and produce 7% of the world’s electricity generating capacity. By 2050, investments could grow to $93 billion. This all assumes, of course, that political and investment barriers are removed in short order. But even in a modest scenario, CSP could grow to 830GW of installed capacity by 2050, providing 12% of the world’s power needs. Combined with geothermal and wind farms, alternative energies could provide a significant portion of our overall energy needs in the next few decades.

Monday, May 25, 2009

Live Weeks 2009 - 2010

KNN-Village of Peace
Dimona, Israel

In its continual effort to assist in the maintenance of perfect health and in the pursuit of Everlasting Life for the African Hebrew Israelite Community, the Ministry of Divine Health at Dimona, Israel has taken the charge in regulating Sugarless Week and Live Food Week.

Sugarless and Live Foods consumption Weeks were created by and for the African Hebrew Israelite Community and has been practiced by its many members worldwide. Thanks to the efforts of The Kingdom News Network (KNN), the Regenerative Health and Nutrition Program* (RHNP), the Soul Vegetarian Restaurant chain, and many other vehicles which have been effective in getting the word out, Sugarless and Live Foods Weeks have more recently been adopted by thousands internationally.

Numerous individuals of the global community at large, who are not a part of the Community, have resigned themselves to practicing the Healthy Hebrews' 'healthy lifestyle', testifying about its countless benefits as a viable health-enhancing lifestyle adjustment in their pursuit of excellent health, more vibrant life, more abundant strength and longevity than that which they had previously enjoyed.

In order to allow ample time for the preparation and shopping commonly associated with entering in to the cycle of Sugarless and Live Foods Weeks prior to the incoming summer, harmattan or whatever the upcoming seasonal change in your region of the world, the Ministry of Divine Health (MODH) in Dimona, Israel has released the tentative schedule for both Sugarless Weeks as well as Live Weeks for the year 2009 through the Hebraic New Year in the Spring of 2010.

SUGARLESS WEEKS
June 5–13 Summer '09                                    September 4–12 Fall '09
December 4-12 Winter '09                                March 12–20, Spring 2010

LIVE FOODS WEEK
June 13–19 Summer '09                                  September 12–17 Fall '09**
December 12–18 Winter '09                             March 20 – 26 Spring 2010

*  Please note that RHNP is an ongoing cooperation between the Community's NGO the African Hebrew Development Agency and Ghana's Ministry of Health.

** Also note that in September, Live Foods Week will end at sundown Yom Kameshe (Thursday) due to the inception of the Hebraic High Holy Day The Memorial of Blowing of Trumpets (Shabbahtone Zeekrone Thruahk).

To view KNN's previous posts regarding Sugarless and Live Foods Weeks and RHNP, either type in 'live foods' in KNN's search box near the upper left hand corner of the screen, or simply click here. Otherwise, please stay tuned to KNN for upcoming information on Sugarless and Live Foods Weeks.

For more information on holistic health, The Ministry of Divine Health can be contacted at divine.healers@yahoo.com

World Bank warns of social unrest

The head of the World Bank has warned that the global economic crisis could lead to serious social upheaval
BBC News Service

"If we do no take measures, there is a risk of a serious human and social crisis with very serious political implications," Robert Zoellick said.

He pointed to Eastern Europe, which faces the "tricky situation" of fast-shrinking economies and protests.

Mr Zoellick suggested governments should start preparing for high levels of unemployment.

"In my opinion, in this context, nobody really knows what is going to happen and the best one can do is be ready for any eventuality," Mr Zoellick said in an interview with Spain's El Pais newspaper.

"There is also what I call the 'X-factor', that one can not foresee," such as the recent outbreak of swine flu, he said.

"Latin America has remained reasonably stable, even if Mexico and Central America are under pressure because they rely a lot on the North American market," Mr Zoellick added.

It was reported last week that Mexico's economy shrank by 8.2% in the first three months of this year compared with a year earlier. Mexico sends 80% of its exports to the US.

Other economies in Eastern Europe have registered double-digit declines in GDP, such as Latvia and Estonia, while the retiring Bank of England rate-setter David Blanchflower has said at least one million more people in the UK will lose their jobs.

The World Bank has previously warned of a "human catastrophe" in the world's poorest countries unless more is done to tackle the global economic crisis.

It said an extra 53 million people are at risk of extreme poverty.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

‘Dedication vs. Education’ Seminar













Institute of Regenerative Truth Teaches at London University


Soferet Baht Yehuda
KNN-London

“Truth the Forbidden Cure!”
“ Dedicate Yourself to Life OR Educate Yourself to Death.”

These regenerative and revolutionary concepts heralded the arrival of the scholarship team from the Institute of Regenerative Truth Dimona, Israel; Crowned Deputy Minister Dr. Ahdeev Ben Yehuda, National Spokesperson, and Minister Dr. Elyahkeem Ben Yehuda, Master Lecturer at The School of the Prophets Institute at Jerusalem. Both are members of the Governmental body of the Hebrew Israelite Community, Hebrew Linguists and members of the International Jerusalem Brotherhood.

The Seminar, already presented in Atlanta, Georgia and Dimona, Israel; drew it’s subject matter from a philosophical concept coined by Spiritual Leader, Ben Ammi Ben Israel, ‘Advancing from Euro-Literacy to Afro-Literacy,’ and developed further by Crowned Dr. Khazriel Ben Yehuda in his position paper. (Please click here to read it.)

The collaborative event, organized by the Institute of Regenerative Truth of the Hebrew Israelite British Isles Community in conjunction with a number of other Black Community Organizations including Black Star Line and Nu- Beyond, was held at the London South Bank University.

Friday evening of the 1st of May 2009 saw an audience of African people from various groups and organizations listen with a mixture of awe, delight, disdain and the occasional cringe factor as Ahtur Sgan (Crowned Deputy Minister) Dr. Ahdeev’s calm meditational style relaxed and prepared the audience for Lion’s roar and presentational prowl of Sar (Minister) Elyahkeem. The Lion and Lamb duo captivated the audience aided by the interactive, multi-media power-point presentation.

They introduced the audience to the notion of ‘Dedication’ as the key Hebraic concept of what has been defined as Education; but the end result of Contemporary Education was shown in graphic images of the cascading demise of the earth’s bio-diversity, geological, social and economic; scientific and medical systems. They stressed that the Bible has no word for education because there is no Hebrew word that corresponds with this process.

The audience, many of Egyptology/Kemetic persuasion have various issues with the Holy Bible--the central reference text used; while others reject the Genesis narrative of the Adamic Civilization. Both speakers elucidated the devastating impact of Contemporary Education and illustrated how a system of ‘Dedication’ will deliver a new mindset, concept and application to teaching and learning that will lead to harmonious living with the ecology of peoples and earth’s eco-systems.

Minister Elyahkeem drew contemporary parallels and commonsense examples to clarify and simplify the scholarship position of the Kingdom, though the language and terms were not calibrated to the majority of the listeners. The combined impact confounded some, enlightened, delighted and irritated others.

A few uncomfortable with the geo-political location and developing dynamics of the Community’s status within the State Israel raised the issue of the community’s youth in the Israeli Defense Force (IDF). This provocative gesture at question time by a prominent community activist, while causing some ripples, did not derail the overall sentiments of the main organizers and majority of audience participants who were captivated!

With his new Israeli citizenship status, Minister Elyahkeem answered the question with authority and counter-challenges to the questioner. He closed by stressing that, “ We are concerned about being prophetically and not politically correct!” The issue remains a sore one for some, as the profile of the Community is being raised within the British Isles African community of families and networking organizations.

Brother Dr. Les Henry, one of the main partners commented that he never knew the Hebrew Israelites were ‘like this’ and would love more presentations and collaboration with the British Isles Scholars of the IRT.

While the formal evaluation is taking place, we thank the team for their scholarship and geo-political skills delivered as the seeds of ‘Ancient Dedication’ are now planted in the minds of the community.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Paying a Price for Loving Red Meat

Red meat has exacted a hefty price health longevity
By Jane E. Brody
N.Y. Times Health

There was a time when red meat was a luxury for ordinary Americans, or was at least something special: cooking a roast for Sunday dinner, ordering a steak at a restaurant. Not anymore. Meat consumption has more than doubled in the United States in the last 50 years.

Now a new study of more than 500,000 Americans has provided the best evidence yet that our affinity for red meat has exacted a hefty price on our health and limited our longevity.

The study found that, other things being equal, the men and women who consumed the most red and processed meat were likely to die sooner, especially from one of our two leading killers, heart disease and cancer, than people who consumed much smaller amounts of these foods.

Results of the decade-long study were published in the March 23 issue of The Archives of Internal Medicine. The study, directed by Rashmi Sinha, a nutritional epidemiologist at the National Cancer Institute, involved 322,263 men and 223,390 women ages 50 to 71 who participated in the National Institutes of Health-AARP Diet and Health Study. Each participant completed detailed questionnaires about diet and other habits and characteristics, including smoking, exercise, alcohol consumption, education, use of supplements, weight and family history of cancer.

Determining Risk
During the decade, 47,976 men and 23,276 women died, and the researchers kept track of the timing and reasons for each death. Red meat consumption ranged from a low of less than an ounce a day, on average, to a high of four ounces a day, and processed meat consumption ranged from at most once a week to an average of one and a half ounces a day.

The increase in mortality risk tied to the higher levels of meat consumption was described as “modest,” ranging from about 20 percent to nearly 40 percent. But the number of excess deaths that could be attributed to high meat consumption is quite large given the size of the American population.

See: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/28/health/28brod.html?emc=eta1

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Most religious groups in USA have lost ground, survey finds

Almost all religious denominations have lost ground
By Cathy Lynn Grossman
USA TODAY

Submitted by Melinda B. A.

When it comes to religion, the USA is now land of the freelancers.

The percentage. of people who call themselves in some way Christian has dropped more than 11% in a generation. The faithful have scattered out of their traditional bases: The Bible Belt is less Baptist. The Rust Belt is less Catholic. And everywhere, more people are exploring spiritual frontiers — or falling off the faith map completely.

These dramatic shifts in just 18 years are detailed in the new American Religious Identification Survey (ARIS), to be released today. It finds that, despite growth and immigration that has added nearly 50 million adults to the U.S. population, almost all religious denominations have lost ground since the first ARIS survey in 1990.

"More than ever before, people are just making up their own stories of who they are. They say, 'I'm everything. I'm nothing. I believe in myself,' " says Barry Kosmin, survey co-author.

Among the key findings in the 2008 survey:

• So many Americans claim no religion at all (15%, up from 8% in 1990), that this category now outranks every other major U.S. religious group except Catholics and Baptists. In a nation that has long been mostly Christian, "the challenge to Christianity … does not come from other religions but from a rejection of all forms of organized religion," the report concludes.

• Catholic strongholds in New England and the Midwest have faded as immigrants, retirees and young job-seekers have moved to the Sun Belt. While bishops from the Midwest to Massachusetts close down or consolidate historic parishes, those in the South are scrambling to serve increasing numbers of worshipers.

• Baptists, 15.8% of those surveyed, are down from 19.3% in 1990. Mainline Protestant denominations, once socially dominant, have seen sharp declines: The percentage of Methodists, for example, dropped from 8% to 5%.

• The percentage of those who choose a generic label, calling themselves simply Christian, Protestant, non-denominational, evangelical or "born again," was 14.2%, about the same as in 1990.

• Jewish numbers showed a steady decline, from 1.8% in 1990 to 1.2% today. The percentage of Muslims, while still slim, has doubled, from 0.3% to 0.6%. Analysts within both groups suggest those numbers understate the groups' populations.

Click here: Most religious groups in USA have lost ground, survey finds - USATODAY.com

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Are You Eating Too Much Salt?

We may be getting nearly four times the amount of salt we need
By Kate Barrett
ABC News

Today one group advocating healthy eating says that at some chain restaurants, we may be getting nearly four times the amount of salt we need in a day in one single sitting.

"If the meal was high in fat, it was high in salt. If it was low in fat, it was low in salt. Salt city at restaurants," Michael Jacobson, executive director of Center for Science in the Public Interest told ABC News.

Instead of eating those meals, some suggest steering clear of salty foods and choosing healthier alternatives when eating out, cooking at home and even opting for drive-through where portions are smaller.

U.S. dietary guidelines recommend healthy adults get a maximum daily dose of about 2,300 mg of salt. But some of the meals on CSPI's list had more than 6,000 mg. With large portion sizes, sit-down restaurants like Red Lobster, Chili's and Olive Garden can be more of a problem than fast food.

Doctors like Keith Ayoob, director of the nutrition clinic at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, worry because too much salt can contribute to high blood pressure, potentially leading to heart attack and stroke.

But salt is an inexpensive flavor enhancer that your taste buds quickly get used to and crave -- and it can be tricky to monitor how much you're consuming, Ayoob said.

Two cases in point: An otherwise healthy stir-fry can be loaded with salt and so can broth-based soups.

See: Are You Eating Too Much Salt?

GM not renewing 1,100 dealers' leases

GM seeking to reduce the number of dealers from 6,200 to roughly 3,600
By Christopher K. Hepp
Philly.com - Inquirer Staff Writer

Notifications came a day after Chrysler, which is in bankruptcy, announced it was cutting ties with 789 of its 3,200 dealers, including 11 in the Philadelphia region.

The moves by both automakers are designed to bolster performance by reducing the number of competing dealerships.

GM is seeking to reduce the number of its dealers from about 6,200 to roughly 3,600 by the end of 2010. The remaining cuts will come from closed Saturn and Hummer dealers, along with 400 dealers that the company expects will close voluntarily. An additional 500 would be consolidated into other dealerships.

GM is doing so as part of a restructuring aimed at saving the automaker. It has received $15.4 billion in aid from the federal government and faces a June 1 government-imposed deadline to dramatically reduce costs or file for bankruptcy. Chief executive officer Fritz Henderson said yesterday that bankruptcy was "probable."

See: GM not renewing 1100 dealers' leases

Chrysler Plans to Shut 1 in 4 of Its U.S. Dealers

Nearly 800 dealers were given notice that they would be cut off next month
By Bill Vlasic and Nick Bunkley
New York Times

The historic downsizing of the American auto industry swept through new-car showrooms on Thursday, as dealers across the country, from Fuller Jeep in Rockland, Me., to Island Dodge in Hawaii, learned that they would be forced to close their doors.

In all, nearly 800 dealers selling various Chrysler brands were given notice Thursday that they would be cut off next month. Meanwhile, General Motors is preparing to close up to 2,600 more of its dealers by next year.

Dealers like Ward Drennen, who runs the business his great-grandfather opened 101 years ago near Birmingham, Ala., learned of their fate in letters delivered Thursday morning by U.P.S.
“I had a small crowd around me when I opened it, all hoping for the best,” said Mr. Drennen, who took over ownership of Don Drennen Chrysler Jeep from his ailing father only a few days ago.

“We were shocked,” he said. “We’ve been in Birmingham for almost as long as Birmingham has been here, and selling cars for almost as long as they’ve been building them.”

The National Automobile Dealers Association has estimated that all the dealership closings, including ones already announced by G.M. and Chrysler, represent 187,000 jobs, more than the number of people who work for the two car companies in the United States.

“Even though we knew it was coming, it’s still a shock to see those names in black and white,” said John McEleney, chairman of the dealers association.

The unprecedented closings reflect the precarious financial state of both G.M. and Chrysler, which have been subsisting on government loans since the beginning of the year.

See: Go to Article from The New York Times »

Nike to cut about 1,750 jobs worldwide

Demand for its products slow as the global economic meltdown hurt consumer spending
By Sarah Skidmore
Associated Press

Shoe and apparel company Nike Inc. said Thursday that it will cut about 1,750 jobs worldwide, or 5 percent of its global work force.

About 500 of the jobs lost will be at Nike's world headquarters in Beaverton, Ore. The company did not specify what departments the cuts would be in.

Nike had announced in February that it would cut jobs as part of a realignment of its business. In March, it said it was reducing layers of management, among other organizational changes.
Like many companies, Nike has seen demand for its products slow as the global economic meltdown hurt consumer spending.

The company plans to complete the reductions in the coming weeks.

"Our new structure sharpens our consumer focus globally to drive continued growth while positioning Nike Inc. competitively in today's marketplace," Chief Executive Mark Parker said in a statement. "We remain a growth company and we know these changes have created a stronger organization that will enable us to invest in our most significant opportunities."

The company, whose other brands include Converse, Cole Haan and Umbro, remains the industry leader. But Nike saw its profit drop in the most recent quarter, largely on one-time items, and its revenue fell 2 percent as the economic downturn dragged on.

Friday, May 15, 2009

California to layoffs of 5,000 state workers

Calif. ordering layoffs to cover $15.4B deficit
By Judy Lin
Associated Press

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said Thursday that thousands of state employees must be laid off and billions of dollars must be slashed from the budget to deal with a deficit that tops $15 billion and could widen again within days.

"I understand that these cuts are very painful and they affect real lives," Schwarzenegger said during a news conference. "This is the harsh reality and the reality that we face. Sacramento is not Washington — we cannot print our own money. We can only spend what we have."
The state approved billions in budget cuts and revenue increases earlier this year but they were not enough to keep up with a sharp drop in tax revenue as the recession batters the state's economy.

California still faces a deficit of $15.4 billion in the fiscal year that starts July 1. That will grow to $21.3 billion if voters reject budget-related measures during a special election next week.
The Republican governor released budget proposals that account for both deficit numbers and call for across-the-board cuts that will strike at the core of state services.

Starting Friday, the administration will send layoff notices to 5,000 state government employees, a move that is designed to cut the general work force by 5 percent but would take months to complete. Funding for health and human services and the higher education system also would be cut.

See: Calif. ordering layoffs to cover $15.4B deficit

Monday, May 11, 2009

KOY-Office of Environmental Affairs Recommends Planting Vegetable Gardens

Vegetable Gardens Save Money, Environmentally-Friendly
KNN Staff

Gardening means different things to different people. Thousands view gardening as a hobby, a relaxing escape from the pressures of an urban environment. For these people, the food produced may be almost secondary. Growing fresh vegetables, herbs, or fruits provides a great sense of joy and accomplishment. A vegetable garden can also reduce the family's food budget, and it can be a source of hard-to-find vegetables such as kohlrabi, Chinese cabbage, horseradish, salsify, and pak choi. One of the main reasons that people garden is that vegetables from the supermarket cannot compare in taste, quality, or freshness with vegetables grown in the home garden.

A great many things happen when you plant a vegetable garden, some of them directly related to climate change, others indirect but related nevertheless. Growing food, we forget, comprises the original solar technology: calories produced by means of photosynthesis. Years ago the cheap-energy mind discovered that more food could be produced with less effort by replacing sunlight with fossil-fuel fertilizers and pesticides, with a result that the typical calorie of food energy in your diet now requires about 10 calories of fossil-fuel energy to produce. It’s estimated that the way we feed ourselves (or rather, allow ourselves to be fed) accounts for about a fifth of the greenhouse gas for which each of us is responsible.

Let's change the world - Plant a vegetable garden today!!!!

Tuesday, May 05, 2009

Hebrew Israelite Community Gains Acceptance In Israel

By Stephanie Rice
The Huffington Post
Dimona, Israel

As a young African-American man in late 1970s Chicago, Atur Yirmeyahu was contemplating the fairly standard dilemmas of whether to go to graduate school and ask his girlfriend of three years to marry him.

Before the year was over, he had decided on a wholly unorthodox way forward. Scrapping the university plans and breaking up with his girlfriend, he left his hometown for a sleepy desert settlement in southern Israel.

He has hardly seen his family in the three decades since he packed his bags, but here, in this working-class Negev town, he says he has found his rightful home. Yirmeyahu is part of the 2,500-strong Hebrew Israelite community settled in one of three neighboring villages.

The first group of vegan, polygamous and ethnically African-American settlers arrived in 1969, following their young, charismatic leader, Ben Ammi Ben Israel. Ben Ammi, formerly a Chicago factory worker named Ben Carter, preached that black Americans were descendants of one of Israel's lost tribes and needed to return to their homeland.

To the Hebrew Israelites, or Black Hebrews as they're known here, Ben Ammi is the Messiah and their exodus from America an escape from oppression and violence.

Yirmeyahu said he grew up in a crime-ridden neighborhood, experimented with drugs in college and "shudders to think" what might have become of him if he had stayed in Chicago.

"The most common cause of death in the black community was handgun murder," he said, sitting on a bench in the village courtyard on a recent afternoon, a group of teenage boys playing basketball nearby. "I've been shot. I've wrestled with individuals with guns. The black experience -- the captivity -- it wasn't a picnic."

Life hasn't always been carefree here either. For decades, the group battled the government for the right to live in Israel. They refused to officially convert to Judaism to satisfy the religious nationalists who doubted their authenticity, arguing they didn't need to prove themselves to anyone. There were mass deportations, and newcomers often resorted to sneaking in, sometimes posing as tour groups.

"It was a big struggle," said Hagit Peres, a Ben-Gurion University professor and anthropologist who has studied the Black Hebrews. "They didn't get anything easily, and many left during the process."

In recent years, some of that tension has dissolved. There was a turning point in 2003 when the government awarded the community permanent residency, allowing them to join the army and apply for full citizenship. Several weeks ago, the government approved a citizenship application from a Black Hebrew man for the first time.

"It's a great victory for us," said Avichiel Ben Israel, a spokesman for the group. "It shows us that the God of Israel lives. We see it in a very historic manner -- after 40 years, being recognized."

Hiskiyahoo, the director of the one of the nearby villages, said the citizenship is validation that Ben Ammi's teachings are correct and that community members are following the right path in their quest to create what they call the Kingdom of Yah, or "Kingdom of God," on Earth.

"All the things he said have come to pass," Hiskiyahoo said.

To be sure, the Black Hebrews have come a long way in their relations with government and society here. They run a successful national chain of vegan restaurants, more than 300 of their youth are serving in the army and their choirs regularly perform throughout the country. In 2006, Israelis even chose Black Hebrew singer Eddie Butler to represent them in the Eurovision song contest.

"Before, people thought that we were a cult," said Avichiel, the spokesman. "That perception has changed now that people have the opportunity to visit and see that it couldn't be farther from the truth. We have a culture, a way of life."

But while their lifestyle has similarities to Judaism -- they practice circumcision, celebrate Passover and observe the Sabbath -- there are major differences that still raise eyebrows among Jewish Israelis. There's the polygamy, for example. It's common for men to take several wives and have more than a dozen children -- a practice Avichiel says stems from an uneven female-to-male ratio and strict purity rules that keep women from fulfilling their domestic role during their periods and after childbirth.

"There are more women than there are men, it's really practical," he said, sitting on a couch in an office with a framed photo of Ben Ammi staring serenely from the wall. "During menstruation, she's set aside and doesn't prepare food. After childbirth she's isolated for 40 days after a boy, or 80 days after a female. So you kind of need more than one."

Yirmeyahu, the Chicago native, has only one wife and no children but hopes to marry two more women and have at least 10 kids. He is also hopeful he will be among the next to receive Israeli citizenship. "I was never an American anyway," he said.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

KOY's Participation in the 2009 Durban Review Conference--Geneva Switzerland

KNN Staff
Dimona, Israel

The Durban Review Conference (20-24 April) served to evaluate progress towards the goals which had been originally set by the World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance (Durban, South Africa-2001).

The Review Conference which convened on 20-24th April in Geneva, Switzerland served as a catalyst to fulfilling the promises of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action agreed at the 2001 World Conference through reinvigorated actions, initiatives and practical solutions.

The African Hebrew Israelite Community's NGO the African Hebew Development Agency (AHDA) was represented by Dr. Ahtur Khazriel Ben-Yehuda on April 24, 2009.

Dr. Khazriel Ben-Yehuda diplomatically delivered a sharp blow by way of undeniable, solid words of truth to the world's statesmen and women, citing the global community's need to acknowledge "TRUTH" in order to end the lies, fears, profound ignorance and hatred which has brought the human family at its lowest point in the 6,000 years since the Genesis.

Though not shown on this footage, he received a standing ovation afterwards, and the clip of his speech was shown on Israel's Channel 2.

To view and listen to his thought-provoking discourse which has been heralded to the four corners of the earth, surely playing its role in activating the universal corrective forces to bring about the end of unrighteousness, please click here, then scroll down to the "15:00-18:00, 12th meeting" under African Hebrew Development Agency and enjoy!!!