jeudi 31 mai 2018

SEX HORMONES AND RELIGIOSITY: IS THERE A CONNECTION?

Older men with higher levels of sex hormones could be less religious, study suggests

Amount of testosterone and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) in a man's body may influence how religious he is

Date:
May 30, 2018
Source:
Springer
Summary:
The level of sex hormones such as testosterone in a man's body could influence his religiosity. A new study now adds to the growing body of evidence that religiosity is not only influenced by upbringing or psychological makeup, but physiological factors could also play a role.

The level of sex hormones such as testosterone in a man's body could influence his religiosity. A new study by Aniruddha Das of McGill University in Canada in Springer's journal Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology now adds to the growing body of evidence that religiosity is not only influenced by upbringing or psychological makeup, but physiological factors could also play a role.

JUNE 1 DAY TO REMEMBER THE JEWISH EXPULSION FROM ARAB LANDS . THE MIZRACHI HOLOCAUST


Why International Farhud Day Stymies Invented Palestinian History

The mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin al-Husseini, meets with Adolf Hitler in 1941. Photo: German Federal Archives via Wikimedia Commons.
When International Farhud Day was proclaimed at a conference convened at the United Nations headquarters on June 1, 2015, its proponents wanted to achieve more than merely establish a commemoration of the ghastly 1941 Arab-Nazi pogrom in Baghdad that killed and injured hundreds of Iraqi Jews. Farhud means violent dispossession. The Farhud but the first bloody step along the tormented path to the ultimate expulsion of some 850,000 Jews from across the Arab world. That systematic expulsion ended centuries of Jewish existence and stature in those lands.
Jews had thrived in Iraq for 2,700 years, a thousand years before Muhammad. But all that came to end when the mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin al-Husseini, led the broad Arab-Nazi alliance in the Holocaust that produced a military, economic, political, and ideological common cause with Hitler. Although Husseini spearheaded an international pro-Nazi, anti-Jewish Islamic movement from India to Central Europe to the Middle East, it was in Baghdad — a 1,000-kilometer drive from Jerusalem — that he launched his robust coordination with the Third Reich.
In 1941, Iraq still hosted Britain’s Anglo-Persian Oil Company, which controlled the region’s oil. Hitler wanted that oil to propel his invasion of Russia. The Arabs, led by Husseini, wanted the Jews out of Palestine and Europe’s persecuted Jews kept away from the Middle East. Indeed, Husseini persuasively argued to Hitler that Jews should not be expelled to Palestine but rather to “Poland,” where “they will be under active control.” Translation: send Jews to the concentration camps. Husseini had visited concentration camps. He had been hosted by architect of the genocide Heinrich Himmler, and the mufti considered Shoah engineer Adolf Eichmann not only a great friend, but a “diamond” among men.
Nazi lust for oil and Arab hatred of Jews combined synergistically June 1–2, 1941, burning the Farhud into history. Arab soldiers, police, and hooligans, swearing allegiance to the mufti and Hitler, bolstered by fascist coup plotters known as the Golden Square, ran wild in the streets, raping, shooting, burning, dismembering, and decapitating. Jewish blood flowed through those streets and their screams created echoes that have never faded.
The 1941 Farhud massacre, which was launched in tandem with an attempted takeover of the British oil fields and London’s airbase at Habbaniya, set the stage for the Mufti-Hitler summit and the establishment of three Islamic and Arab Waffen SS divisions in central Europe under Himmler’s direct sponsorship. After the State of Israel was established in 1948, mufti adherents and devotees throughout the Arab world, working through the Arab League, openly and systematically expelled 850,000 Jews from Morocco to Lebanon. Penniless and stateless, many of those refugees were airlifted to Israel where they were absorbed and became almost half the families of Israel.
Remembering the tragic facts of the Farhud process will make it harder for the newly-invented history to take root. After the Arabs rebranded themselves as “Palestinians” in May 1964 with the backing of the Soviet KGB, a new narrative began to come together. In part, it pretends that the Arabs of Ottoman and then British Palestine did not arrive in the seventh century during the Arab-Islamic Conquest, as history records. Their narrative now asserts that are actually descendants of the Canaanites and the Philistines. Palestine is named for the Philistines. After the Jews were expelled by the Romans in about 135-136 CE, the name of their nation was changed from Judea to Syria Palaestina. But in truth, the Israelites gave rise to the only true surviving Canaanites. The Philistines were Greek Island sea invaders defeated by Ramses III in about 1150 BCE and sequestered into the Gaza Pentapolis, not Arabs from the Arabian Peninsula who conquered in the seventh century CE.
Invented Palestinian history also asserts that present-day Israelis are almost entirely transplants from such alien regions as the Ukraine, Poland, Brooklyn, and Germany — or descendants thereof. Remembering the Farhud helps us understand that almost half the early Jewish families in newly-declared Israel were not from across the sea, but rather from across the river, across the bridge, down the road, and plucked from the same culture.
What’s more, the fabricated Palestinian history laments that Palestine became just a consolation prize for the Holocaust — a tragedy that either never occurred or was a purely European misdeed for which Arabs are not responsible and in which they were not involved. Remembering the 1941 Farhud and the Arab-Nazi alliance that sparked it, locks in Arab involvement in the Holocaust as one of full partnership with the Third Reich. This Nazi-Arab alliance thrived, complete with tens of thousands of Islamic and Arab volunteers arduously fighting in the trenches, coordinating diplomatic and strategic affairs through the Arab Higher Committee, broadcasting nightly incendiary hate messages beginning with words “Oh Muslims,” and undertaking all things calculated to advance a German victory which promised an Arab state in Palestine and a disappeared Jewish population. No wonder the Arab marketplaces were filled with placards that exhorted, “In Heaven, Allah is your ruler. On Earth, it is Adolf Hitler.”
The established and incontrovertible facts chronicling the Arab world’s deep and enthusiastic anti-Jewish alliance with the Third Reich during the Holocaust, which exploded into the Farhud, plus the subsequent population shift that Arab governments engineered to expel 850,000 of their own Jewish citizens, make it impossible to weave a fabric of invented history. Recognizing, remembering, and reminding the world of those facts on International Farhud Day, June 1, will help all participants and observers of the Arab-Israeli conflict confront the true legacy that has helped create today’s stalemate. Recognition is the first step along the painful path toward reconciliation.
Edwin Black is the New York Times bestselling author of IBM and the Holocaust, and the prize-winning book The Farhud — Roots of the Arab-Nazi Alliance in the Holocaust. In 2015, Black organized and founded International Farhud Day.

ARTICLE COPIED WITHOUT ALTERATION FROM THE ORIGINAL
I remember a story about Hitler refusing to see  the Mufti because he was not an ARYAN, but someone assured him that the Mufti had Blue Eyes.

samedi 26 mai 2018

ONLY A GOOD PERSON CAN BECOME A GOOD HEALTH CARE PROVIDER

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I have finished my usual monthly rotation with some of the medically underserved communities in the United States. The western medicine practiced here is far from the ideal vision of a patient centred care, in which his social, cultural, economic characteristics are taken into account.
Many of the so-called Family Practice offices that use more and more people with different educational formation (a Nurse can now easily become a Primary Care Provider after a short two year course, or any body with a degree can become a Physician’s Assistant with just two years of further training, and these people function as Primary Care Providers).
What is being done is Urgent Care, much like a dispensary where you go when you have minor cuts and bruises and coughs and colds. This kind of “slash and burn” mentality looks for a fast fix to relieve, but it does not work well when people are really ill
This non holistic urgent care mentality has spread among the doctors and even some specialists where they look for the quickest solution to the problem at hand, which usually involves action over words, medications over counseling.
I am fortunate to work with American Indians. With the Omaha tribe of Nebraska I have built a special relationship and have benefited enormously from their wisdom.
I fondly remembered Jim BB who was one of my earliest patients when we began the concept of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention (a crude form of holistic medicine practiced under difficult economic conditions). He used to say to me:
Only a Good Person can become a Good Doctor. He said he couldn’t understand when he heard the white doctors /providers bragged that they want to be good doctors. He would say: You cannot become a good doctor;  for that you have to be a good person.

I have been lucky to have the wisdom of Pierre M also of the same tribe. He had said: the doctors must realize that to provide better care they have to improve themselves and their humanistic side.

I was reading a touching story of Medical Humanities in the April 2018 issue of American Journal of Medicine, about the tragic death of the Jewish doctor Dr. Ismar Boas who was considered to be the pioneering founder of Gastroenterology. Having forced to flee his practice in Berlin by the Nazis, he left for Vienna. Dr. Boas’ mentor was Professor Hermann Nothnagel, a German Internist who in 1882 had become a Professor of Medicine in Vienna.

The following words were attributed to Professor Nothnagel:
Only a good man can be good physician.
Photo of Professor Nothnagel 

The voice of Jim BB of the Omaha Nation resounded in my ears. How a humble man like him had the level of wisdom of such intensity and universality!
Concluding the short article on Medical Humanities in the April 2018 issue of the American Journal of Medicine, the authors Hoenig and Thom write, I quote: (they were referring to a monodrama about the life of Dr. Boas)
It is noteworthy that looming over this drama is the image of Hermann Nothnagel with his inspiring words “Only a good man can be a good physician”. This maxim, timeless in its wisdom, can serve all physicians as a moral guide to help overcome any obstacle, whether economic, regulatory or bureaucratic that challenges our ability to give patients our finest medical care.

Sadly, that finest medical care is translated in the primary care facilities in this country as more medications, more laboratory tests and more interventions. They have either not been taught or nor heard of the Oslerian concept:  as a physician, you are half the cure.

PS
It is a Friday Night here in the Omaha Indian Reservation and the shabbat candles are still lit.
I will say Kaddish (the jewish prayer for the Dead) for the Jewish Doctor, Dr. Ismar Boas 91858-1938) who was the founder of Gasteroenterology.


I have worked with some of the best Nurse Educators in the Indian Country, two of them stand out: Michele S and Ashleen BB, both at the Omaha Tribe.




vendredi 25 mai 2018

WELCOME TO THE UNITED STATES, THE MOST OPEN MINDED AND MOST DIVERSE COUNTRY ON EARTH 
Just yesterday they announced the 10 finalists for the National Geography Bee sponsored by the National Geographic, well known for their erudite magazine and documentaries.
American students are usually portrayed as ignorant of the world and domestic geography. Not the ones pictures above, averaging about 12-13 years of age from various parts of the USA  California Oregon New Jersey Texas Massachusetts North Carolina , even North Dakota!
They knew the answers to difficult questions such as which state capital in USA is on the Pearl River, and the winning question, which south american country has a population similar to New Jersey? (paraguay is the answer). There were environmental awareness question, about the plastic pollution of River Yangtze, these young americans managed them all and the winner was Venkat Ramjan 13 year old who took home a 50 000 dollar scholarship, he lives in California.
There are 300 + million Americans.
Population of the United States by Race and Hispanic/Latino Origin, Census 2000 and 2010

Race and Hispanic/Latino originCensus 2010,
population
Percent of
population
Census 2000,
population
Percent of
population
Total Population308,745,538100.0%281,421,906100.0%
Single race    
White196,817,55263.7211,460,62675.1
Black or African American37,685,84812.234,658,19012.3
American Indian and Alaska Native2,247,098.72,475,9560.9
Asian14,465,1244.710,242,9983.6
Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander481,5760.15398,8350.1
Two or more races5,966,4811.96,826,2282.4
Some other race604,265
.2
15,359,0735.5
Hispanic or Latino50,477,59416.335,305,81812.5
I want you to note that there are only 3.6 % of the population that identifies itself as Asian and if you look for americans of Indian origin, they are not the major portion of that.
According to the 2010 United States Census, the Asian Indian population in the United States grew from almost 1,678,765 in 2000 (0.6% of U.S. population) to 2,843,391 in 2010 (0.9% of U.S. population), a growth rate of 69.37%, one of the fastest growing ethnic groups in the United States.
They constitute a very small number of Americans, these Indo-Americans( this does not include Pakistani-Americans, Bangladeshis, Nepalis, Sri Lankans) but they are disproportionately represented in Computer and Health Care Industries.
My own interest in Geography was sparked by a question my grandfather asked me when i was about 8 years of age.
He asked, dangling a chocolate in front of me: Imagine there is a railroad that goes from Cairo to Cape Town , which towns in which countries would that railroad pass through.. so entered such sonorous names into my mind Blantyre, Bulawayo, Khartoum, Kampala and other sounds of the African heartland..
Also I was given a stamp album around that age, and I learned that Botswana used to be called Bechuanaland, Nyasaland had disappeared and Zambia had appeared and that Mozambique was named after the Arab explorer Moussa al Bique ..
I listened to the video of the presentation of the ten finalists, with the courageous MC trying to pronounce the difficult names , for of the 10 finalists , 8 were Indian Americans and 2 were chinese americans..No Blacks, No african americans, haiti jamaica and no latins, mexico cuba..there has to be a cultural explanation to this lopsided representation of a small minority from India ..
As an anthropologist i can come up with a cultural explanation but I leave that for another day.
I have visited USA on numerous occasions and each time I come (almost monthly visits from my projects around the world) I notice the enlarging diversity that makes me very happy.
At the Centurion Club in Miami there are Colombians, Haitians and Cubans to say Hello and an odd Portugese; at the Flagship lounge there are Dominicans and Puerto Ricans and Costa Ricans and when you fly , a black man is kind and serves you a nice drink, on arrival the driver of the shuttle bus could be from Mexico, the hotel front desk is manned by a south east asian..
Cubans have transformed the once sleepy town of Miami into an International metropolis; Mexican immigrants to the midwest has added charm to the dying small town now reverberating to their songs and tortillas, Koreans, Chinese, and the exotic ones, Somali and the Hmong.. every one is here.. WELCOME to the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

mardi 22 mai 2018

WHY FRIENDLINESS/FRIENDS MATTER WHEN YOU ARE A FREQUENT TRAVELLER?

WHY FRIENDLINESS/FRIENDS MATTER WHEN YOU ARE A FREQUENT TRAVELLER?
If you are traveling once in a while, you can search whether your destination is hosting National Football League Matches or the annual gathering of Berkshire Hathaway! In the USA, when an event of such a magnitude occurs, hotel rates soar and space becomes unavailable and of course cars are rented out.
In the USA, I have to fly into Omaha once a month to attend to the Omaha Indians who live 100 miles north of the airport.
This week they are hosting some form of a sports competition and I could tell from the rates for car rentals and hotels that something was going on, I was to know that only later.

I have been very loyal to AVIS rent a car during the time I have been using Omaha Airport. One special employee has been my friends over the years and has helped me procure the best rates.
This morning was no exception. She texted early in the morning to say that she would be at the office at 10 am. I got there in time and after much manipulation, she got me a Jeep at an attractive price for the next four days. Our conversation does not end there, she tells me about her family and the lifestyle changes she had made. A pleasant exchange, that sets the good mood for the day.
There is a particular agent at the Priority Check in at Miami airport, let us call him James, I will wait for him to be free so that we can spend a few minutes talking and always he takes care of any of the problems, especially the other agents seem not to wish the extra work necessary to check in for flights to Cuba.
The staff at Centurion Lounge near gate D 15 is friendly but no one can beat Yunior, the Haitian-American Food manager, who greets me with a big smile and a glass of Sauvignon Blanc. Or Victor from RD, who takes extra care while making Arepas for me at the Flagship Lounge near gate D 30, both in Miami.
Travel is no longer a novelty for me, even though I look forward to each and every one of my trips (like the upcoming one to Brussels, Hamburg and Haifa). I very seldom talk to fellow passengers on the ground or on the air but go out of the way to make friends with people who make our journeys pleasant. I have a PHL-DOH-CMB COK-DOH-CDG flight coming up on QR and I am always excited to board that flight and try to procure my favourite seat 1K. L look forward to my flights with QR and pleasant chats with Fas from Romania or India or Other countries.
Regardless of the countries you visit, travelling in Cuba is so different from travelling in Colombia for example, the little help an array of people offer you add to your experience and the collective story of your life.

Countries visited this year:
Cuba/USA
France
Israel
India
Malaysia
Colombia
Brazil
Qatar
Singapore

Looking forward to a trip to the Amazonia in July.

and of course I can never forget my friends at Al Mourjan Lounge at Doha airport



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