NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassador
Jason Kendall
The Inwood Astronomy Project
New York City
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June 5 is World Environment Day: focus Kurdistan
June 3, 2009

Click here for the Jupiter and Venus Conjunction Star Party


World Environment Day is on Friday. And my friend in Iraq, Azhy Hazan, has put together his program “Stars For Peace” in Erbil City, Iraq in Kurdistan. Azhy is the president of the Amateur Astronomers Association of Kurdistan, and is doing amazing things for his neighbors.

Azhy plans to show the night sky as illuminated candles to show how people and the sky can be used to bring about peaceful relations and show the journey from ignorance and war into knowledge and enlightenment.

Here is Azhy’s website that he maintains. It is one of the many great shining beacons for outreach in the world.

http://www.kurdastros.org/About%20Us.html

I do some outreach in a big town, but his observatory got hit with shells during fighting. His perserverance and good will are to be applauded by all people. Azhy is what the International Year of Astronomy is all about.

stars-for-global-peaceaaak-poster-2.jpg

ABOUT WED

http://www.unep.org/wed/2009/

World Environment Day (WED) was established by the UN General Assembly in 1972 to mark the opening of the Stockholm Conference on the Human Environment.

Commemorated yearly on 5 June, WED is one of the principal vehicles through which the United Nations stimulates worldwide awareness of the environment and enhances political attention and action. The day’s agenda is to:

  1. Give a human face to environmental issues;
  2. Empower people to become active agents of sustainable and equitable development;
  3. Promote an understanding that communities are pivotal to changing attitudes towards environmental issues;
  4. Advocate partnership which will ensure all nations and peoples enjoy a safer and more prosperous future.

The theme for WED 2009 is ‘Your Planet Needs You-UNite to Combat Climate Change’. It reflects the urgency for nations to agree on a new deal at the crucial climate convention meeting in Copenhagen some 180 days later in the year, and the links with overcoming poverty and improved management of forests.

This year.s host is Mexico which reflects the growing role of the Latin American country in the fight against climate change, including its growing participation in the carbon markets.

Mexico is also a leading partner in UNEP’s Billion Tree Campaign. The country, with the support of its President and people, has spearheaded the pledging and planting of some 25 per cent of the trees under the campaign. Accounting for around 1.5 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions, the country is demonstrating its commitment to climate change on several fronts.

Mexican President Felipe Calderon states that the WED celebration will .further underline Mexico’s determination to manage natural resources and deal with the most demanding challenge of the 21st century . climate change..


About Jason Kendall

I am the NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassador for New York City. I hold a Master of Science in Astronomy from New Mexico State University and am currently adjunct faculty at William Paterson University. I have led numerous "starwatching parties" and astronomy events in New York City, New Mexico, Minnesota and Texas. It all started way back in the fourth grade by the encouragement of two noted astronomers, Charles Schweighauser and Bart Bok. I saw Saturn through Charlie's telescope at then Sangamon State University on a clear Illinois night, and Bart encouraged me under those stars to study hard to come visit him at Kitt Peak National Observatory. I finally did make it down there about a decade after Bart passed away, and I found the favorite spots in Tucson, Arizona, where Bart and his wife Priscilla would spend when they were not gazing at the stars. Bart and his wife were pioneers in the study of the Milky Way, and their studies of the starforming regions called Bok Globules. It's even in my family. My great-grandfather was a Midwestern minister who used to preach his sermons out under the dark, cloudless nights. He always believed that getting out and experiencing the wonders of the natural world was a central part of being human. My family has always been inspired by his words: "We look up to look within." I hope that you'll join me under the stars or at one of my talks.

Come see what's up in the sky!

Jason Kendall
NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassador to New York City

The Inwood Astronomy Project is thankful for the support of the NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassadors Program, the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation, the New York Public Library, the International Year of Astronomy and the Amateur Astronomers Association of New York


We look up to look within

American Astronomical Society Astronomical Society of the Pacific Amateur Astronomers Association of New York

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NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassador to New York City