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<title>SANCTUARY</title><link>http://sanctuary-thebook.org/index.html</link><description>SANCTUARY News</description><dc:language>en</dc:language><dc:creator>media@dancingstarfoundation.org</dc:creator><dc:rights>&#xa9; 2008 Dancing Star Foundation</dc:rights><dc:date>2009-02-18T10:50:27-08:00</dc:date><admin:generatorAgent rdf:resource="http://www.realmacsoftware.com/" />
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<lastBuildDate>Tue, 27 May 2008 22:46:02 -0700</lastBuildDate><item><title>Library Journal Review</title><dc:creator>media@dancingstarfoundation.org</dc:creator><category>None</category><dc:date>2009-02-18T10:50:27-08:00</dc:date><link>http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/4fe9e68d0369683c1f3f4f842ce33afa-15.html#unique-entry-id-15</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/4fe9e68d0369683c1f3f4f842ce33afa-15.html#unique-entry-id-15</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; ">Library Journal | 15 January 2009<br /></span><br />Paying tribute to those safe havens where life can flourish in peace, this handsome volume introduces us to 24 nature and wildlife sanctuaries in 20 countries around the world. The sanctuary movement combines the principles of conservation biology with an interest in protecting individual members of each species, whether plant, animal, or human. The authors traveled from deserts to rain forests, from mountains to seashores, and from farmlands to urban centers, and they devote a chapter to each location, revealing that particular sanctuary's unique focus. The photography is superb, but the overall result is much more than a collection of pretty pictures. The accompanying essays provide a bit of history and a glimpse into the personalitie\involved in each sanctuary's creation. The book also serves as a valuable cultural resource, as it takes a look at the cultures that host each of the locations discussed. Tobias and Morrison head Dancing Star Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to conservation and environmental education. They are also the authors of Donkey: The Mystique of Equus Asinus. Highly recommended for environmental collections. [Dancing Star is negotiating with PBS to film a documentary based on the book.&mdash;Ed.]&mdash;Deborah Emerson, Rochester Regional Lib. Council, Fairport, NY]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>The Power of Two</title><dc:creator>media@dancingstarfoundation.org</dc:creator><category>News Coverage</category><dc:date>2009-02-09T11:08:58-08:00</dc:date><link>http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/7eecc71a2644a59422a193fc25989255-14.html#unique-entry-id-14</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/7eecc71a2644a59422a193fc25989255-14.html#unique-entry-id-14</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; ">Vegetarian Times | February 2009<br /></span><span style="font-size:15px; color:#FF6600;"><br /></span><img class="imageStyle" alt=""style="float:left; margin: 0px 10px 1px 0px" src="http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/pasted-graphic.jpg" width="220" height="212"/>Ecologists, authors, filmmakers&mdash;and married couple&mdash;Michael Tobias and Jane Gray Morrison are no strangers to teamwork. They&rsquo;ve collaborated on dozens of projects, including the recently published Sanctuary: Global Oases of Innocence, which celebrates some of the world&rsquo;s purest havens of biodiversity. Recently, Tobias and Morrison, who are vegetarians, talked with us about treading lightly and compassionately.<br /><br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Biophilia&#x2c; anyone?</title><dc:creator>media@dancingstarfoundation.org</dc:creator><category>News Coverage</category><dc:date>2008-12-03T19:40:38-08:00</dc:date><link>http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/a6d4800ccb7169a4a5d7cf0a16964da6-11.html#unique-entry-id-11</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/a6d4800ccb7169a4a5d7cf0a16964da6-11.html#unique-entry-id-11</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; ">The Southland Times | New Zealand</span><span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; "><br /></span><br /><img class="imageStyle" alt=""style="float:left; margin: 0px 10px 1px 0px" src="http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/nzsouthlandtimes-tobias.jpg" width="231" height="278"/><strong>Stewart Island's global significance has been highlighted in internationally acclaimed ecologist, historian, anthropologist, explorer, author and film-maker Michael Tobias' latest film and book. Southland Times reporter Amy Milne spent a day with one of the natural world's renaissance men.<br /></strong><br />A fly is buzzing at the window of the Church Hill Cafe on Stewart Island as Michael Tobias sits down for lunch.<br /><br />He quickly acts to save it, cupping his hand around it and gently scooping it towards the window he's opened to set it free.<br /><br />"Everything is precious," he says.<br /><br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Heaven on Earth</title><dc:creator>media@dancingstarfoundation.org</dc:creator><category>News Coverage</category><dc:date>2008-11-23T14:41:18-08:00</dc:date><link>http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/5c7d86e1e19bc550fedc9a4acae2a5a8-10.html#unique-entry-id-10</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/5c7d86e1e19bc550fedc9a4acae2a5a8-10.html#unique-entry-id-10</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; ">Mindfood<br /></span><span style="font-size:15px; "><br /></span><strong>by Michael Tobias & Jane Gray Morrison<br /></strong><span style="font-size:15px; "><br /></span><span style="font-size:15px; "><em>Throughout the world, there are places where Mother Nature is honoured and protected. These sanctuaries are a step towards conserving our biosphere.</em></span><span style="font-size:14px; "><br /></span><strong><br /></strong><img class="imageStyle" alt=""style="float:left; margin: 0px 10px 1px 0px" src="http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/mf1108-cover-nigella_v2.jpg" width="164" height="213"/><strong>AUSTRALIA</strong> -<span style="font-size:13px; "> </span>For most of our lives we have searched the world for those rare places where humans have worked passionately to save remnants of the original Eden. There are, as it turns out, more than 114,000 protected areas on Earth. Some of them are enormous, such as Alaska&rsquo;s Wrangell St Elias, the largest national park in the US at over 5.3 million hectares. Others are as tiny as the hectare comprising one of Japan&rsquo;s most symbolic sanctuaries, the sand garden of Ryoan-ji, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, in Kyoto&rsquo;s remarkable greenbelt.<br /><br />What these protected areas share is the critical and timely lesson that celebrating nature may be the key to our future survival as a species, not to mention the survival of millions of other species that share this miraculous planet with us.<br /><br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>The Race Against Extinction</title><dc:creator>media@dancingstarfoundation.org</dc:creator><category>News Coverage</category><dc:date>2008-11-19T12:19:09-08:00</dc:date><link>http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/82f331359b80ce68938c768effe8c84b-9.html#unique-entry-id-9</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/82f331359b80ce68938c768effe8c84b-9.html#unique-entry-id-9</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; ">2 Magazine<br /></span><span style="font-size:15px; color:#FF6600;"><br /></span><strong>By Fran&ccedil;ois Oosthuizen<br /></strong><span style="color:#999999;font-weight:bold; "><br /></span><a href="http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/assets/2featureHOTSPOTS.pdf" rel="self">&raquo; Download a PDF of the full feature as seen in the magazine.</a><br /><span style="color:#999999;font-weight:bold; "><br /></span><strong><img class="imageStyle" alt=""style="float:left; margin: 0px 10px 1px 0px" src="http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/2-living-green-cover-oct.jpg" width="167" height="236"/></strong><strong>BANGKOK</strong> -<span style="font-size:13px; "> </span>The protection of biodiversity is now the biggest issue on Earth &ndash; much bigger than global warming. We are currently witnessing the sixth major extinction event in the history of our planet, and the greatest since the dinosaurs disappeared, 65 million years ago. The co-producer of a new television documentary that takes cameras deep inside critical conservation areas around the world spoke exclusively to 2magazine while on a brief stopover in Bangkok.<br /><br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Midwest Book Review</title><dc:creator>media@dancingstarfoundation.org</dc:creator><category>News Coverage</category><dc:date>2008-11-12T15:06:22-08:00</dc:date><link>http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/b61d8265cdf325d7daa8864add9ee6fa-8.html#unique-entry-id-8</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/b61d8265cdf325d7daa8864add9ee6fa-8.html#unique-entry-id-8</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; ">The Environmental Studies Shelf</span><span style="font:12px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; "><br /></span><br />An awareness of environmental issues is now universal throughout first world and third world countries around the globe. That awareness of the diversity, beauty, and utility of what we humans must rescue, preserve and protect has now been beautifully and dramatically illustrated through the publication of "Sanctuary: Global Oases Of Innocence". The collaborative work of Michael Tobias (President of the Dancing Star Foundation, a nonprofit organization to global diversity conservation, animal protection, and environmental education) and Jane Gray Morrison (the Executive Vice President of the Dancing Star Foundation), "Sanctuary" is a 338-page compendium of full color photography showcasing twenty-four sanctuaries located throughout twenty different countries. Some of them are in private hands, others are public preserves, all of them are presented with an informed and informative text of description and explanation. Along with stunningly beautiful images of the flora and fauna. "Sanctuary" is a seminal and superbly produced volume of work that is enthusiastically recommended for personal, academic, and community library Environmental Studies and Photographic Studies collections and supplemental reading lists.]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Sanctuary: The Passionate People Protecting The Planet</title><dc:creator>media@dancingstarfoundation.org</dc:creator><category>News Coverage</category><dc:date>2008-11-01T11:41:26-07:00</dc:date><link>http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/84682fb904b6eda1fa8868e68123a4b5-6.html#unique-entry-id-6</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/84682fb904b6eda1fa8868e68123a4b5-6.html#unique-entry-id-6</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; ">Prime Time Focus Radio</span><span style="font:12px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; "><br /></span><br /><strong>AARP</strong> - All around the world people who really care about animals and the environment are making a difference. Now a new book called Sanctuary picks some of the places where one person, through unfailing devotion, has changed things for the better. The authors have also made a stunning movie called Hot Spots that airs on November 2nd on PBS stations.<br /><br />Prime Time Focus host Alyne Ellis reports on a book and television show with a clear focus - proving that dedicated people can make a difference when it comes to saving the fragile parts of our planet. Watch the preview of the PBS documentary Hot Spots, and then listen to Alyne's report on the film, and the new book Sanctuary.<br /><br />Michael Tobias and Jane Morrison are the creative force behind the film and book. They run the Dancing Star Foundation, which has the goal of "helping humankind protect the natural world." <br /><br /><a href="http://radioprimetime.org/specials/focusspecials/sanctuary/" rel="external">&raquo; Click here to listen online<br /></a><a href="http://real.aarp.org/content/radio/2008/mf/mf11012008.mp3" rel="self">&raquo; Click here to download MP3<br /></a>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Conservationist to attend Celebration of Books</title><dc:creator>media@dancingstarfoundation.org</dc:creator><category>News Coverage</category><dc:date>2008-09-25T16:11:24-07:00</dc:date><link>http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/999f538b298bae410f3e3eabb02f85a4-5.html#unique-entry-id-5</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/999f538b298bae410f3e3eabb02f85a4-5.html#unique-entry-id-5</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; ">Tulsa World<br /></span><br /><span style="font:10px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; font-weight:bold; ">By James D. Watts, Jr. World Scene Writer</span><span style="font-size:15px; color:#FF6600;"><br /><br /></span><img class="imageStyle" alt=""style="float:left; margin: 0px 10px 1px 0px" src="http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/tulsaworld.jpg" width="250" height="166"/>Oklahoma was one of the places considered for the film "Hotspots." That the state failed to end up in the finished documentary, however, is a good thing in the eyes of Michael Tobias.<br /><br />Tobias, the executive director of the Dancing Star Foundation, is a writer and filmmaker who has devoted himself to issues of conservation, wildlife preservation and bio-diversity.<br /><br />Tobias, along with his wife and frequent collaborator Jane Gray Morrison, will be at the Oklahoma Center for Poets and Writers' Celebration of Books on Saturday. They will take part in panel discussions on wildlife and conservation in life and literature, and will host a screening of their latest film, "Hotspots," at 7 p.m. at the Circle Cinema, 10 S. Lewis Ave.<br /><br />"A hot spot refers to a place on Earth &mdash; specifically on land &mdash; that contains at least 1,500 flowering plants endemic to the region, 70 percent of which are threatened with extinction," Tobias said, speaking by phone from New Zealand, where he is observing the re-introduction of two rare species of birds to an ecological preserve there. <br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Red listed - biodiversity threatened</title><dc:creator>media@dancingstarfoundation.org</dc:creator><category>News Coverage</category><dc:date>2008-07-24T14:08:13-07:00</dc:date><link>http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/122e81c168eccc9f5b1fa379bdf9cac6-4.html#unique-entry-id-4</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/122e81c168eccc9f5b1fa379bdf9cac6-4.html#unique-entry-id-4</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; ">Australian </span><span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; "><em>On Line Opinion</em></span><span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; "><br /></span><br /><span style="font:10px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; font-weight:bold; ">By Jane Gray Morrison and Michael Tobias<br /></span><br />Whether in orangutans, lambs or human children, innocence conjures a call to the heart; one that, in the musings of the Prophet Isaiah, evokes a vision of the wolf, lamb, leopard and goat nestled together in harmony. Such hints of vestigial Eden present tantalising scenarios not entirely out of kilter with the best laid plan of conservation, namely, the protection of large ecosystems with their intact assemblages of plants and animals.<br /><br />This was the dream of Abraham Lincoln, who not only brought the nation together, but sought to include within that community protected natural areas beginning with his gift to the nation of the Mariposa Big Tree Grove of Giant Sequoias and Yosemite Valley on June 30, 1864. This action led to the creation of the national park system which some consider to be the best idea America ever devised.<br /><br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Man&#x27;s erosion of Earth in focus</title><dc:creator>media@dancingstarfoundation.org</dc:creator><category>News Coverage</category><dc:date>2008-07-10T10:35:47-07:00</dc:date><link>http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/1fb04c5ece2802db07580657ead9c653-3.html#unique-entry-id-3</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/1fb04c5ece2802db07580657ead9c653-3.html#unique-entry-id-3</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; ">Daily Breeze<br /></span><br /><span style="font:10px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; font-weight:bold; ">by Kristin S. Agostini<br /></span><br />For three years, Michael Tobias traveled the globe documenting the daunting efforts under way to protect threatened plants and wildlife.<br /><br />He's followed a stewardship program to protect an endangered parrot species in New Zealand and the native plantings occurring on Easter Island, once home to rich palm forests before humans ripped them from the landscape. <br /><br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Larger-than-life book showcases stunning case studies of world&#x27;s leading eco sanctuaries</title><dc:creator>media@dancingstarfoundation.org</dc:creator><category>News Releases</category><dc:date>2008-07-11T13:05:55-07:00</dc:date><link>http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/d5fb6a277cb50cc0d5cba519cccc8170-2.html#unique-entry-id-2</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/d5fb6a277cb50cc0d5cba519cccc8170-2.html#unique-entry-id-2</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; ">News Release<br /></span><br /><img class="imageStyle" alt=""style="float:left; margin: 0px 10px 1px 0px" src="http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/sanctuary-cover.png" width="212" height="233"/>According to Michael Tobias and Jane Gray Morrison, protecting innocence is perhaps humanity&rsquo;s deepest procreative instinct, and celebrating nature our highest calling. In <strong>SANCTUARY: Global Oases of Innocence (</strong><strong><u><a href="http://www.counciloakbooks.com/">Council Oak</a></u></strong><strong>/On-Sale Date: September 1, 2008/978-1-57178-214-4/$60.00)</strong>, Tobias and Morrison profile globally significant sanctuaries at the forefront of an emerging multinational movement to sanctify nature and save her last pristine places&ndash;a vital step toward the total renewal of the biosphere.<span style="font-size:9px; "><br /></span><span style="font-size:9px; "><br /></span>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>SANCTUARY: Epublishers Weekly Review</title><dc:creator>media@dancingstarfoundation.org</dc:creator><category>News Coverage</category><dc:date>2008-05-10T02:45:50-07:00</dc:date><link>http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/6b5bb22fe4455c2528ed67c17d45216f-1.html#unique-entry-id-1</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/6b5bb22fe4455c2528ed67c17d45216f-1.html#unique-entry-id-1</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font-size:13px; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; ">EPublishers Weekly</span><span style="font:10px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; font-weight:bold; "><br /><br />Reviewed by Michael Pastore<br /></span><br />Ralph Waldo Emerson drew his personal and literary power from a deep contact with the natural world. In a journal entry written in April in the year 1840, Emerson wrote:<br /><br />"As I sat on the back of the Drop or God's pond ... I said to my companion I declare this world is so beautiful that I can hardly believe it exists."<br /><br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Book review by Shambhala Sun</title><dc:creator>media@dancingstarfoundation.org</dc:creator><category>News Coverage</category><dc:date>2008-12-10T02:15:59-08:00</dc:date><link>http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/cd2f372c7eb72d7bf9b75b820013dd9e-13.html#unique-entry-id-13</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://sanctuary-thebook.org/news/files/cd2f372c7eb72d7bf9b75b820013dd9e-13.html#unique-entry-id-13</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span style="font:13px Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; color:#993333;font-weight:bold; ">Shambhala Sun<br /></span><span style="font-size:15px; color:#FF6600;"><br /></span>This beautiful coffee table book is a visual and textual homage to the preservation of the natural world and to the individuals, worldwide, who protect it. Husband and wife team Michael Tobias and Jane Gray Morrison traveled the world to document twenty-four havens for non-human life forms, from the Alertis bear refuge near Utrecht in the Netherlands to Gene Baur&rsquo;s farm animal sanctuary in Upstate New York; from Howard Buffet&rsquo;s cheetah reserve near Johannesburg in South Africa to the Kingdom of Bhutan, where 60 percent of the country is protected as inviolable primeval forest. Tobias and Morrison suggest that there is a &ldquo;sanctuary movement&rdquo; afoot, a spontaneous worldwide happening that will &ldquo;rectify ongoing anthropogenic (human-induced) assaults on biodiversity; and halt the global epidemic of cruelty to animals.&rdquo; This book gives us some evidence for hope.<br /><br />]]></content:encoded></item></channel>
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