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Canada is ending Jewish National Fund’s charitable status

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Canada is ending Jewish National Fund’s charitable status
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This story originally appeared in Jacobin on Sep 5, 2024. It is shared here with permission.

The recent revocation of the Jewish National Fund’s (JNF) charitable status may be the most important Palestine solidarity victory in Canadian history. The grassroots win is a boost to the global Stop the JNF campaign and efforts to disrupt Canadian charity assistance to Israel.

On August 10, the federal government officially revoked the charitable status of an organization that’s has hosted events attended by many prime ministers, ministers, and senators. Just days before the revocation, former prime minister Stephen Harper headlined JNF fundraisers in Windsor and London, Ontario. The organization’s galas, held across the country, draw thousands of well-healed and connected individuals each year. Since 2003, JNF Canada has partnered with provincial governments and raised over a quarter billion CAD.

After fifty-seven years of making all Canadians subsidize its controversial activities, including support for West Bank colonies and the Israeli military, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) has finally revoked the JNF’s ability to issue tax receipts to its donors, which often cover half (or more) of all donations received. The organization now has one year to wind up its charitable operations and dispose of its $30 million in assets.

Parkland on demolished villages

In its letter explaining the revocation, the CRA highlights a slew of issues with JNF’s operations. Alongside a multitude of accounting problems, the agency faults JNF Canada for assisting its discriminatory parent organization in Israel. The CRA letter notes:

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Our review identified that the Organization’s resources appear to have been applied to JNF’s non-charitable projects in the Occupied Territories, and to supporting the Israeli armed forces, and not to activities furthering its charitable purposes. It is our position that the Organization has operated as a conduit for JNF [Israel], a non-qualified donee, in contravention of the Act.

The revocation is the culmination of decades of demonstrations at JNF galas, countless email campaigns, extensive educational efforts, and formal complaints to the CRA about the JNF. The campaign began in earnest in 1978 when Ismail Zayid discovered that Canada Park was built on the village from which he and his family were expelled. JNF Canada raised $15 million (equivalent to $120 million today) to build Canada Park on three West Bank villages — Beit Nuba, Imwas, and Yalu — that were demolished by Israel after the 1967 war. Despite repeated attempts to return home, the five thousand expelled Palestinians were not allowed back. A 1986 UN Special Committee reported to the secretary-general:

[We] consider it a matter of deep concern that these villagers have persistently been denied the right to return to their land on which Canada Park has been built by the JNF Canada and where the Israeli authorities are reportedly planning to plant a forest instead of allowing the reconstruction of the destroyed villages.

JNF Canada, which subsequently raised millions of dollars to refurbish the park, replaced most traces of Palestinian history with signs devoted to Canadian donors such as the Metropolitan Toronto Police Service, City of Ottawa, and former Ontario premier Bill Davis. The Diefenbaker Parkway, dedicated to former prime minister John Diefenbaker, opened in 1975, bisecting Canada Park.

The CRA cites Canada Park, which it labels the “organization’s flagship project,” as a key reason for revoking the JNF’s charitable status. The revocation letter also mentions seven other ventures that the charity funded on land deemed illegally occupied by the Canadian government. Additionally, the CRA details nine JNF Canada initiatives that support a foreign military, which violates the rules for registered charities.

Funding settlements, one eviction at a time

Established in 1910, JNF Canada played a role in an important pre-state land conflict. In the late 1920s, JNF Canada helped raise $1 million (equivalent to $17 million today) to acquire the Wadi al-Hawarith area, a thirty thousand dunam (roughly seventy-five hundred acres) stretch of coastal territory located halfway between Haifa and Tel Aviv. This land was home to a Bedouin community of more than one thousand people. Without consulting the Palestinians living on the land, JNF acquired legal title to Wadi al-Hawarith from an absentee landlord in France.

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For four years, the tenants of Wadi al-Hawarith resisted British attempts to evict them. Historian Walid Khalidi explains:

The insistence of the people of Wadi al-Hawarith to remain on their land came from their conviction that the land belonged to them by virtue of their having lived on it for 350 years. For them, ownership of the land was an abstraction that at most signified the landlords’ right to a share of the crop.

The conflict at Wadi al-Hawarith became a lightning rod for the growing Palestinian nationalist movement. In 1933, a general strike was organized in Nablus to support the tenants of Wadi al-Hawarith. Palestinians, especially those without title to their lands, resented the European influx into their homeland.

Founded in 1901 to acquire land in historic Palestine for exclusive Jewish settlement, JNF, along with the World Zionist Organization and Jewish Agency, is a key institution of Zionism. By the time of Israel’s creation, JNF had acquired nine hundred thousand dunams of Palestinian land and later “purchased” over two million additional dunams of absentee land from the state after over seven hundred thousand Palestinians were ethnically cleansed in 1947–48.

Today the JNF owns 13 percent of the country’s land and has significant influence over most of the rest. Due to its systematic exclusion of Palestinian citizens of Israel from leasing its property, a 1998 UN report concluded JNF lands are “chartered to benefit Jews exclusively,” which has led to an “institutionalized form of discrimination.” Similar conclusions were drawn by Israel’s high court in 2005 and a 2012 US State Department report noted “institutional and societal discrimination” in Israel due to JNF’s statutes, which “prohibit sale or lease of land to non-Jews.”

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In the early 1980s, JNF Canada helped finance an Israeli government campaign to “Judaize” the Galilee, the largely Arab region in northern Israel. Khateeb Raja, mayor of Deir Hanna, a Palestinian-Israeli town in the Galilee, told the Globe and Mail in 1981 that “the government is building Jewish settlements on our land, surrounding us and turning our villages into ghettos.” A resident of the Galilee, Ishi Mimon, told the paper that he planned to move his family to the newly settled “Galil Canada” area because “the Galilee should have a Jewish majority.”

JNF Canada’s representative in Israel, Akiva Einis, described the political objective of Galil Canada: “The government decided to stop the wholesale plunder (by Israeli Arabs) of state lands [conquered in the 1947/48 war]. . . . The settlements are all on mountain tops and look out over large areas of land. If an Arab squatter takes a plow onto land that is not his, the settlers lodge a complaint with the police.”

JNF Canada spent tens of millions of dollars, aiming to raise $35 million, on fourteen Jewish settlements in Galil Canada. In the contested valley of Lotem, a stone wall and monument was erected, reported the Globe, with “hundreds of small plaques etched with names and home towns of Canadians who have contributed money to the Galilee settlements.” Most of the donors to Galil Canada were Jewish, “but a Pentecostal congregation in Vancouver, the Glad Tidings Temple, has given $1 million.”

Tawfiz Daggash, Deir Hanna’s deputy mayor, denounced Canadian financial support for the settlements to the Globe. “I want to say to the people of Canada that every dollar they contribute [to JNF] is helping the Israeli government in its attempt to destroy the Arab people here.”

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Global revocations loom

The CRA’s decision to revoke the JNF’s charitable status has already energized the global Stop the JNF campaign. The UK-based legal advocacy group, the International Centre for Justice for Palestinians, cited Canada’s decision in a recent letter urging the UK attorney general to revoke the charitable status of the UK branch of the JNF. With chapters in some fifty countries, the JNF raises around a quarter billion dollars a year in subsidized donations. Losing charitable status in these countries would significantly reduce the parent organization’s resources to further its discriminatory, colonial policies.

While the JNF revocation marks a victory for those opposing Canada’s role in Palestinian dispossession, hundreds of other registered charities raise over a quarter billion dollars annually projects in Israel, with many violating existing CRA rules.

On the same day that JNF’s loss of charitable status was made official, the Canada Gazette also announced the revocation of the Ne’eman Foundation’s charitable status. Raising $7.3 million in 2022, the Ne’eman Foundation assists West Bank colonies and the Israeli military.

Formal complaints have also been submitted to the CRA regarding a dozen other Israel-focused charities, including the Canadian Zionist Cultural Association, Jewish Heritage Foundation of Canada, Mizrachi Canada, and HESEG Foundation.

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In recent months, there has been significant activism surrounding Israel-focused charities. In June, public figures such as Gabor Maté, Yann Martel, Linda McQuaig, Roger Waters, Monia Mazigh, Desmond Cole, Libby Davies, and others signed the “Stop Subsidizing Genocide” public letter. The letter points out that “200+ registered Canadian charities funnel a quarter billion dollars a year to projects in Israel. Many of these groups finance projects that support the Israeli military, racist organizations and West Bank settlements in contravention of Canada Revenue Agency rules.”

New Democratic Party revenue critic Niki Ashton has also challenged the government on this issue. She hosted a press conference at the parliamentary press gallery on June 13, calling “on the Liberal government to investigate Canadian charities that allegedly funneled taxpayer money in support of Israeli military operations and illegal settlements in Palestine.” Ashton has also sponsored a parliamentary petition on the subject and sent a letter to Revenue Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau, demanding an investigation into these charities’ funding. In a recent post on the matter, Ashton wrote, “Not one cent of Canadian tax-dollars should be funding genocide.”

On the International Day of Charity, September 5, Just Peace Advocates, Canadian Foreign Policy Institute, and others are organizing a day of action at CRA offices across the country, calling on the Canada Revenue Agency to stop subsidizing genocide.

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Is Starbucks app down for US customers trying to access Holiday Menu 2024?- The Week

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Is Starbucks app down for US customers trying to access Holiday Menu 2024?- The Week

Several Starbucks customers in the United States complained that they were unable to place orders through its mobile app on Thursday — the first day of the coffee chain’s holiday menu. However, Starbucks later claimed that the issue was resolved.

From ordering beverages to buying reusable cups and merchandise, multiple services offered by the Starbucks app were unavailable, US citizens claimed on social media. They were asked to place their order at a Starbucks store, US media reports quoted people as claiming. “We’re sorry for the inconvenience,” the message displayed by the app was headlined. “Mobile ordering is currently unavailable. Please visit one of our stores and place your order with a barista,” it further said. 

Confirming the glitch, Starbucks Care’s official handle replied to a customer stating, “we are currently experiencing a temporary outage of the order ahead and pay feature in our app. We continue to welcome and serve customers in our drive-thrus and stores.” However, the coffee chain hasn’t elaborated on the cause, nature and scale of the issue. 

The response was given to a user called Chritine D, who asked, “is the app down? first day of Christmas at Bucks and my app with ALL my stars won’t work?” 

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According to a Business Insider news report, a platform tracking website outages found several users reporting problems with the Starbucks app around 8 a.m. local time. It coincided with the time most Americans tried to order their morning coffee. The media house, in an online article, mentioned that its staff in  Washington, DC, and New York City offices tried to place orders using the app but failed.

As a part of the ‘Starbucks Holiday Menu 2024’, the company is offering Cran-Merry Orange Lemonade Refreshe, Cran-Merry Orange Refresher, Peppermint Mocha, Iced Gingerbread Oatmilk Chai and Turkey Sage Danish among other items. CLICK HERE TO ACCESS FULL MENU

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The world of legal ‘cannabis’ and how it is getting popular in India- The Week

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The world of legal ‘cannabis’ and how it is getting popular in India- The Week

Welcome to the world of Cannabidiol or CBD, derived from plants like Cannabis Sativa and Cannabis Indica that we better know by names ranging from marijuana and hemp, or simply, by its variant, ganja.

But CBD refers to the medicinal products derived from the plant. Administered as oils, tinctures or even as a neat capsule, CBD is a bonafide medicine whose popularity has been on the upswing in India in recent times — so much so that that there are over 20 CBD-focused medicine manufacturers in the country, with top players like Bombay Hemp Company, Awshad and Indian Hemp Organics (IHO). 

“With more people seeking natural remedies for conditions like pain, anxiety, and insomnia, demand for safe, effective CBD products is rising,” said Richa, co-founder of Awshad. 

Richa ventured into cannabis-based medicines and pain relievers after witnessing the agony and struggle of her beloved pet dog Champ, as he went through a slow, agonising death due to cancer.

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“Witnessing his pain inspired me to explore plant-based wellness, leading me to co-found Awshad with Shivam in 2021,” Richa said.

CBD is used for pain, anxiety, insomnia and inflammation, coming in various forms, ranging from full-spectrum of the tetrahydrocannabinol (the main psychotropic part of the cannabis plant), broad spectrum and isolate forms, the levels strictly regulated for medical formulations.

Of course, let’s put any mistaken notion of morality and civics to rest, right away. Cannabis and its various forms of psychoactive substances have been culturally and an intrinsic part of Indian history and social life for centuries, ranging from the mythologies down to lifestyles and festive observations. They were regulated only in the mid-1980s in the country with the draconian Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (Prevention) Act 1985, commonly known as NDPS. The act came mainly after major pressure from the Reagan-era USA, which was then struggling under an influx of cocaine and other chemical drugs easily smuggled in from Latin America. 

More worryingly, such trade was also increasingly seen to be financing terrorism and the mafia in many parts of the world. While nations of the world cracked down, a natural Indian healer ended up as the big casualty.

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However, the CBD formulation we are talking about is completely legal, a Schedule E-1 drug that is regulated by the Ministry of AYUSH as well as state excise departments. The products are officially allowed on prescriptions and for therapeutic use only, with the cannabis sourced from government-approved farms in Madhya Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Uttar Pradesh, which are strictly regulated and monitored.

“The scope of medical cannabis in India is growing immensely as awareness of its therapeutic benefits expands with our efforts and other companies on educating customers,” added Richa. 

In recent years, recreational cannabis, too, is getting legalised by an increasing number of countries, including Canada, Thailand, many states in the US as well as many countries in Europe. A discussion paper asking comments whether to legalise cannabis and the like is pending with the union government. An expert committee in Himachal Pradesh last year recommended that cannabis be legalised in the state, to generate revenue and create employment.

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The Turkish holiday hotspot with turtles, mud baths visited by Cleopatra and stunning all-inclusive hotel

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We spent a week in Sarigerme, on Turkey’s Dalaman coast

WADING out of the sea, my daughter Riley is breathless with excitement as she tells me a huge turtle has just floated under her as she was swimming.

Bearing in mind she is 13 and rarely excited by anything these days, it’s clearly an impressive sight.

We spent a week in Sarigerme, on Turkey’s Dalaman coast

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We spent a week in Sarigerme, on Turkey’s Dalaman coast
Look out for Loggerheads at turtle beach

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Look out for Loggerheads at turtle beach

That is just one of many things that will wow us on our week in Sarigerme, on Turkey’s Dalaman coast.

It’s been almost three decades since I last visited Turkey – on a girls’ holiday to tourist hot spot Marmaris.

This time, I’ve picked the four-star Tui Blue Tropical, just 20 minutes’ drive from Dalaman airport, for a getaway with my husband Alistair and our twins Riley and Harris.

Here, a marble-clad lobby leads out to the pool area, where you’ll find low-rise buildings housing 500 rooms.

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Our junior suite is close to the pool, but not too close to be noisy.

There’s one bedroom with a king-size bed, while two sofas in the living area turn into beds come night.

A spacious balcony overlooks tranquil gardens, while the bathroom comes with a power shower, bathrobes and slippers.

All you can eat

We soon establish that people are up early to get the best sunbeds, but manage to nab a few close to the bustling restaurant by the main pool (there are seven to choose from) and spend the afternoon riding the two water slides and eating vanilla and strawberry ice cream.

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At breakfast, we enjoy everything from freshly cooked waffles and pancakes to sausages, bacon and eggs in the main restaurant.

For lunch, we opt for the pool eatery, feasting on a delicious assortment of fresh salads and fish straight from the grill, and it feels super-healthy (other than the glass of white to wash it down).

Discover Urla: Turkey’s Hidden Gem for Wine and Cuisine

Anyone with children knows the joy of an all-inclusive – especially with teens who never seem to stop eating.

My two tuck into pizza, pasta, grilled chicken and salad, accompanied by smoothies.

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In the evening, it’s back to the buffet, with its variety of themed nights, including Chinese and Italian.

But the Turkish kebabs, houmous, meatballs and delicious breads are all a hit, and the huge selection of Insta-worthy desserts on offer are also a winner.

After dinner, the resort is always buzzing with entertainment – from live music to acrobats and discos, as well as several Turkish-bazaar-style shops to explore.

The kids pick up cheap football shirts, while a Louis Vuitton Neverfull dupe costs me £24, as opposed to the designer handbag price of £1.4k, and it’s pretty hard to tell the difference!

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Our favourite place by far, though, is the pristine stretch of sandy beach, with its clear-blue waters.

The nearby beach bar plays cool tunes and serves up a cocktail of the day at 4.30pm to sip from our loungers.

Fresh seafood hits the spot in Sarigerme

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Fresh seafood hits the spot in Sarigerme
Alistair, Riley, Sinead and Harris get stuck in at the mud baths

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Alistair, Riley, Sinead and Harris get stuck in at the mud baths

Some afternoons, I even manage a much-needed exercise class, such as a HIIT and yoga, while morning football goes down a treat with Harris.

There is also daily beach volleyball with the Tui reps, which proves very competitive!

Water activities include parasailing and banana boats – we brave the inflatable and it’s an experience to remember.

A river runs through it

The hotel’s beachfront is not the only place to spot turtles.

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Midweek, we take an excursion down the River Dalyan on an eco boat, which costs £49 for adults, £28 for children.

It’s a brilliant way to see a completely different side of Turkey, taking in luscious vegetation, beautiful homes and luxe hotels along the riverbank.

Our first destination is the Dalyan Mud Baths, which claim to have anti-ageing properties and is said to have been visited by Cleopatra to maintain her beauty.

The smell of sulphur hits as soon as we pull up, and it takes some persuasion to get Riley and Harris into the mud pool, where we all cover ourselves in what seems very similar to potent green slime.

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After we’ve let the mud dry in the sun, it’s time for a hose down, before a dip in a warm sulphur pool, followed by a cleansing shower.

It’s all great fun, though my bikini has never been the same again and I’m not quite convinced I look any younger!

Back on the boat, we spot a few ancient rock tombs carved into the cliffs by the Lycian civilisation, before stopping at Iztuzu Beach, nicknamed Turtle Beach after the endangered loggerhead turtles that nest here.

We feed several that are swimming around the boats with crab claws, before a spot of sunbathing and a refreshing swim.

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Later that evening, when we’ve made sure we are totally mud-free, we walk the 2km into the village of Sarigerme and wander the winding streets.

In quaint little eatery Dorya, we feast on fresh calamari, £3, fillet of sea bass, £7.60, and a huge salad, £1.80, before popping into a few of the village shops to admire the colourful crockery.

I only wish I could fit some in my suitcase!

Before we know it, it’s time to fly home and say goodbye to one of the loveliest places we’ve ever been.

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  • Seven nights for a family of four at Tui Blue Tropical cost from £879 per person (Tui.co.uk).
Drift down the Dalyan River

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Drift down the Dalyan River
Find all you need from bliss to buffets at Tui Blue Tropical

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Find all you need from bliss to buffets at Tui Blue Tropical
Rock out at the cliffside Lycian tombs

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Rock out at the cliffside Lycian tombs

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I visited Ireland’s ‘ancient capital’ an hour from London – with seafront pubs and Viking experiences

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At Trim Castle a guided tour starts at just £2.50 and it is free to explore the grounds

I FEEL about six years old, hands and knees covered in thick mud, as I emerge from a tunnel only big enough to crawl through, first used by Christian settlers more than 1,200 years ago to escape Viking raids.

I’m at Knowth, the world’s largest passage tomb, just 20 minutes north of Dublin in Ireland’s Boyne Valley.

At Trim Castle a guided tour starts at just £2.50 and it is free to explore the grounds

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At Trim Castle a guided tour starts at just £2.50 and it is free to explore the groundsCredit: Alamy
The ancient sites of Newgrange, Knowth and Howth were built 5,000 years ago for the burial of around half a dozen 'god-like' people

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The ancient sites of Newgrange, Knowth and Howth were built 5,000 years ago for the burial of around half a dozen ‘god-like’ peopleCredit: Supplied
Plenty to sea at Annagassan Harbour

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Plenty to sea at Annagassan HarbourCredit: Meath County Council
Mel Gibson in Braveheart

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Mel Gibson in BraveheartCredit: Alamy

The ancient sites of Newgrange, Knowth and Howth were built 5,000 years ago for the burial of around half a dozen “god-like” people.

Our tour guide explains that the monuments, older than the Egyptian pyramids and Stonehenge, were built like giant lasagnes, with huge stones piled one on top of the other.

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Known as the birthplace of Ireland’s ancient east, the Boyne Valley is ideal for exploring Ireland’s history and tradition — without travelling too far from Dublin Airport.

After my ancient sites tour, I headed to Causey Farm in Fordstown, which offers groups of tourists the chance to “be Irish for the day” for as little as £12pp.

Arriving to the homely smell of a wood-burning stove, I’m shown how to make Irish soda bread, before moving on to a lesson on the traditional Irish drum, known as a bodhrán (pronounced bow-ran).

Next comes a tour of the animals — I get to meet a fluffy, ten-week-old border collie that melts my heart, as well as a slightly less charming (actually terrifying) pig, some alpacas and rabbits.

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The visit finishes with farmer Matt Murtagh demonstrating how his sheepdog Crick effortlessly corrals a herd of sheep wherever he demands, at one point playfully running the herd inches from me.

The Boyne Valley is also ripe with history — it’s the setting for the 1995 Mel Gibson film Braveheart and where the Battle of the Boyne was fought between deposed King James II and the newly crowned King William III in 1690.

At Trim Castle, a guided tour starts at just £2.50 and it is free to explore the grounds.

We get to climb right to the roof, stopping to see key rooms along the way, with walls covered in 18th century graffiti — a John Gibney marked his name in 1760.

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Aer Lingus launch new direct flight to popular stateside destination from Dublin Airport

We’re then shown the chapel where the priests’ ornate wash basin can still be seen, and there’s even a medieval toilet (read hole in the floor) — lucky us!

If history isn’t your thing, Park Beo, an adventure base in Wilkinstown, offers a “gateway” to the Lakelands Greenway — a cycle path stretching 18 miles along an old railway line from Navan to Kingscourt — as well as shops selling everything from cheese toasties to cherry bakewells produced by a local.

With a huge car park, it acts as space to service visitors who want to head out for a walk with a fresh takeaway coffee.

There’s also a bi- cycle hire office with bikes and e-bikes to rent from £8.30 an hour.

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If you prefer a seafront amble, this region boasts miles of impressive coastline.

The village of Annagassan, a former Viking settlement, has breathtaking coastal views, with a dramatic tide perfect for razor clams.

Seafood banquet

You can sample them fresh at local joint, The Glyde Inn, a charming 18th-century pub with roaring fires and an award-winning restaurant with panoramic sea views.

For something extra special, the family-run Irish National Pub of the Year award winner offers a dinner-and-show style “Viking VR Experience” for £50pp.

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Each ticket gets you a pint of Irish Pale Ale, brewed down the road, as well as a ten-minute VR show of what the area would have looked like at the time of the Vikings in 841 AD, when Bjorn the Great was in charge of the settlement there.

Then comes the main event, a seafood banquet of whatever has been caught that day.

I was served Carlingford oysters and crab and butter-coated razor clams to start, followed by a main course of black sole with wilted sea beech foraged just outside the restaurant’s patio doors, served alongside a creamy sea radish mash.

Try to book for late afternoon, as from 5.30pm to 6.30pm each day a live band plays traditional music.

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It’s the perfect ending to any Irish adventure.

GO: BOYNE VALLEY

GETTING THERE: Aer Lingus offers nine daily flights from Heathrow to Dublin at £59.99 each way.

See aerlingus.com.

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STAYING THERE: Double rooms at the 4H Trim Castle Hotel in Meath from £100 per night.

See trimcastle.com.

The Headfort Arms Hotel in Kells has rooms from £82 per night.

See headfortarms.ie.

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MORE INFO: See discoverboynevalley.ie.

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Eurowings adds access to four new lounges

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Eurowings adds access to four new lounges

BIZclass passengers and HON Circle and Senator status members will now have access to lounges in Palma de Mallorca, Dubai, Cairo and Jeddah

Continue reading Eurowings adds access to four new lounges at Business Traveller.

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Sunday Number 66: Numbers Puzzle

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Sunday Number 66: Numbers Puzzle

Sunday Number 66: Numbers Puzzle

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