The catch wasn't great but everybody eats a little bit. All the good fishing was done offshore by the Israeli's.
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Blockade of the Sea
The catch wasn't great but everybody eats a little bit. All the good fishing was done offshore by the Israeli's.
Zakat with Perfume
When the Code Pink (CP) delegation held a press conference in Cairo, Egypt on March 6, in attendance was the owner of the bus company they had contracted with for transport to the border. She was so moved by the CP mission to Gaza, to engage with Palestinian women for International Women's Day (IWD), that she provided the 15- passenger minivan, a truck, and the gasoline for free! She said that this was her Zakat, Islamic charitable donations that are required by all Muslims except the poor Muslims. This is "zakat with perfume," the bus company owner said.
The Director General of the Egyptian Red Crescent Society facilitated a truck and bus for the CP delegation to use inside Gaza. This was available at the Rafah Crossing. On March 7 the Red Crescent provided the CPers with a storehouse and 20 volunteers to assemble the baskets for IWD activities.
On IWD CP broke into 3-4 groups of separated by gender, for the day's activities.
Author (COLOR PURPLE) Alice Walker's partner, was resistant to breaking into male-only, female-only groups when Code Pink made their visits to the various organizations. but when he came back from the visits "he was glowing", said Gael Murphy, CP activist.
Alice Walker did not take notes during the sessions with bomb victims, she just listened, and at times, seem to be meditating. "She just absorbed it," recounted Gael.
Sunday, March 15, 2009
White Flags Ignored by IDF
The tragic accounts of the Gaza Palestinians are all very similar. They left their homes after a bomb, a mortar, or artillery round hit their houses. They raised white flags or hands over heads. Then one or more family members would be shot by Israeli soldier's gunfire.
The US Gaza Delegation (March, 2009) found Saleh sitting on a chair in the middle of the dirt road. He and his family left their home on January 4 at 11:45AM. "We had white flags," he told us.
Saleh and his family decided to evacuate their home in the village of Johr Ad-Deick.
His 13 year-old niece had been wounded by gunfire. First, Saleh's family gathered under the stairs and called the Red Cross to get care for the niece. Israeli soldiers would not allow the Red Cross to enter the area.
They walked across the field, 150 meters from Israeli tanks. They waited for orders from the invading soldiers. There were 27 children, five women, and four men. One tank began firing and the family retreated. A soldier fired into the group, hitting Saleh's mother and daughter, Majda, killing her. His mother kept walking for a while, until she too, perished.
Saleh said they could not carry the bodies of his mother and sister. His family made their way to a nearby refugee camp and called the Red Crescent to get medical aid for his niece; and to retrieve the martyred mother and daughter. The Israeli army had not reached the camp yet, so the NGO arrived quickly.
When the Israeli ceasefire began on January 18th, Saleh went back to his house to retrieve the martyred bodies. He found his mother's body near the house, buried in sand and rubble. After searching, he finally found his sister's body 500 meters from the house. Her body had been run over by a tank. This was 14 days after their deaths.
The brutality and dehumanizing treatment by Israeli soldiers of the Palestinians of Gaza is yet another chapter in the sixty-one year history of massacres, displacement, occupation, segregation and racism. Our task of moving the US taxpayers and government to action is daunting, We must work to break the blockade and allow the Gazans to rebuild. Above all, the US and Israel must talk to Hamas, stop illegal arms shipments to the Israelis, and achieve justice for all Palestinians. This is the way to end violence and insure security for Palestinians and Israelis.
Don Bryant
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Gaza Strip
MEDIA RELEASE: Multinationals in Gaza
MARCH 12, 2009
CONTACTS: IN GAZA: Inaya Khalil 011-972-59-706-1774
IN US: Kim Hill 440-884-0936
Multinational Humanitarian Delegations Converge in Gaza
The US Gaza Delegation for Medical/Mental Health and Relief spoke with dismembered and disfigured children and their parents, survivors of Cast Lead, Israel's recent 22-day bombing campaign in the Gaza Strip, yesterday.
"Our visit to Gaza is difficult and wonderful," said tearful Cleveland activist Don Bryant.
"Our country paid for this horrific attack and I feel great shame. But the Palestinian people have welcomed us with great generosity."
Since entering Gaza on March 7, the American delegation has toured the Strip's destroyed homes and listened to and listened to accounts of the bombing by the surviving members of families who were buried in the explosions.
The Samouni family lost 28 people in one night. The surviving group of eight women and children sat under a few sticks and a torn blue tarp on a field of rubble that had been their homes. The mother of five-year-old Mahmoud Samouni, whose face had been scarred, blocking his nasal passage, said her son had expressed suicidal wishes.
The delegation had waited four days to enter Gaza through the Egypt border, which has been largely closed to journalists and aid workers since the bombing ended. They camped at the border, together with an Italian delegation of psychologists and social workers. The two groups were allowed into Gaza on March 7, along with a team of British orthopedic surgeons. The American anti-war group Code Pink and British George Galloway's convoy of 200 ambulances and trucks bearing donated supplies followed shortly thereafter.
The siege on Gaza, in effect since 2006, has made basic supplies like tomato paste and children's clothes nearly impossible to come by. Since the end of the December-January attacks, journalists, UN workers, and humanitarian aid workers have been denied access into the Strip.
Episcopal Hospital in Gaza: The Facts
Suhayleh Terazi, Director from Spartanburg, SCC. Originally from Gaza City.
Heard about our suffering at the border, strong will to come means a lot to us. Unable to go out and completely isolated from the whole world.
Situation in Gaza is very bad and suffering of people can't be described in words. Witnessed the atrocities, especially during the last "war." She could not believe that she would survive it. Living minute by minute. Angry at what happened accompanied by the silence of the whole world.
Gaza 360 sq. km. 1.5 million people, one of highest density in world. 2/3 are refugees living in camps.
Ahliarab serves Palestinian people, without discrimination. Target group is most needy. Built in 1882 by Christian Missionary Society till 1952 when followed by Southern Baptists -- 1982 and had financial crisis and sold and went to Episcopal diocese of Jerusalem. hospital is 80 beds but only 50 are in use -- surgery, pediatrics, medicine, orthopedics, urology. A small gynecology clinic. Diagnostic services -- xray and lab -- and pt for outpatients.
Another field of service -- prevention and capacity-building that is extended to personnel and local folks.
Expanded emergency services and outreach. Addressing areas of invasion and bombing -- provide free medical outpatient and inpatient care, dx(diagnosis) and rx(treatment). Increasing # of poor families -- provide most needy with food baskets and special food aid programs.
Not an easy task. Every day a new challenge. Since June 2007 -- tightened the siege on Gaza, 1.5 million prisoners, suffering from shortages of food, medicine and medical supplies and staff.
Health system in Gaza has been deteriorating with restrictions and shortages. Out of medicine in last "war", esp. anesthetics. Suffered from electricity cuts. Israel restricted fuel and quantity of electricity to Gaza already. 8-12 hours a day. With shortage of fuel, medical machines, cannot work effectively. Shortage of spare parts. Shortage of funds to replace. Applicable to every aspect of life.
Siege brought shortage of raw materials. 3,900 factories limited, 3,500 factories completely closed because unable to get raw materials or to export products. 75,000 laborers left without jobs.
Poverty -- 80% of population depends on food aid.
Because of shortages of basic goods tremendous increase in prices.
No fresh meat in Gaza. Increase in prices from 35-50%. No fresh milk. Price of flour skyhigh. Daily income per person is $1.10 down from $2.00.
Lacking access to medicines and hospital. Cannot get permit to cross for days or more.
Last "war" caused more suffering. 50,000 homeless. 5,000 injured, 1,400 killed. >55% women and children. Left people very angry about what is going on.
The same people who were running for their lives are those who were clapping for Yasser Arafat at Oslo. People do not believe in peace based on injustice.
Aid is not enough. Need people to work for peace with justice in the Holy Lands. At least 2 states built on dignity. Security of Israel will never be if neighboring people are hungry, angry and humiliated. Humiliation and isolation will bring more violence to the area. Need advocate for peace built on justice.
One of biggest problem is shortage and contamination of water. Network needs pumps and and pumps need fuel. Every day 40-50 million liters of sewage dumped into Gaza.
Now have influx of medicines. Still missing many items. Have to apply through who to get medicines.
Has small autoclave in Israel waiting for permit to come in. Shortage of anesthesiologists and cardiologists and ICU personnel. Appreciate part-timers. Arab-American Mediacl Association would like to come but can't secure passage.
During the last 2 weeks, head of churches came from Jerusalem, but didn't allow the Anglican Bishop because he has a Palestinian passport.
She has a Palestinian ID card and US passport -- cannot go to the West Bank. A prisoner.
Outreach program Tuesday and Saturday. Try to plant hope for better days to come.
During the war, took the complex cases. 15 % of the surgical patients. All lectures are open to other health providers. Are here for the community. During the first intifada Amal came here and visited. Per annum caring for 32,000 outpatients and 4800 inpatients.
First intifada 185 staff members and now 60 full-time and 60 part-time.
Provide outpatient mental health services -- medical director has found that a lot of children have psychological problems -- bedwetting, fear of going out. Call Eyad Suraj, Palestine Mental health Program to provide the services. Working with community leaders and women's groups -- send buses and bring them into the hospital for exam and treatment.
Episcopal Relief and Development. Provide money and advocacy -- preach for reconciliation, peace and justice. Arabs and Jews are brothers and sisters. This conflict should end soon.
Monday, March 9, 2009
Getting into Gaza
Crossed into Gaza/ Refugees Devastated
The US Gaza Delegation for Medical/Mental Health and Relief finally received approval to enter the Gaza Strip through the Rafah Crossing on Friday, March 6, 2009. We had camped at the border gate one night and were prepared to camp again. We received word late Friday afternoon that we would be allowed to enter Gaza, Palestine. With us was the Italian Delegation of mostly mental health professionals and a team of British orthopedic surgeons.
We have much to report, but I will start with this summary of our visit to a village that was devastated by the US funded Israeli massacre in Gaza.
On March 8, International Women's Day, the US Gaza Delegation for Medical and Mental Health visited the Al Shata' village in North Gaza City. The village was in a state of disaster. There were piles of rubble everywhere. Some homes were partially destroyed with makeshift plastic roofs and lean-tos to keep out the wind, sand and rain. One boy of about 15 years approached us with his father. He had two toes missing, a disfigured hand and wounded eye and other bruises. Gaza Delegation member Dr. Saeed Algheri examined him on the spot. Other delegates provided his father with the phone number of the Palestine office of the Palestinian Children's Relief Fund of Kent, Ohio.
Delegate and filmmaker Edward Salem had walked off into the rubble and I followed him over piles of broken concrete blocks, splintered beams and scattered housewares, fixtures and children's book bags and smashed toys. There were two men sitting by a small campfire next to their destroyed home. Edward was sipping a coffee that they had offered him from their meager supplies. The woman of the "house" began talking in Arabic to US/Gaza delegate Dr. Martha Nathan and me. Neither of us understood the words, but we certainly heard her anguish. Delegate Inaya Khalil came over and told us that the woman only wanted a tent so her family could have a safe place to sleep. She showed us the shelter they had built to keep their supplies. It was not adequate for sleeping because the logs they used were unstable and might not stand in a heavy wind. The rain came in at times and soaked the few belongings they had salvaged from their pre-massacre (yes, MASSACRE) lives. The woman showed us the embroidered crafts that her disabled daughter had made. Two robes and an embroidered cloth tray with a broken frame. I gratefully purchased this fine piece.
The worst was yet to be revealed to us. Over a few more piles of broken Palestinian lives and refugee camp homes we came upon a woman, about forty years old. She carried a young boy and invited us into her collapsed porch. She was speaking and digging with her hands in the dirt. I thought she was looking for something. I asked Inaya what she was looking for. "She's showing us her husband's blood," she told me. He had been gunned down with forty bullets by Israeli soldiers. The soldiers came in the night and shouted in Hebrew for the owner of the house to come outside. The eldest son, who now sat before us, had risen to answer the soldiers call. Mrs. Al Samouni, the wife of the dead man whose blood stained the earth, told us that Mr. Al Samouni gestured his son to sit back down and he went to the door, now riddled with bullet holes. He went out with his hands raised above his head. He was killed with merciless gunfire - along with 28 other members of the Al Samouni family killed by heavy artillery, except for one other who was killed by gunfire.
Mrs. Al Samouni begged the soldiers not to kill the children. "We are not Fatah! We are not Hamas!" With utter merciless brutality these gutless murderers shot the four-year old child inside the house. Today, and everyday, they live in the two-room house with these dark memories, with little to eat, and the stench of death all around. On our way out the son picked up a gun shell he found in the rubble; he handed it to me. We determined it was from an M-16, made in the USA.
Friday, March 6, 2009
Crossing into Gaza
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Pictures
Rafah Border, Egypt
Monday, March 2, 2009
School supplies, Water units, and Soccor balls
In CAIRO, Egypt
The Gaza Delegation has now arrived in Cairo, and will be going to the US embassy to get our passes to enter Gaza. If all goes well, we should be heading to the Rafah border right after. We are really excited and ready. I personally can't wait! Our delegation consists of 8 members at this time, one more to follow in a few days. This is a wonderful group of people. We will be taking pictures and posting them as soon as we have access to internet services.