Nearing The Edge In Gaza
People are suffering in Gaza as a result of incessant wars and an occupation of over 50 years.
People are suffering in Gaza as a result of incessant wars and an occupation of over 50 years.
At this very moment, Team Kinder is on the ground in North Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley Palestinian Wavel Camp distributing clothes and food fuel to families impacted by recent floods. We are now witnessing the 4th generation being raised in the camp. The Wavel Camp used to be the French Military base. The families live in…
The Social Development Center is a school KinderUSA funds in Ein el Helweh camp, the largest of 12 camps in all of Lebanon, that cares for 81 students, 28 of whom are Syrian refugees, some born in the camp. In addition, we have a tutoring program with 44 students whereby students from the UNRWA schools…
Although no longer in the international spotlight, the humanitarian crisis in Palestine continues unabated. In Gaza, food insecurity impacts 7 out of 10 people due to widespread poverty and high unemployment. As the strangulating blockade approaches its twelfth year, the overall health and well-being of the civilian population continue on a downward spiral. Meanwhile, the…
As 2018 comes to an end, we are sad to report that living conditions in Gaza continue to get worse, taking an unfathomable toll on the population. Unemployment is over 55%, with youth unemployment at 75%, while most who do get paid receive only half their wages. Many families live on $1 a day, at best.…
With every passing month, Gaza becomes more “unlivable”. More than 1.6 Million of the Gaza Strip’s 2 million residents now rely on the delivery of humanitarian goods and services just to survive. According to the World Bank “Gaza’s economy is in a free fall” with an unemployment rate reaching more than 32 percent, “the highest…
For over thirty years, Dr. Mads Gilbert has worked in conflict zones including volunteering in hospitals under siege in West Beirut, Lebanon during the 80s and Gaza for the last two decades. His perspective as a doctor and activist in such a conflicted time and area makes him the ideal person for our upcoming speaking…
For many parents, the most challenging part of the school day involves waking children from sleep and preparing them to leave the comfort of the home. Education is easily taken for granted. In Palestine, however, recently publicized cuts to UNRWA funding threaten the one bright spot in the lives of thousands of Palestinian children – education. Make…
An urgent appeal was made today by Mr. Jamie McGoldrick, the Humanitarian Coordinator for the occupied Palestinian territory. Fuel supplies are dangerously low affecting every aspect of life in Gaza. “We have now run out of funds and are delivering the final supplies in the next few days. Without funds to enable ongoing deliveries, service…
Speaking after a recent visit to Palestine, UN Special Rapporteur Michael Lynx declared that in Gaza, “Residents are deprived of their most basic rights, including the rights to health, to education, and most recently, in attempting to exercise their right to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly, they were deprived of the right to life.”…
At this very moment, Team Kinder is on the ground in North Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley Palestinian Wavel Camp distributing clothes and food fuel to families impacted by recent floods.
We are now witnessing the 4th generation being raised in the camp.
The Wavel Camp used to be the French Military base. The families live in the former horse stables that have been turned into living quarters. The photo attached shows the front door of a ‘home’ a family is living in where the horse would hang its head out. It is quite sad, but a testament to the resiliency of our people.
Remember, our work is only possible with your continued support. Please consider donating.
The Social Development Center is a school KinderUSA funds in Ein el Helweh camp, the largest of 12 camps in all of Lebanon, that cares for 81 students, 28 of whom are Syrian refugees, some born in the camp.
In addition, we have a tutoring program with 44 students whereby students from the UNRWA schools come for tutoring by our staff in subjects they are failing or need extra help. The Social Development Center teaches academics such as Arabic, English, Math, Science, reading and writing to name a few subjects. The Center also provides awareness programs for the parents and the students such as smoking, hygiene, acceptance of others.
The Social Development Center is also a place for the camp neighborhood children to gather for activities on Friday’s where they play games & receive food/snacks. Over 50 young people come to play in the open play area every Friday with the staff on hand to guide the activities.
Remember, our work is only possible with your continued support. Please consider donating.
Although no longer in the international spotlight, the humanitarian crisis in Palestine continues unabated. In Gaza, food insecurity impacts 7 out of 10 people due to widespread poverty and high unemployment. As the strangulating blockade approaches its twelfth year, the overall health and well-being of the civilian population continue on a downward spiral.
Meanwhile, the twin blows of funding cuts to the UNRWA and the discontinuation of USAID assistance for Palestine have led to even more misery among large swaths of the population dependent on outside aid for survival. Fuel shortages have contributed to the suffering, crippling the health system, while rolling blackouts play havoc on every aspect of life. According to reports, 97% of Gaza’s water aquifers are contaminated, providing water unsuitable for drinking. The end result of this completely avoidable, man-made crisis is that gastrointestinal diseases account for 12% of all deaths in children under 4 years of age.
Indeed, no aspect of Palestinian life has been unaffected by this crisis. Two million people in Gaza survive on the brink of catastrophe, and the future of thousands of children remains at risk.
While families scramble to survive, KinderUSA continues to deliver food to indigent families and provide meals for school children in Gaza. We believe that our work today is more essential than ever as Palestinians are assailed from all sides in what can only be viewed as a sustained effort to crush the indomitable spirit of resilience and uproot Palestinians from their intimate connection to their land.
Over the years, you have generously supported KinderUSA in our work on behalf of needy children in Palestine and helped promote innovative projects that promote independence and sustainability. When others have shied away, you have stepped forward, upholding the belief that all children – including the children of Palestine – deserve the opportunity to live and thrive in a safe environment that offers hope for a better future.
Please consider making an online tax-deductible contribution of $25, $50, $100, or whatever is meaningful to you. Many employers match employee gifts to KinderUSA which is a way to double or in some instances triple your donation. Together, InshaAllah, we can continue to deliver hope.
As 2018 comes to an end, we are sad to report that living conditions in Gaza continue to get worse, taking an unfathomable toll on the population. Unemployment is over 55%, with youth unemployment at 75%, while most who do get paid receive only half their wages. Many families live on $1 a day, at best. Over 95% of the water supply is now undrinkable due to the persistent lack of electricity limited to about 4 hours per day. The land, sea, and air blockade is now in its 12th year, sealing Gaza off from the rest of the world.
Children in Gaza are caged in a toxic slum from birth to death, where they are being suffocated out of hope, out of life, out of any sense for progress.
One year from now, Gaza will be “unlivable” as determined by the United Nations. Officials recently reconsidered their prediction about 2020 by saying “We’ve been optimistic about this deadline. Gaza is already, in fact, unlivable.”
Despite the hardships, we at KinderUSA are inspired and motivated by the determination and perseverance of our partners and beneficiaries in Gaza. We continue to promote the empowerment of women heads of household by focusing on self-sustainability. KinderUSA provides them with the education and tools they need to begin chicken farming and then we are their first customer, purchasing the eggs and chickens to use for our emergency food distribution program serving Gaza’s neediest families. With your support, we hope to extend this project into 2019 and beyond.
Your donation will continue to enable women to begin their own business, generating an income to care for their children: $170 will buy 200 chickens to get them started; $45 will buy a water tank to feed the chickens; and $25 will buy enough chicken feed to last a 4-month period. To date, KinderUSA has provided 74 women with the necessary skills and tools needed to operate their own business.
Um Mohammed from South of Gaza told our field representative, “Before the project I was very sad because I am the breadwinner of my family ( 8 members ) and my husband left me 3 years ago. I am alone and my house lacks of everything. Today I have an income, I am very happy, I am productive woman and I depend on myself. The project restores my own confidence and gives my children a future”.
Please consider a year-end donation to ensure that this project continues. We at KinderUSA send you the warmest wishes for a new year of peace, hope, and security.
With every passing month, Gaza becomes more “unlivable”. More than 1.6 Million of the Gaza Strip’s 2 million residents now rely on the delivery of humanitarian goods and services just to survive. According to the World Bank “Gaza’s economy is in a free fall” with an unemployment rate reaching more than 32 percent, “the highest rate in two decades”. While the 11 year blockade on Gaza is the primary factor, the recent funding cuts to the UNRWA by the current administration has only deepened the sense of despair among ordinary Palestinians.
After Ramadan, KinderUSA sat with beneficiaries to map out upcoming projects. All spoke clearly and resolutely about the greatest priority: they need food. “We must wait one year to feed our children full meals in Ramadan. To give them something beyond Ramadan is all we ask,” said Um Omar from Khan Younis.
Yes, you read that correctly. Many families in Gaza rely on the Ramadan project to provide their children healthy food. When the funds run dry…when the blessed month of Ramadan passes…these families must scramble to put food on the table.
Working with our partners on the ground, KinderUSA is in the distribution phase of a 4-month project that will provide fresh food to 725 families in Gaza, enlisting farmers and our women cooperatives. Live chickens and fresh eggs will be purchased from our successful, female-run chicken micro-enterprise project with each family receiving 2 distributions over this 4-month period.
Reports from the field are heartbreaking. Ibrahim, one of our beneficiaries, states that, “I am a sick person. I have not been able to work for a long time. I did not receive any help during the holy month of Ramadan except KINDER assistance (Food Distribution). As you see, my house is very bad, I do not have a kitchen, and there is no door to the bathroom. Also, we suffer from the rain water during winter, with the entry of insects and some reptiles into the rooms…my children cannot sleep all nights because of bugs…they often have skin diseases.”
For many Palestinian families, our modest food distributions provide a ray of hope amidst the bleak uncertainty of life in Gaza. “I was afraid of not being able to meet my children’s requirements because of the very difficult economic situation, and my inability to work,” said Ibrahim. “This project (funded by Kinder) helps me to provide the needs of the house as it contains chicken, eggs, vegetables, cheese and others. Thank you to all.”
Over the years, our efforts together have made a difference in the lives of thousands of Palestinian children and their loved ones. Please consider making an online donation today and put smiles on the faces of these wonderful, resilient children.
_________________
The 1982 bombing and siege of Lebanon. The brutality and oppression coupled with the total lack of mercy. Occupation is a type of oppression and everything I witnessed in Lebanon, in Beirut in 1982 is taking place in Gaza.
I have been working ever since for NGOs as solidarity medicine. I am a voice for the voiceless.
Desmond Tutu said to be silent is to be neutral. I stand with the Palestinian people although I am neutral. I would treat an occupying general the same as a Palestinian woman. I choose to side with the occupied, not the occupier. My choice is an easy one.
How can the average person make a positive impact on the people of Gaza?
The most violent force in society today is ignorance. The most important contribution a person can make is to get the facts and be informed. Travel to Palestine. Truth is the best means of discovery. Being organized, part of a group, through your church, students groups. Be an activist. Don’t give up. Every voice counts. Read reliable resources, talk to Palestinians. Become a true power of change.
Ghandi said, ““When I despair, I remember that all through history the way of truth and love have always won. There have been tyrants and murderers, and for a time, they can seem invincible, but in the end, they always fall. Think of it–always.”
What do you do to stay motivated in the face of such harrowing work?
Travel as often as I can to Palestine. Witnessing their ‘sumud’ and what it means to be a true human being. They carry their own dignity on their shoulders.
What experience or moment has impacted you most about your work in Gaza?
There are numerous stories. Every meeting with a patient, a medical worker, a paramedic, a medical student. Deeply touching moments of honesty and amazing what they are sacrificing in their lives.
What are you hoping that people gain or learn from your upcoming talks with Kinder USA?
I hope they will gain more about the realities on the ground in Gaza. An understanding of the Palestinian reality of the siege and occupation. I hope they will understand the need for active solidarity. We carry the keys for making a change in their lives, their justice. Solidarity.
During these times what words of encouragement do you have for the people of Gaza or anyone else who may feel oppressed?
We stand behind you in difficult times. We respect your activism and put a lot of trust in the US people and know change will come. We put trust towards our march to solidarity. Political activism achieves our goals to see Palestinian people liberated.
_________________
For many parents, the most challenging part of the school day involves waking children from sleep and preparing them to leave the comfort of the home. Education is easily taken for granted.
In Palestine, however, recently publicized cuts to UNRWA funding threaten the one bright spot in the lives of thousands of Palestinian children – education. Make no mistake – Palestinian children in Gaza are under attack.
Palestinian children already encounter numerous obstacles to earning an education. Regular outbreaks of violence and deteriorating living conditions affect every aspect of life. More than 90 percent of schools in Gaza run double or even triple shifts to provide space for children whose home schools were either destroyed in successive wars or await the arrival of construction materials for repair. Educators work tirelessly, at times facing classrooms filled with in excess of 50 students. Meanwhile, Palestinian parents struggle to scrape together the funds necessary to purchase clothing and supplies for their children.
This school year, KinderUSA is providing uniforms, shoes, socks, undergarments, and backpacks to 500 children from needy families in Gaza, where new clothing is often considered a luxury. Your generous contribution helps put a little light in the lives of these innocent children.
FOR AS LITTLE AS $40, YOU CAN HELP THESE CHILDREN CONTINUE THEIR EDUCATION AND THE JOURNEY TO A BETTER LIFE.
Imagine, for a minute, the life of the average child in Gaza. For more than a decade, thousands of Palestinian families have faced periodic invasions and a brutal, ongoing siege, living in unsafe shelters, drinking unsanitary water, surviving on whatever food is available, and managing on a few hours of electricity per day. The streets are not safe. The skies can bring death. Even rare outings to the beach are hazardous. For so many of these children, school is a refuge from the trauma of life under siege, life under constant threat of war – a chance to learn, to meet friends and play…a chance to be normal children.
Help us remind these children that they are not alone, that they are not forgotten.
An urgent appeal was made today by Mr. Jamie McGoldrick, the Humanitarian Coordinator for the occupied Palestinian territory. Fuel supplies are dangerously low affecting every aspect of life in Gaza.
“We have now run out of funds and are delivering the final supplies in the next few days. Without funds to enable ongoing deliveries, service providers will be forced to suspend, or heavily reduce, operations from early September, with potentially grave consequences”, said Mr. McGoldrick.
The occupying authority has prevented fuel from entering Gaza as part of their “restraint” policy, denying 2 million Palestinians medical services. Operating on 4 hours a day, public and NGO supported hospitals need fuel to run generators for newborn, trauma, and intensive care units.
Further, there is a risk of sewage overflow increasing the danger of waterborne diseases for a population already living with 97% of water unfit for human consumption. Water related diseases are the primary cause of child deaths in Gaza and account for a quarter of all illnesses.
Fuel is used to compensate for the severe lack and chronic outages of electricity in Gaza. An 11 year old child in Gaza does not know what it means to have a full day of electricity.
With funding cuts to UNRWA by the US, emergency food aid, primary healthcare, and education are deteriorating. Gaza’s unemployment is one of the highest in the world so over half the population are dependent upon UNRWA.
The fuel crisis is exacerbating an already catastrophic humanitarian disaster impacting the lives two million Palestinians, half of whom are children. Entering the 12th year of a blockade, the plight of Gazan’s is dire, and moving towards collapse.
It is the obligation of the occupying power to provide for the humanitarian needs of the protected population according to International Law. Equally illegal is the blockade which must end if there is to be peace in the region. Palestinians will endure…they will not go quietly into the night.
Speaking after a recent visit to Palestine, UN Special Rapporteur Michael Lynx declared that in Gaza, “Residents are deprived of their most basic rights, including the rights to health, to education, and most recently, in attempting to exercise their right to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly, they were deprived of the right to life.”
Indeed, it bears repeating that Gaza has been under a constant air, sea, land, and economic blockade for over eleven years and a suffocating campaign that has deprived the civilian population of basic necessities including food, clean water, and electricity that many of us take for granted in the modern age.
HOW CAN YOU HELP ALLEVIATE SUFFERING FROM THIS ONGOING HUMANITARIAN NIGHTMARE?
As a modest response to the pervasive poverty and economic distress experienced by Palestinians living in Gaza, KinderUSA has embarked on a chicken farming micro-enterprise project that empowers female heads of households. The initial stage of the project began in March with 38 households and continued through the end of June.
One of our beneficiaries, 48-year-old Nisreen, supports a family of 5 boys and 3 girls, one of whom is physically challenged and requires special care at home. As the sole provider for her family, Nisreen spoke about how the chicken farming project has changed her life and her children’s lives.
“The project is rare in Gaza. They provided me with everything I needed to start and continue the business. I received 200 chicks until I sold them and did not pay any dollars. I sold 165 of the chickens back to KinderUSA for Ramadan and after, they gave me 200 more. I was able to buy food and clothes for my children. My girls were so excited since it’s been a long time since they received new clothing! Alhumdulilah (thank God), I succeeded and was able to share my earnings and some food as charity with my neighbor.”
Now, KinderUSA hopes to replicate this success with 38 new families for a period of 4-5 months, providing the same education, training, tools, and 200 chicks to female heads of household. For a little more than $400 a month, we are helping provide an income to indigent families in Gaza, providing sustainability and offering the hope of a more secure future.
Over the past decade, the blockade of Gaza has had a devastating impact on the well-being of Palestinian children. With your generous support, KinderUSA will continue to work on behalf of these vulnerable children, providing small pockets of hope in a sea of misery.