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A Tale From Gaza

By John Lloyd

A friend just asked me if the situation in Gaza had calmed down because they had not heard anything on the news lately. I was shocked because of course it isn’t better in Gaza, it’s worse. Do we have so much going on in our lives that conflicts in other countries become abstract unless we have periodic reminders? Perhaps. If so, here’s a reminder in the form of the story of a friend of mine.

Ayman Hassan Al Masri lives in the town of Biet Lahya in the northern part of the Gaza Strip along with his wife Ghada and their six children. The kids range from one to fourteen years old. I met Ayman over repeated card games at our home in Gaza during 2004 and later in and around his farm lands. We spent a lot of evenings together and I knew him to be kind, even tempered and having a gentle disposition. In normal times, he runs the family nursery business raising fruit trees for local farmers and for export. But these are not normal times.

Early in 2004, an Israeli tank paid the Al Masri family business a visit. The results were catastrophic. The tank ran directly through a line of greenhouses carrying away the construction and irrigation system. It also destroyed the entire nursery stock. When I visited the site, six months later, it was still a jumbled mess of mud, torn plastic, broken piping and dead plants. But, it gets worse. In 2003, a year earlier, the nursery had also been paid a visit by a marauding armored vehicle. This previous attack had also completely destroyed the greenhouses and nursery stock. The family business was wiped out two years in a row and as far as I know, never did recover. Read more »

November 12, 2009

Join Pastors for Peace in Cuba this July!

By Maxine Insera

Pastors for Peace is an ecumenical agency whose mission is to help forward the struggles of oppressed peoples for justice and self-determination. The Latin American Solidarity Committee of the WNY Peace Center continues to support their efforts.

We invite you to join us in breaking the US blockade as we take humanitarian aid and ourselves to Cuba without a US government license. Be with us for 9 days in Cuba in solidarity with the Cuban people as they celebrate the 50th anniversary of their revolution, and as we learn about the problems caused by the blockade and how they have creatively responded, as well as how they are rebuilding after recent hurricanes. Read more »

May 14, 2009

Salem Mohammed Abu Kalik is Dead— A Palestinian narrative

By John Lloyd

I didn’t know him.  But I knew his father. Or it might be better to say that I saw his father. The old man was the night watchman at the American International School of Gaza where I taught 5th grade.

He used to greet the teachers in the morning as they started work. As I was watching him work one morning I realized that he would never leave the Strip.  No passport, wrong passport, relative of a fugitive, whatever. 

Thousands and thousands of people are trapped in Gaza for various reasons.  This old man was just one on them.  That weekend I was thinking of him while visiting the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem.  I bought a set of prayer beads along the Via d’La Rosa.  Back in Gaza I pressed the beads into his hands when he greeted us at the beginning of our next school day.  I said: “ Al Haram Sharif” and “Al Quds” in my grade school Arabic; he got the idea.  His eyes teared a little and he thanked me. Sometimes kindness is all that Gazans have.

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May 6, 2009

A place to gather rises in the mountains of Chiapas

By Bill Jungels

 

On February 15th 2009, Christine Eber and I climbed up the mountain to the home of Cristóbal Arias in the highlands of Chiapas in southern Mexico. We came bearing donations that members of the Peace Center, among others, had made so that the little community of Chixiltón could build a new church and community center.

 

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May 6, 2009