Syrians in Gaza
http://interactive.aljazeera.com/aje/2016/syria-refugees-of-gaza/index.html
The Syrian refugees of Gaza
Meet the refugees who fled war-torn Syria for the besieged and impoverished Gaza Strip
Etiquetas: Al Jazeera, eng, Gaza, Syria
Blogueando desde marzo de 2004 / Blogging since March 2004. Creador también de The World According to Carmelo: carmeloruiz.tumblr.com. Contacto: ruiz@tutanota.com. Twitter: @carmeloruiz
Etiquetas: Al Jazeera, eng, Gaza, Syria
14 de julio 2014
El Frente socialista de Puerto Rico condena una vez más el genocidio Sionista en contra del pueblo palestino en Gaza.El vil asesinato de tres jóvenes israelitas no es ni puede ser excusa para masacrar a un pueblo indefenso. Mujeres, niños, ancianos y discapacitados son parte de las víctimas inocentes de los misiles sionistas.Esta criminal ofensiva, forma parte de los intentos del gobierno criminal israelita para anexionarse Gaza y para ello necesita aplicar su política genocida y destruir la infrastructura del pueblo palestino, por ello arrasa con colegios, mezquitas, hospitales, plantas de energía eléctrica.El Frente Socialista de Puerto Rico, solidario con el pueblo palestino, exige el inmediato cese de la agresión sionista y la acción inmediata de los organismos internacionales pertinentes, para que detengan de inmediato la matanza.Viva Palestina Libre!San Juan de Puerto RicoFrente Socialista de Puerto Rico
Organización miembro de pleno derecho del Grupo
de Trabajo del Foro de Sao Paulo.Visítanos en: frentesocialistapr.blogspot.comPuedes comunicarte con nosotros/as en nuestro correo electrónicoPO Box 71325 Buzón 69 San Juan. Puerto Rico 00936
Etiquetas: esp, Frente Socialista, Gaza, Palestina, Puerto Rico
Gaza gardeners, with harvest.Photo: Grassroots InternationalThis is the time of year when gardeners start to reap their rewards—fruits and vegetables that make for a healthy feast. But for the people of Gaza, gardens produce a serving of self-sufficiency, too.
Urban gardens usually bring to mind savvy urbanites indulging in an organic lifestyle—witness Michelle Obama and her model urban garden at the White House. Although urban gardens in the West may not be a total indulgence—Ms. Obama, for example, is trying to counteract the growing instances of diabetes and obesity—they are hardly a necessity.
In the Gaza Strip, on the other hand, where more than 80 percent of residents are dependent on food aid, urban gardens mean survival, and resistance to Israel’s policies of occupation and blockade. When only half of the U.N.‘s food aid is actually allowed in to Gaza (during the last siege on Gaza, only 10% of the food trucks were allowed entry), planting an edible garden on just a scrap of land can be enough to ensure self-sufficiency. In an enormously insecure and unstable zone, a simple urban garden ensures food security, and food sovereignty.
The World Food Programme says “Gazans face an acute shortage of nutritious, locally-produced and affordable food.” The drastically reduced consumption of meat, oils, fats, fruits and dairy products can lead to anemia and stunted growth. Fifteen percent of Palestinian schoolchildren are “intellectually impaired” due to malnutrition, according to the Gaza Community Mental Health Program. Since last December, the price of pepper has doubled, the price of onions increased 33% and chicken 43%.
Urban gardens are just now gaining popularity in the West, thanks to the rise of environmentalism and health awareness (Ms. Obama only planted hers in April). But Grassroots International, a Boston-based nonprofit has been funding efforts to plant urban gardens in the Gaza Strip for the last five years.
Photo: Grassroots InternationalGrassroots partners with the Palestinian Agricultural Relief Committees (PARC), a progressive organization that runs an “Urban Gardens” initiative. To date, PARC has set up 1,000 urban gardens in Gaza. Last year, Grassroots granted $25,000 to PARC’s “Urban Agriculture for Food Security and Increased Income Project.” PARC also runs a Farm-to-Table program sourcing local food from Gazan farmers for Gazans in need of food aid - a model worth emulating globally.
Ahmed Sourani, is PARC’s project director in Gaza City (PARC works in the West Bank as well). He says that urban gardens are vital not just for food security but as a way to empower women, and a way to “revitalize” agriculture in general. Household gardens are a part of Gazan culture, he explains, and says, “Since women are the primary caretakers of these gardens, the status of women will advance as this vital food source expands in the community.”
PARC provides women with vegetable and fruit seeds, and gives them rigorous training in how to maintain a garden: they learn about composting, fencing, irrigation, and how to make and use natural “green” pesticides. Women learn how to turn any scrap of land-even on a rooftop-into a blossoming garden.
Women are also taught how to raise rabbits, which are notoriously easy to breed. PARC incorporates animal husbandry into its training because, explains Sourani, chicken and other sources of protein are so prohibitively expensive. Between the gardening and the animal husbandry, a number of households can become almost completely self-sufficient.
Um Abdullah, who lives in the bleak al-Maghazzi district, is just one example: she grows corn, spinach, cabbage, eggplant, beans, peas, zucchini…even alfalfa for her rabbits. And in fact, PARC has helped Um Abdullah raise not just rabbits, but pigeons, chicken and ducks. They’ve helped her grow trees like orange, lemon, peach, palm, and pear. Her urban garden provides more than food security for her family, it provides financial security; it’s her livelihood.
War can make gardening necessary—and simultaneously impossible. Photo: Grassroots InternationalDespite the success, the urban gardens of Gaza are at risk. Half of the gardens funded by Grassroots International were destroyed in Israel’s December ‘08-January ‘09 assault. Most of the rabbits were killed by plumes of white phosphorous unleashed by the Israeli military. Human Rights Watch has confirmed the use of white phosphorous, stating, “A disturbing weapon was used against Gazan civilians and their livestock by the Israeli military in violation of international law.”
Grassroots released emergency funding, but it’s not just the gardens that are struggling. PARC too suffered a great set-back. Its office was occupied by soldiers and severely damaged. Their greenhouse training facility was lost, as were most documents and twenty computers.
Right after the war, Salena Tramel, Grassroots’ Program Coordinator for the Middle East & Haiti saw first-hand both the destruction and resilience in Gaza. She recounts the story of an old man who lived next to PARC’s office. The day after Israeli Defense Forces destroyed PARC’s model urban garden, he took his sons to start replanting it. “This is how I can teach them to not lose hope,” he said.
Grassroots and PARC are trying to rebuild Gaza’s gardens, resolute to make them a permanent fixture and a symbol of justice and hope for Palestinian human rights and self-determination. The White House lawn, let’s remember, isn’t the only place for an urban garden.

Etiquetas: Gaza, Israel, Naomi Klein
Etiquetas: Gaza, Israel, Naomi Klein
Anti-War Protests Grow in Israel
Israel’s attack on the Gaza Strip has prompted public opposition from anti-war elements of the Israeli public – and counter-measures from right-wing groups and Israeli domestic intelligence agencies.
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Protesters across the country have turned out in larger numbers than opposed the 2006 war with Lebanon and some have clashed with police in both Arab-Israeli and Jewish cities.
(The story summary continues below.)
Jesse Rissin Rosenfeld, a freelance journalist based in Tel Aviv and Ramallah, reports that the Israeli intelligence agency, Shabak/Shin-Bet, has been cracking down on dissenters.
TheRealNews.com is an independent news network that produces stories of global interest.
Etiquetas: Gaza, Israel, The Real News, Video
WAR OF CHOICE: How Israel Manufactured the Gaza Escalation
Steve Niva
Israel has repeatedly claimed that it had "no choice" but to wage war on Gaza on December 27 because Hamas had broken a ceasefire, was firing rockets at Israeli civilians, and had "tried everything in order to avoid this military operation," as Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni put it.
This claim, however, is widely at odds with the fact that Israel's military and political leadership took many aggressive steps during the ceasefire that escalated a crisis with Hamas, and possibly even provoked Hamas to create a pretext for the assault. This wasn't a war of "no choice," but rather a very avoidable war in which Israeli actions played the major role in instigating.
Israel has a long history of deliberately using violence and other provocative measures to trigger reactions in order to create a pretext for military action, and to portray its opponents as the aggressors and Israel as the victim. According to the respected Israeli military historian Zeev Maoz in his recent book, Defending the Holy Land, Israel most notably used this policy of "strategic escalation" in 1955-1956, when it launched deadly raids on Egyptian army positions to provoke Egypt's President Nasser into violent reprisals preceding its ill-fated invasion of Egypt; in 1981-1982, when it launched violent raids on Lebanon in order to provoke Palestinian escalation preceding the Israeli invasion of Lebanon; and between 2001-2004, when Prime Minister Ariel Sharon repeatedly ordered assassinations of high-level Palestinian militants during declared ceasefires, provoking violent attacks that enabled Israel's virtual reoccupation of the West Bank.
Israel's current assault on Gaza bears many trademark elements of Israel's long history of employing "strategic escalation" to manufacture a major crisis, if not a war.
READ THE REST AT http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5776
Etiquetas: Gaza, Israel, Militarism, Steve Niva
Etiquetas: Argentina, Brazil, Gaza, Israel, Radio Mundo Real
Among participants were also several residents of Sderot, a town which has been hit by Hamas rockets, who are members of the "Different Voice" organization, calling for dialogue with the Palestinians of Gaza. Some 500 Sderot residents have signed a petition calling to for Israel to halt the military campaign and renew the truce with Hamas. Sderot resident Arik Yalin said over 1,800 Israelis and Palestinians have already joined the petition. "About a month ago we realized that the situation was about to deteriorate into total chaos," he said. "It's important for us to voice an opinion that represents quite a few residents who live within the rocket range but who believe that we can, and should try to resolve this ongoing conflict in a peaceful manner."
Some 100,000 people also marched in Sakhnin, an Arab city within Israel's borders, led by Arab members of the Israeli Knesset Ahmed Tibi and Mohammad Barakeh. Barakeh told PNN, "This is the largest march in the history of Palestinians" within Israeli boundaries.
In another move, Israeli scholars and authors, including Amos Oz, Eli Amir and Avraham Yehoshua, issued a public statement calling on Israeli leaders for an immediate ceasefire. (Press TV, Iran, YNet, Israel, Gush Shalom, Israel, Palestine News Network, Jan. 3)
See our last post on Gaza
Etiquetas: Bill Weinberg, Gaza, Israel, Militarism