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Community building in the Westbank

“Have you ever been in a country more miserable than ours?”

I am facilitating a meeting with Palestinian women in the Westbank. They are describing their situation to me. Their village is a 2,000 heads big community up in the hills with very few facilities. The Israeli occupation has a big impact on their daily lives. It is impossible to travel outside the Westbank without a special permit. The men who used to work in Israel until a few years ago are now sitting at home idly. There is an unemployment rate of 58% in the area. The women keep their heads up and work hard to keep their big families fed and educated.

I am in the Westbank to do community building for a month. The first few meetings have been about setting the right expectations on both sides. A group of Europeans come to live in a little village for a month: that must mean money! In reality we are a group of students without any money of our own or access to funds. Our intention is to guide the community to work with the available resources. We teach new ways of project planning to support them in realizing their dreams. Our aim is to create groups of empowered men, women and youth inspired to continue improving the village.

“Have you ever been in a country more miserable than this?” The women try to figure out what is worse: the situation in poor Africa as they see it on television or their lack of freedom. I tell them about having to fetch water from a well, not having access to electricity or education, lack of rain and other challenges in Africa. In return we listen to their stories about Israeli soldiers that destroy their crops with jeeps just before harvest time. Olive trees take 20 years before the investment pays off but are cut by soldiers after 10. Israel compensates its lack of water by forbidding Palestinians to pump up water from their wells. Husbands and sons are in jail suspected of affiliation with the Hamas. A brother misses his leg because he was stopped at a checkpoint on his way to the hospital and sent back home. It’s a discussion without conclusion.

The last words have not been said about the situation in Westbank. We will continue working here for two more weeks and I will continue reporting about our experiences.

Selma Steenhuisen

Comments (2)

Dear Selma, How nice to read about your beautifull project, after having met you some time ago in our office in Nijmegen. Keep up the good work. If I can help you spread your word just let me know. I have acces to a couple of good blogs:

www.nilsroemen.com/category/inspiratie www.durftevragen.com www.naamlooz.nl  www.greatplacetolive.nl www.achtuuroverwerk.nl www.1procentclub.nl www.nieuwegarde.nl www.congresnieuw.nl www.standupinspiration.nl www.lifehacking.nl

regardzzzz Nils Roemen

posted by roemen on 4/27/2009 3:07 pm

During my recent trip to Rishikesh (India) I met an Israeli girl who told me as we shared a cup of tea in a cafe, about how she hates going back to her own country. How she hates ‘War’ and how she keeps running away to India for peace!

Tears flowed from my eyes while reading your blog.... about the plight of those women…those people… and all those who are suffering in such a way. Reminds me of a Genocide that happened in India in Feb-March 2002 in the city of Gujarat—

“More than 3000 Muslims were killed, looted, their houses and shops burnt and over 1,40,000 rendered homeless. Women were raped and the pregnant ones had their wombs torn with spears to take out the fetus, which was then burned. Little children were burnt alive and infants were dashed against the walls causing instant deaths, in front of their mothers.”

Seven years on the ‘survivors’ still live in ‘relief (??) camps’. Targeted, bifurcated, and ostracized on the basis of their religion they are still awaiting the justice in this torturous labyrinth of what passes for India’s legal system.

Barring few NGOs , the State Government has done nothing for them- so far.

The novelist Henry James said, "Three things in human life are important. The first is to be kind. The second is to be kind. And the third is to be kind."

Keep up the good work. God bless.

Nazia

posted by Nazia Mallick on 4/29/2009 11:01 am

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