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Volume 1, Issue
15
September -
October,
2004
In this Newsletter:
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A Look
at the Bright Side
-
The New
School Year
-
Medical
Marvels
-
Sports –
a Universal Unifier
-
The
Pride of Peace — Lions
-
Talking
Together: Palestinian - Israeli Radio Station
-
About
The Prism Group
-
The
Prism Group website
A Look at the Bright Side
It is always darkest just before dawn. As night leaves us, the
birth of a new day is heralded by the faintest glimmer of light
brightening the sky. This is the promise of a new day
approaching, a promise of hope. In this newsletter, The Prism
Group focuses on bright aspects that rarely receive sufficient
press coverage; glimmers of hope in the Palestinian-Israeli
conflict.
The New School Year
September starts the new school year throughout much of the
Middle East. This year, The Prism Group is able to report on a
number of positive programs being run in both the Palestinian
and Israeli educational systems, programs intended to promote
co-existence and peace. Ultimately, if today’s leaders cannot
bring peace to the region, the task will fall to the next
generation. What that generation is taught today, may very well
determine how actively it fights for peace tomorrow. In the
past, we have researched incitement and reported on Palestinian
Authority schoolbooks that encourage violence and glorify
terrorism. In this report, we offer a more optimistic view. For
example:
The Hope Flowers School in the Bethlehem area. Muslim
children from El-Khadar attend a school, which is dedicated to
“education for coexistence, peace, non-violence and democracy”.
As part of its ongoing curriculum, the school teaches Hebrew in
both primary school and high school.
Center for Bilingual Education in Israel: Located in
Jerusalem, this Israeli-based organization sponsors bilingual
schools for Jewish and Arab children.
Mar Elias College: The campus of Mar Elias, part of a
large complex of schools, centers itself on the values of mutual
recognition, understanding, and appreciation. It is a place
where students, faculty and staff work and plan together for a
future of coexistence and peace. According to Abuna Elias
Chacour, the school’s president: "It is a matter of building
bridges among the members of the same family: Christians, Jews,
Moslems and Druze". The college accepts students from all these
faiths.
Windows: This is a wonderful magazine that is prepared
by Israeli and Palestinian children. It is written in both
Hebrew and Arabic. WINDOWS also runs community dialogue projects
and a magazine for high school youth, Panim El Panim (Face to
Face).
Neve Shalom/Wahat el Salaam: Neve Shalom/ Wahat el
Salaam is an Arab-Jewish village founded in 1970 close to the
Jerusalem-Tel Aviv highway. The residents are Muslims and Jews,
citizens of Israel, who have chosen to create a shared community
to provide a model of peaceful coexistence between religions. In
1979, the village opened the School for Peace (SFP), currently
attended by approximately 250 students.
Medical Marvels
Peace is more than just the cessation of violence. It is about
people living together and working together to promote
understanding. Doctors have the ability not just to heal the
body, but often to mend a society.
In August, a joint conference on diabetes was held in the
Palestinian city of Tul Karem. The conference was organized by
Physicians for Human Rights-Israel as part of its Specialist
Clinic project. The Palestinian Medical Association in Tul Karem
hosted the event, which was attended by approximately 120
Palestinian physicians and included lectures and speeches by
both Israelis and Palestinians.
During 2004, Israeli hospitals provided health care to a number
of Palestinians, who required urgent services that could not be
provided by the Palestinian Authority’s health services. Some
examples included:
Meir Hospital, Kfar Saba
Earlier this year, a Palestinian baby conceived by in-vitro
fertilization, was born in the 31st week of pregnancy. The baby
subsequently developed an infection and was admitted to a Gazan
hospital. There he was given antibiotics not suited to the
pathogen causing the infection. His condition deteriorated
seriously. Doctors in Gaza said his only chance of survival was
to be treated in Israel.
The baby was received by Meir Hospital's premature baby I.C.U.
His parents were unable to leave Gaza and be with the baby, due
to a lack of documents. The head of the I.C.U, Dr. Tzipi Dolfin
(who is also an unpaid deputy mayor of the neigbouring Israeli
city of Ra'anana) contacted Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz,
noting that the presence of the parents at his bedside and their
ability to give him warmth and love would help the baby recover.
Arrangements were made, and the parents were able to join the
infant in Israel during his recovery.
Soroka Medical Center, Beersheba
Humanitarian gestures at Soroka Medical saved Palestinian
children from Gaza who have no medical insurance. A
seven-year-old girl suffered second and third-degree burns over
a third of her body, after she had been left alone at home and a
large pot of boiling water had overturned on her. Her
grandfather, who worked for many years as a building contractor
in Israel, thanked the hospital and said that without its care,
she would have suffered great pain and died.
During that same week a 22-month-old Palestinian boy was brought
to the hospital with a severe bacterial infection. Both were
successfully treated at Soroka's pediatric I.C.U. The Prism
Group notes that Soroka, because of it’s proximity to Gaza,
often receives cases which cannot be successfully treated in
medical facilities supported by the Palestinian Authority. As
noted above, such services are often rendered even though the
treated individuals are without insurance and may lack the
financial resources to pay Soroka.
Israeli doctors, Palestinian children
Saving Children, an organization run by Israel's Peres Peace
Center, has enabled hundreds of Palestinian children to receive
free medical care from Israeli doctors in the last four months.
Previously, scores of Palestinian children with serious medical
conditions went untreated due to a lack of funds and access to
proper medical care.
Four Israeli hospitals participate in the 'Saving Children'
program. A committee comprising several dozen Palestinian
pediatricians from the West Bank and Gaza screen Palestinian
infants and children. They refer Palestinian children suffering
from serious conditions that cannot be treated by Palestinian
doctors. Congenital heart disease, which is prevalent among
Palestinians due to a high rate of consanguineous marriage, is
the mostly commonly treated condition.
Under the auspices of the program, nearly 200 Palestinian
children have already undergone major surgery at Israeli
hospitals, at no cost to the families. Another 350-400 children
have had free diagnostic testing. Prof. Anwar Dudin, a
Palestinian project coordinator and a pediatrician at
Bethlehem's al-Yamama hospital describes the project: "This
program is a program of hope - a collaboration of Palestinian
and Israeli doctors…"
Hadassah Hospital, Jerusalem
Doctors in Jerusalem had an opportunity to show that medicine
and the need to heal is more important than nationality,
politics, or religion. Hadassah has a long history of treating
both Israelis and Arabs and is one of the primary hospitals
where terror victims are sent after an attack. In recent months,
however, this policy of treating all those who need medical
attention was extended to an Iraqi orthopedic doctor who was the
only survivor of a terrorist attack in Baghdad. The blast left
him with injuries to his eyes, abdomen, neck and shoulders.
Doctors at Hadassah made it clear that the Iraqi would be
welcome, and so he was.
Sports – a Universal Unifier
Like medicine, sports are also a great unifier.
As an example, we offer the case of the Peace Team, a unique
example of Palestinian-Israeli co-operation. The soccer team
plays in friendly international tournaments and also competes in
the Israeli Professional Indoor Football League. The Peace Team
has two coaches – a Palestinian coach, who is the former captain
of the Palestinian national team, and an Israeli coach who has
held various professional sporting and coaching positions.
This year, a soccer team from the Arab town of Sakhnin became
the first Arab soccer team to win the Israeli national cup. The
squad of Hapoel Bnei Sakhnin is composed of 10 Arab players, 8
Jews, a goalkeeper from Guinea, a defender from Cameroon, a
French midfielder, a Polish midfielder and a Brazilian striker.
They were cheered on by a stadium packed with fans, both Arab
and Jew, from the team's home region of Galilee in the north of
Israel. The team has just returned from a European tour,
representing Israel in the UEFA cup.
The Pride of Peace – Lions
In
September, the Ramat Gan Safari park in Israel gifted the
Qalqilya Zoo, located in the West Bank, with three young lions,
along with two adolescent zebras and a deer. The staff of the
two zoos have maintained close ties throughout the years of
conflict.
Both
the Palestinian zoo caretakers and their Israeli counterparts
believe a shared love of animals may help their peoples build a
bridge to peace.
"They'll be the main attraction," said Dr Sami Khader, the
veterinarian at the Qalqilya zoo. "Lions are the king of any
zoo. Without a king, you've got a problem."
This
is part of an on-going project of Ramat Gan Safari to liaise
with other zoos in the region. Earlier in the year, it supplied
2 grey kangaroos to the zoo in Amman, which had been previously
living at “Gan Guru” in the Beit Shean Valley.
"If we
forge lots of little links then maybe it will result in one big
connection and better understanding between the two peoples",
said Israeli vet Motke Levison, who escorted the animals to
Qalqilya.
Talking Together: Palestinian -
Israeli Radio Station
All
For Peace, based in Jerusalem, is a new radio station with a
mission: to promote intercultural awareness between Arabs and
Jews in their own languages, and to instill hope for the future
of the region. The station also produces programs in English.
The
project is funded largely by the European Union and is run as a
joint project of Biladi, The Jerusalem Times and The Jewish-Arab
Centre for Peace. The station may be found on the Internet, at
www.allforpeace.org
About The Prism Group
The
Prism Group continues to focus on several key issues and is
pleased to see that its efforts are causing “spectrums of
awareness” in many places. We look forward to your feedback.
Please share this newsletter with your friends.
The Prism Group Website
Please visit
our site and help direct others to the existing fact sheets. If
you have ideas for fact sheets that you believe we should
investigate and compile, please write to us at:
info@theprismgroup.org.
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