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voices of unrwa

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UNRWA USA is a nonprofit organization that supports the work of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA). Our mission is to promote a life of dignity and human development for Palestine refugees by...
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"The only thing that can change the future is education."

Hanan al-Hroub is a second-grade teacher at Samiha Khalil Secondary School, a governmental school in Ramallah. On February 17, it was announced that she was one of the top ten finalists for the Global Teacher Prize. The annual competition, facilitated by the UK-based Varkey Foundation, is a million dollar award presented every year to an exceptional teacher who has made an outstanding contribution to their profession.

The prize serves to recognize and celebrate the efforts of teachers around the world and the impact they have on their students and communities. This year, Hanan is the only teacher from the Middle East who has been shortlisted in the top ten.

Originally from Dheisheh refugee camp, located on the outskirts of Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank, Hanan explains that her life growing up in the camp was the main motivation to become a teacher: “It imbued me with the persistence and resilience I needed to face challenges.

Being a child in a refugee camp is different from being a child anywhere else in the world,” she explains. “Children elsewhere can enjoy their childhood, but not Palestinian children. The games that we played were affected by the surrounding conditions. You grow up aware and informed about the politics and what’s happening around you.”

But her eyes light up when we ask her about her memories as a student at the UNRWA Elementary School for Girls in Dheisheh. “I never forgot the quality of my education there or my teachers,” she recalls. “UNRWA teachers are very distinguished. They provide students with high-quality teaching and inspire them.”

She continues: “My school was unlike other schools at the time. We had plenty of games and the girls from my school would participate in the sporting competitions that took place in our districts. We also had many activities that stimulated our minds, challenged us mentally.” But the library at her school seems to have left the deepest impression on Hanan: “I still remember the library. It was full of books. You couldn’t find a library like that at any other school.”

“Being a child in a refugee camp is different from being a child anywhere else in the world,” recalls Hanan. Hanan grew up in Dheisheh refugee camp, located on the outskirts of Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank. © 2016 UNRWA photo by Alaa Ghosheh

As a teacher, she speaks passionately about how education can be used to counteract the negative impact of the violence that Palestinian children – particularly those living in the camps – are frequently exposed to. “When I was a child, I was exposed to violence. Even today, my own children and my students still suffer from violence, and it affects their behavior.” During the second intifada, Hanan’s husband, Omar, was injured after being shot by Israeli security forces. Her children, who witnessed the incident, were left in shock. “After that, I felt that they were suffering and isolated from the community,” she says. “They lacked confidence, and they were afraid to go to school for a while.” She believes that her children’s schools didn’t provide the psychosocial support they needed to deal with the trauma in the aftermath of their father’s injury, and it affected their performance in the classroom. The experience inspired Hanan – then a first-year student at Open Al-Quds University – to study elementary education so that she could help other children who had been exposed to violence to overcome the psychosocial effects and trauma that often follow. “If children who suffer from violence are not given the assistance and support they need, they will be lost,” she says.  

“From the very beginning, I make sure that the students understand that in that classroom we are a family – we belong to each other,” says Hanan. “I feel as though I am very important to them.” © 2016 UNRWA photo by Alaa Ghosheh

Hanan’s inspiring approach to education centers on ‘Play and Learn’, whereby she integrates educational games into the classroom, often using tools and toys created from everyday household materials. She also emphasizes the importance of creating a ‘safe space’ for her students where they can learn in a peaceful, happy and comfortable environment.

“By playing these games with my students, I try to decrease the effect of violence among them, particularly those who themselves exhibit violent behavior,” she says. “I try to change these behaviors – which often contribute to a lack of participation and focus – and replace them with confidence, dialogue and mutual respect.” 

Hanan explains that she often tailors her teaching and games to meet the unique needs, skills and capacities of her students: “It’s important that the students understand that they all have a role to play in their future, even if their academic outcomes aren’t high.” She adds, “From the very beginning, I make sure that the students understand that in that classroom we are a family – we belong to each other. I feel as though I am very important to them.”

Her efforts have had a noticeable impact; today, her approach is widely replicated by her colleagues and has led to a decline in violent behavior in schools where it is applied. She has shared her experiences at conferences and seminars and detailed the methodologies she uses in her book, We Play and Learn.

When asked how she feels about being shortlisted for the prestigious award, she smiles warmly. “For me, it shows that the world recognizes, believes in and respects this kind of approach to education. It also shows that Palestinian teachers can be creative, face challenges and compete despite the circumstances we live in.”

She adds: “The only thing that can change the future is education. Education can affect change and help us build the Palestinian community and state we want.”

Hanan al-Hroub was announced as the winner of the million dollar 2016 Global Teacher Prize during the awards ceremony held in Dubai on Sunday, March 24, 2016. The announcement was made by Pope Francis in a video message broadcast at the event, which also featured tributes from UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Prince William, former US President Bill Clinton and Stephen Hawking. UNRWA congratulates Hanan on her inspiring achievements and celebrates the remarkable contributions that teachers like her make every day in Palestine and around the world.

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Meet Amal & Mahmud

A Palestine refugee family’s story from Syria to Lebanon…

21 year old Amal describes how she was forced to quit her education and to flee the conflict in Syria by moving to Lebanon. "We had a life in Syria," said her father Mahmud man, sitting in his small flat in the crammed Palestinian refugee camp of Shatila in a suburb of Beirut, in Lebanon. "We thought we were coming to paradise, but in fact, life here is hell.” This is the situation from many Palestine refugee families who are forced to flee the lives they set up and start over with nothing, in a brand new place.

Mahmud, a Palestinian refugee, fled Syria in 2012 with his wife and daughter. The family moved to different parts of Beirut, but unfortunately in Beirut, the rents are quite high. After dwindling resources, they were forced to move into Shatila, in the south of Beirut.

Under Lebanese law, Mahmud, a former shop owner, is unable to work so he now relies on his 21 year old daughter to support the family. “In Syria I was at university studying trade and commerce but now I am the source of income for my family. I have a good education so I work teaching private lessons," Amal.

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An icon two years on begs some unsettling questions

Chris Gunness, UNRWA Spokesperson

It is now two years since the iconic photo of thousands of bewildered, besieged civilians in the Palestine refugee camp of Yarmouk, Damascus was taken. Traumatized and drained of all emotion, children, women, the sick, the elderly, the dying waited in the besieged camp for food from UNRWA, the UN agency mandated to bring them aid. It was an image whose graphic power seared itself into the collective memory of our age, as the word “Yarmouk” was added to the appalling lexicon of man’s inhumanity to man. The photo went viral and thus became an icon of Syria’s pitiless conflict.

The UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon was later to describe Yarmouk as akin to the lower regions of hell; a refugee camp that had become a death camp. Yarmouk was once home to some 150,000 Palestinians. Each has a humanity, an individual dignity that must be recognized, respected and nurtured.

Yet two years on, as peace talks begin in Geneva and just days before the London conference on Syria, this haunting image begs some discomfiting questions. Where are the individuals now, whose faces stare compelling out at us? Are they alive or dead? Did they become part of a lost generation? Were they left behind? The majority are Palestinians yet is the plight of this marginalized community being overlooked, dwarfed by the sheer enormity of the Syrian tragedy?

We owe it to each and every individual in that photo, to ourselves and to future generations to find answers to these questions. Without them, the stain that is Yarmouk will forever be on the conscience of humanity

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Meet Jaleelah

Meet Jaleelah, a Bedouin Palestine refugee living near Jabal al baba. Like many other refugees, Jaleelah faces constant hardships, especially during the harsh winter. ““Our home is made of zinc sheets and the rainwater leaks into our house from all sides. In the winter, my children are usually soaked by the time they get to school because we do not have transportation. We cannot depend on electrical heating because of frequent power cuts. If there is a windstorm or heavy rain, the roof of our house might be blown away.”- Jaleel.

Imagine living under the constant fear that your home could too be ripped away from you at a second. Imagine not knowing when the next time your family will have a meal is. Life as a refugee is not easy, and it is our mission to help the less fortunate. UNRWA has provided assistance to 5 million plus Palestine refugees, but through increased funding we would like to help out the entire refugee population.

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UNRWA condemns demolition of the homes of Palestine refugee Bedouins families at risk of forcible transfer; decries desperate humanitarian consequences

Director of UNRWA Operations in the West Bank, Felipe Sanchez, has condemned the demolition of Bedouin homes in the West Bank by the Israeli authorities. “The humanitarian consequences of this destruction of property are grave and I am seriously concerned, particularly about the children who are now homeless,” said Sanchez.

The demolitions were carried out on the morning of January 6, 2016 by the Israeli Civil Administration (ICA) in the vulnerable community of Abu Nwar, in Area C near East Jerusalem. In the midst of the winter, a total of five residential structures were demolished, leaving 26 refugees, including 17 children, displaced and without a home.

With more than 7,000 inhabitants, the majority of them Palestine refugees, Abu Nwar is one of 50 Palestinian Bedouin communities in Area C that have been slated for transfer to three proposed “relocation” sites by the Israeli authorities. The communities have refused to be relocated and have faced the daily threat of their homes being demolished.

In May 2015, the UN warned about the rapidly advancing plans to transfer the Palestinian Bedouins and the risk of demolitions after residents of Abu Nwar were informed by the Israeli authorities that they would have to move to the Al Jabal area outside of East Jerusalem, where the preparation of the ground had been taking place for several months.

Prior to and during the demolitions on January 6, 2016, residents were repeatedly informed by Israeli Civil Administration officials to move to the proposed transfer site of Al Jabal West. UNRWA has been providing urgently needed humanitarian assistance to the displaced communities.

Demolishing residential structures exacerbates an already coercive environment, driving Bedouin communities off the land they have inhabited for decades. UNRWA recalls that Israel, as the Occupying Power, has strict obligations under international law regarding the prohibition of the destruction of private property and of forcible transfer, including as a result of policies creating a coercive environment. Forcible transfer is a grave breach under the Fourth Geneva Convention.

“The distress in the community is heartbreaking,” said Sanchez. “When children should be enjoying their holidays from school, they are instead picking up the broken pieces of their destroyed homes. How can a child grow up in such an environment? I condemn these demolitions and reiterate my call to respect the Bedouins’ decision to remain where they are,” said Sanchez. “I urge the Israeli authorities to halt all plans and practices that will directly or indirectly lead to the forcible transfer of the Bedouin.”

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

UNRWA is funded almost entirely by voluntary contributions, and financial support has not kept pace with an increased demand for services caused by growing numbers of registered refugees, deepening poverty and conflict. As a result, the UNRWA General Fund, which supports core essential services and most staffing costs, operates with a large deficit. UNRWA emergency programmes and key projects, also operating with large deficits, are funded through separate funding portals.

UNRWA is a United Nations agency established by the General Assembly in 1949 and mandated to provide assistance and protection to some 5 million registered Palestine refugees. Its mission is to help Palestine refugees in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, West Bank and the Gaza Strip achieve their full human development potential, pending a just solution to their plight. UNRWA services encompass education, health care, relief and social services, camp infrastructure and improvement, and microfinance.

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Meet Sham.

Sham, on the right, was 10 days old when her father left to try to reach Europe. He never made it, dying in a traffic accident in the desert between Sudan and Libya.

Like so many Palestine refugees from Syria, Sham’s family is struggling to survive in Lebanon. #shareyourwarmth with them.

https://getinvolved.unrwausa.org/shareyourwarmth

© 2015 UNRWA photo by Maysoun Mustafa

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UNRWA Promotes Diversity and Tolerance on Human Rights Day

Sounds of laughter and children playing games drifted across the school yard on an unusually warm and sunny December morning. One could assume this was a normal day at the Aqbat Jabr Coed School in Jericho, however today was different, today they were celebrating Human Rights Day. The excitement in the air was palpable as students performed plays, songs and dances around the different themes of diversity, tolerance, equality and more.

UNRWA schools in Gaza, the West Bank, Syria, Lebanon, and Jordan brought together students, parents and teachers along with representatives from countries around the world to participate in activities to mark the day. Most activities were from the Human Rights, Conflict Resolution and Tolerance (HRCRT) toolkit which is part of a United States-funded education program that supports the integration of these human rights concepts into all subjects.

Some guests were asked to identify actions that promote diversity, others watched as students acted out a skit about gender equality. One classroom demonstrated an exercise on democratic processes and leadership as they cast ballots for their new school parliament representative. Heba abu Laban, a 13-year-old member of her school parliament in Gaza, has been studying human rights since first grade and talks about her experience. “I have learned a lot about diversity and human rights. Now I know that people have different religions or colors, but while we all have the right to be different, we need to be treated equally.”

Human rights education is not only about knowledge and understanding. It is also about changing attitudes and behavior. Explaining the impact of this program, UNRWA teacher Maison Askar said, “what I have observed is that there is less intolerance among students in the school, they are more respectful with each other and towards each other’s opinions. They consciously listen to each other.”

Throughout the year the HRCRT program helps cultivate an environment of understanding, tolerance and appreciation for differences, both inside and outside the classroom. One involved parent remarked, “By learning about human rights in the UNRWA school, my children gained different perspectives regarding certain issues. They became more tolerant of other viewpoints, and they listened to others.”

The HRCRT Toolkit is being implemented in an increasingly challenging environment across all five fields of UNRWA operations, where some children witness and experience human rights violations first hand on a regular basis. Teaching children to resolve conflicts through dialogue rather than violence, and to respect each other’s rights is an important component of the programme, which also extends to the entire community through events and advocacy videos.

Thanks to the generous support of the United States, this program enables all 500,000 students enrolled in UNRWA schools to promote a culture of human rights.

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3 ways you can contribute to the #ShareYourWarmth campaign this winter:

1) Create a free fundraising page, set a goal, and encourage your friends and family to join the campaign by donating to you!

2) Like and share our #shareyourwarmth posts on social media to raise awareness about Palestine refugees and UNRWA’s programs in the Middle East. Your efforts will amplify our outreach to folks across the United States. Every little bit counts towards providing warmth to Palestine refugees this winter!

3) Change your cover photo to let friends and family know about the #shareyourwarmth campaign.

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Did you know UNRWA’s Health Care program has provided health services to Palestine refugees for over 60 years? In the areas where UNRWA operates, at least 50% of registered Palestine refugees access its health services. In Gaza, nearly 100% depend on UNRWA for health care.

Help Palestine refugees get the care they desperately need: https://getinvolved.unrwausa.org

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EIGHT YEARS OF THE BLOCKADE: The illegal blockade on Gaza affects every aspect of daily life from unemployment to infant mortality to food insecurity to electricity outages and more.

In part due to this ongoing blockade, nearly 100% of children in Gaza need immediate counseling. Positive mental health initiatives are absolutely vital to ensuring stability and a future for the children of Gaza. Participating the #Gaza5K will help give these children the help and care they need.

The San Francisco Gaza 5K is only TWO DAYS  away on Saturday, October 17 and the LA/ Orange County Gaza 5K is the following, Saturday, October 24. Sign up today to do your part to help the kids of Gaza: gaza5K.org

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It’s not easy to succeed in school when you’re battling PTSD. The #Gaza5K will directly benefit children in Gaza who need mental healthcare in order to treat their psychological trauma.

The San Francisco Gaza 5K is October 17, which is only 3 DAYS away, and the LA/Orange County Gaza 5K is happening one week later on October 24. Don’t miss your chance to sign up and do your part to help the kids of Gaza! https://getinvolved.unrwausa.org/charity/charity?cid=19825

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We’re so excited for the California Gaza5K races that are only weeks away! Haven’t registered yet? There’s still time to sign up: gaza5k.org.

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