Leaving St Clement’s After nine years, we are leaving St Clements Eastcheap this week.
Chris Rose writes about leaving our home of 10 years, St Clement’s Eastcheap, in the City of London.
940 People. 1 Toilet. That was the situation in the camps in Rafah (at the southern tip of Gaza) among the 1.1 million people sheltering there before Israel invaded on 6th May. Since then, 1 million people have been forced out of this so-called safe area, with 900,000 of them moving to central Gaza onto an even thinner strip of land along the coast, with virtually no facilities.
940 People. 1 Toilet
That was the situation in the camps in Rafah (at the southern tip of Gaza) among the 1.1 million people sheltering there before Israel invaded on 6th May. Since then, 1 million people have been forced out of this so-called safe area, with 900,000 of them moving to central Gaza onto an even thinner strip of land along the coast, with virtually no facilities.
In the new camps, water levels are critically low, with people having to queue for hours to collect what little there is and being forced to rely on sea water for domestic use. People are using shallow pit latrines and there is a continuing spread of communicable illnesses amid sewage overflow, piles of effluent, a proliferation of insects, rodents and snakes, and a near-total lack of hygiene items and sanitation facilities.
$25,000 = 21 toilets
We have known MA’AN Development Centre for many years. They are based in Ramallah but have a long history of work in Gaza and many local links that have proved invaluable since 7th October. Chris Rose, Amos’ Director, visited them shortly before Easter to understand more about how they were working in Gaza and how we could partner with them.
A toilet block in Rafah in southern Gaza paid for by Amos Trust supporters.
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They explained the urgent need for toilets in Rafah and the appalling sanitation in many of the camps. We allocated $25,000 to provide 7 toilet blocks (21 toilets) for the camps.
1,584 familes
Usually, the delays in getting aid into Gaza are deeply frustrating, but this time we were happy for the delay. If they had been installed in Rafah before 6th May, they would have been useless and probably destroyed as part of the Israeli advance.
The toilet blocks, including sinks, were finally installed in Deir Al Balah and Khan Younis (central Gaza) at the beginning of June. 1,584 families will now be able to use the toilets and to wash. It’s a tiny shred of dignity, but it’s so important nonetheless.
“I guess I expected a kind of Ottolenghi-style tour, a pomegranate-seed strewn food odyssey with a bit of politics thrown in. Naïve, ignorant, stupid me. Nothing could have prepared me for the mind-blowing gut-wrenching tragedy that is happening in this region.” Sue Quinn writes about Amos’ Taste of Palestine trip.
There was an awful inevitability to the killings this weekend in Jenin and Jerusalem. We deplore the loss of any life, and our thoughts and prayers are with all those who mourn. While we welcome the US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken flying in to try to calm the situation, this will, at best, be a temporary reprieve in what is an escalating pattern of violence.
On Friday, 24th September, Amos Trust Director Chris Rose met with Ambassador Dr Husam Zomlot, the Palestinian Ambassador to the UK. The main item in their discussions was UK Prime Minister Liz Truss’ announcement that she is considering relocating the British embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. Dr Zomlot has sent this message to Amos Trust supporters.
Amos Trust
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