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Citizen journalism: Despite cease-fire, huge needs remain

Able to smile again: Schoolgirls attend a class at a school in Gaza

The Jakarta Post
Mon, October 13, 2014

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Citizen journalism: Despite cease-fire, huge needs remain

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span class="inline inline-center">Able to smile again: Schoolgirls attend a class at a school in Gaza. The school was reopened following the cease-fire between Israel and Hamas fighters. Courtesy of Iyad Al Baba/Oxfam

Ten-year-old Nesma Al Wadiya used to enjoy going to school. But now her school is no longer just a place of learning and seeing her friends '€” it's a constant reminder that her home is gone.

Each night she sleeps in a classroom, her family's only shelter after their home was destroyed during 50 days of war. Six weeks after the cease-fire, more than 100,000 people in Gaza remain homeless and hundreds of thousands more have no running water. Children like Nesma still shelter in crowded school buildings where Oxfam and partners are delivering clean water.

"My whole life is about schools now," Nesma says sadly. "I don't like going to school anymore. It makes me think of bad memories. Now we don't have a house and I am fed up of seeing classrooms and blackboards all day and night."

More than 200 schools were damaged or destroyed by the airstrikes, and dozens more turned into makeshift shelters. Despite the difficulties, school resumed this month. Nesma's mother, Sahar, knows it may be a long time before her family can go home, but she decided to send her daughter back to her old school rather than find a new one closer to their shelter: "It's already overwhelming for Nesma to lose her house. I wanted her to study in the school that she knows, with her friends and the teachers that she knows."

The airstrikes caused billions of dollars worth of damage to Gaza's vital infrastructure and people's homes, schools, hospitals and water systems. The scale of destruction will take years to repair '€” a task made even more difficult by the seven year-long Israeli blockade, which restricts goods and people moving in and out of Gaza. Vital construction materials for rebuilding homes like Nesma's are restricted.

However, the psychological scars may take even longer to recover from. Many parents are gravely worried about the impact of the war on children '€” many of whom have lost friends and family members as well as homes. The UN estimates more than 370,000 children in Gaza are in need of psychosocial support.

"It is good that my school was not destroyed and I can still see my friends," says Nesma. "But this does not help so much because I still go back to sleep in a school."

Oxfam and our partners are providing safe water to Nesma's school and many others like it, as well as residential neighborhoods across Gaza. We are running hygiene classes in schools to help people sheltering there learn to how to manage water safely and reduce the risk of illness. This emergency work is funded by the UK Department for International Development (DFID) and the European Commission Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection (ECHO)

Iyad Al Baba
Gaza

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