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The Ahli Arab Hospital
THE EPISCOPAL DIOCESE OF JERUSALEM
The Ahli Arab Hospital is a profound expression of the mission of the
Anglican Church. Located in the Gaza Strip, Palestine, the hospital was
established in 1882 by the Anglican Church Missionary Society and became a
ministry of the Episcopal Diocese of Jerusalem in 1982. It is one of 22
health care facilities in Gaza to serve a population of 1.5 million people,
and it is the oldest hospital in Gaza. Ms. Suhaila Tarazi, the hospital
director, says, "Ahli Arab Hospital is a place of love, real love in action.
As Christians we must express this love to all people without
discrimination. Jesus was a healer and loved to help the needy, as we are
called to do at Ahli."
GAZA-PAST AND PRESENT
Gaza lies on one of the oldest highways in the world on the Mediterranean
coast. It was on the strategic caravan route between Asia and Africa for
centuries well before the arrival of Christianity or Islam. It was occupied
in Biblical times by the Canaanites and in the 15th century BCE it became a
chief city of the Philistines from which the name Palestine is derived. In
the New Testament, Acts 8:26, the disciple Philip is sent to Gaza from
Jerusalem and is instrumental in the conversion and baptism of the Ethiopian
who took the gospel to Africa.
Gaza, like the rest of Palestine, has survived occupation by the
Egyptians, the Assyrians, the Babylonians, the Romans, the Byzantines, the
Crusaders, the Ottomans, and the British. In 1948, Gaza City was a thriving
coastal city of Palestine, approximately 40 miles from Jerusalem. Then, on
May 15, 1948, passage of the U.N. Resolution 181 created the State of
Israel, designating 56% of the land of Palestine for the State of Israel.
The remaining 44% was designated to be a Palestinian State with Jerusalem an
international city. Immediately, Israelis began expelling 750,000
Palestinians from homes and villages that were located within the new
Israeli state. More than 400 Palestinian villages were destroyed or
confiscated. The refugees comprised 60% of the Palestinian Christians and
70% of the Palestinian Muslims.
Fifty-nine refugee camps were established by the U.N. to serve those who
had no place to go; 200,000 homeless Palestinians went to Gaza causing a
critical situation for the 80,000 inhabitants living there. More refugees
fled to Gaza after the 1967 War. Today, eight refugee camps still house
468,000 of the 686,000 U.N. registered refugees in the Gaza Strip. In all,
1.5 million people are now enclosed in Gaza, a narrow strip of land on the
Mediterranean, only 139 square miles, less than one fifth the size of
Delaware which has a comparable population.
Following the 1967 War, Israel began its occupation of the remaining
Palestinian land, establishing 21 settlements within Gaza for 8,000
Israelis, thus violating U.N. resolutions and the Fourth Geneva Convention
(Article 147). The settlements occupied 76 times more land per capita than
the Palestinian population and controlled the coast, the borders, the
economy, the air, the sea and water use. Palestinian protests or uprisings,
the Intifadas of 1987 and 2000, brought down even harsher measures by the
Israeli Occupation Forces, including continuous bombings, targeted
assassinations, destruction of homes and the death of many residents,
including hundreds of children. After the signing of the Oslo Accords in
1990, a new airport was built but later destroyed along with other new
developments, including 500 new shops and stores in Gaza City.
Israeli punitive policies and actions caused loss of jobs and
restrictions on travel both within and outside of the Gaza Strip. In 2002,
Dr. Viveca Haszboun Ninos, a psychiatrist and director of the Guidance and
Training Center in Jerusalem, reported that 45% of the people living in Gaza
were suffering from malnutrition, 54% of the population were suffering from
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, 54% of the children were experiencing
bedwetting, and 13% of the children had serious mental disorders.
THE AHLI ARAB HOSPITAL

In the midst of this turbulence, we find the Ahli Arab Hospital, located on
a busy street in the center of the city of Gaza in the northern part of the
Gaza Strip, a welcoming and peaceful compound of whitewashed buildings and
small church. St. Philip's Episcopal Church was built in the early 1900's
and is in the center of the hospital complex. It was re-consecrated in1996
in the presence of the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Presiding Bishop of the
U S, and 36 other primates of the Anglican communion. Although it has been
many years since the Israeli military has allowed a resident Arab priest in
Gaza City, the building had been the center for a small congregation and
used by the 13 Christians on the hospital staff.
During the early morning of January 24, 2003 St. Philip's Church was
severely damaged by a TOW guided missile launched from an Apache helicopter.
The guided missile, which entered through the roof, shattered the church's
stained glass windows and left the church unstable. The explosion damaged
the hospital as well, shutting down the generator, shattering hospital
windows, damaging the pediatric clinics, the laboratory, the physical
therapy building, and several other areas. It also rendered inoperative the
X-ray machine, which was replaced at a cost of $160,000. The missile attack
was both a physical and emotional blow to the staff, coming at a time of
intense bombing in northern Gaza with increased demands on the hospital for
the injured brought to the hospital. One elderly patient died of fright.
Later the same day tanks surrounded the hospital so that no one could
enter or leave. Dr. Nabila, an internist at the hospital, whose apartment
complex was bombed and destroyed as well, remarked, "Ahli Arab Hospital is
like a small family; we all feel connected. I have been through so many
attacks, but never imagined our hospital would be hit, or this church. It is
a holy place. We are strong, we will survive."
In a surprising unilateral move in August 2005, the Israeli government
forcibly removed the 8,000 settlers from Gaza and dismantled their
settlements. Palestinians were both jubilant and skeptical, with good
reason. As the Rev. Naim Ateek, Director of Sabeel Ecumenical Liberation
Theology Center warned in the Fall 2005 issue of Cornerstone, "The pullout
does not indicate the end of the occupation of the Gaza Strip, as Israel
continues to control all access in and out of the Occupied Gaza Strip, both
for people and goods."
Samira Farah, assistant director of the Ahli Arab Hospital, made this
report to the diocese in October, 2005. "Less than one month following the
Israeli Occupying Forces' (IOF) redeployment from the Gaza Strip, IOF
escalated their attacks against Palestinian civilians and property in the
Gaza Strip. This escalation proves that IOF continue to substantially occupy
the Gaza Strip, despite the recent evacuation of Israeli settlements." In
addition, IOF launched a series of mock aerial raids, terrifying the
Palestinians and damaging their property. Children have been particularly
affected by the frightening noises that frequently occur during the night
and in the morning when they are walking to school. An increase in
miscarriages among the women is also attributed to the deafening noises.
With the 2006 election of a Hamas-led government, conditions in Gaza
began to deteriorate further. The borders of Gaza were closed, preventing
money, food, and supplies, including medical supplies, from being brought
in. There were even fewer jobs and less income for the employed, including
medical personnel. And then in the summer a family enjoying a day on the
beach was killed with a stray bomb. As Hamas retaliated with rockets into
Israel and the capture of an Israeli solder, bombing and other punitive
measures were intensified.
Today the hospital, like all medical facilities in Gaza, is overwhelmed
with treating casualties, both physical and emotional, as well as other
ongoing medical conditions. At the same time they are experiencing dwindling
medical resources and other basic necessities of operating a hospital. A
July 19, 2006, report from the Diocese of Jerusalem include these following
excerpted messages, some almost frantic in tone.
MESSAGE FROM SUHAILA TARAZI, HOSPITAL DIRECTOR
This is the worst situation we have ever had here in Gaza: politically,
socially, and economically. Everything is in deterioration. And what is even
worse is that we cannot see any hope.
Mrs. Suhaila Tarazi, hospital director
Gaza is under a complete siege. We are running out of medicine. I am
really afraid that if we do not get what we urgently need at the hospital
for our medical stocks and our operating theatre we will stop operating. The
severe shortage of medicine and infusion is our greatest problem.
We are suffering from the bombardment of the main power station in Gaza.
It has its effect on people and on our hospitals. We have electricity from
five to eight hours maximum a day, which means a shortage of electricity of
between 16 to 19 hours a day. Now imagine any hospital in the world without
electricity. And even though at times we have electricity, it never comes in
one go, but comes and goes unpredictably.
Yesterday, I had 300 underweight children because their parents had heard
that we offer food supplies. We had to tell them, "Sorry, we have no milk.
There is no dry milk in the market." There is a big problem with water. Many
children are suffering from diarrhea.
There is a real danger of contaminated water, because the sewage goes
directly into the water if there is no electricity to clean the water. . .
.We are really afraid of cholera, especially in areas of high population
with no water. We have a severe shortage of the cash revenues from our
patients. This becomes even more of a problem because we have to increase
the number of staff for emergencies to be ready for any mass casualties. The
Mobile Clinics had to be cancelled because of the current crisis, but the
hospital hopes to start them again next week, if the situation gets better.
Two of the areas our Mobile Clinics serve were invaded seriously, so many
times during the last two weeks it was impossible to get there. . . .The
clinics need a lot of preparation, and each area has its special needs.
Shrapnel from nearby explosions are causing severe burns and injuries. .
. .Many people, among them are children. . . . with lost hands and limbs and
severe burns. . . .The hospital has repeatedly suffered from damage caused
by sonic bombs. There is no single item of our infra-structure left without
any damage. . . .It is a real catastrophe here.
What is hurting us most is that the international family is closing its
eyes to what is going on here."
THE RT. REV. RIAH ABU EL-ASSAL ANGLICAN BISHOP IN JERUSALEM
The situation of the hospitals in the Gaza Strip is a grave danger. The
operating rooms in the hospitals are full. . . .Many operating theatres will
stop functioning if necessary supplies do not reach the hospitals within the
next week.
In a July 25 letter he adds, "Garbage and sewage have created a likely
outbreak of cholera. . . .There is no milk. Drinking water, food, and
medicine are in short supply. Innocents are being killed and dying from lack
of available emergency care. . .Commerce between the West Bank and Gaza has
been halted, and humanitarian aid barely trickles in to some of the neediest
in the world. On Saturday we will attempt to enter Gaza with medical aid for
doctors and nurses in our hospital there who struggle to serve the injured,
the sick, and the dying."
THE PRESSING NEEDS OF THE HOSPITAL
During such times of violence, the hospital receives casualties from a
number of heavily populated neighborhoods, including two of the largest
refugee camps. On a regular basis, the hospital serves several hundred men,
women, and children in its out-patient services, including general medicine
clinics, surgery, pediatric, obstetrics/gynecology and urology clinics. The
hospital also has emergency and ambulance service 24 hours a day. Over
23,000 outpatients are treated annually; another 6,000 in-patients are
treated each year in the general medicine clinics, surgical and maternity
wards, and an intensive care unit. The hospital's rehabilitation department
is rated the best in all Gaza.
As the film and latest reports from the hospital reveal, there are
shortages of almost everything. The annual operating budget is $2.4 million
with an average deficit of $700,000. Ahli Arab patients have little or no
income due to job losses throughout the area and inability to travel outside
Gaza for work. The average Gazan lives on a dollar a day and cannot afford
the medical care they desperately need. In its 2005 annual report, the
Jerusalem Diocese reported, "Because of the ongoing conflicts in the Gaza
Strip, the Ahli Arab Hospital has suffered with its community throughout the
years. However, the work of healing in the name of Christ continues to the
present day as the staff at the hospital demonstrate love in action."
A January 2006, report of the American Friends of the Episcopal Diocese
of Jerusalem listed these pressing needs of the hospital and their projected
costs at that time:
Outreach clinic $4,107
Food support for 100 families $9,058
Nephroscope $4,440
Resectoscope $1,110
Ultrasonic machine with probe $8,880
Additionally, as the director states in the film, there is need for
medicines, operating instruments, and help in meeting the annual $700,000
deficit of its modest budget. Given the grave humanitarian crisis in Gaza
today, funds for medicine and food supplies are perhaps the most immediate
need. Beyond that there are needs for building repair, medical staff
salaries, aid to the homeless-the hospital and the villages and refugee
camps it serves are in need of everything!
There is no question that the level of demand on the services of Ahli
Arab Hospital will remain exceedingly high. The political and military
challenges that the Palestinian Authority faces in Gaza, and the long-range
rebuilding and economic revival of the Gaza Strip will make continuous
demands on the hospital which is a unique and courageous Christian presence
in the lives of Gazan Palestinians.
The film "A Place of Healing in Gaza" was made to highlight the
courageous and committed work of the Ahli Arab Hospital in the embattled
Gaza Strip, Palestine, and to seek recognition and support from U.S.
Episcopalians, Christians of other denominations, and all others concerned
with the delivery of medical services to persons living under occupation and
without means to afford the care they dearly need.
The purpose of this booklet is to provide to persons showing the film
sufficient information to introduce the film and be prepared to lead a
discussion following the film. Please feel free to make copies of this
handout and the DVD. If you have questions or wish further information,
please contact me by email:
ehartwell@austin.rr.com, or telephone:
       512-443-3170.
I would be pleased to furnish you with additional information and recommend
books, periodicals, and web pages that would expand the information of this
booklet.
In addition, I know that the director of the Ahli Arab Hospital would
welcome letters and emails from those who wish to convey personal messages
of support. Palestinians rightly feel that the world, and particularly
Americans, do not know what they are experiencing under occupation. Contact
her at: Mrs. Suhaila Tarazi, Director, Ahli Arab Hospital, P. O. Box 72,
Gaza, Palestine, or by email:
suhaila@palnet.com.
Thank you for your interest and support and for sharing this film and
story with others.
The Rev. Edward Hartwell, retired Episcopal priest,
Member, St. James' Episcopal Church, Austin
Coordinator for St. James' Partnership with the Diocese of Jerusalem |