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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, May 4, 2016
Gaza’s only orphanage struggles against odds
Children perform during a celebration marking Arab Orphan Day at the Al-Amal Institute in Gaza City in March 2010.Mohammed AsadAPA images
In spite of all he has been through, nothing hurts Yousif al-Shimbari
more than getting used to mornings without hearing his mother’s voice.
During Israel’s assault on Gaza in 2014, the 14-year-old and his family
sought refuge from their Beit Hanoun neighborhood in the northern Gaza
Strip to a UN-run school in the area, thinking themselves protected by
its blue flags and logos.
Yousif and Manar now live in Al-Amal Institute for Orphans in Gaza City,
formed in 1949, the only institution devoted to the care of orphaned
children in the coastal enclave.
The institute is their only option, Yousif said, with relatives unable to help out all 11 siblings.
“We are scattered. Some of my sisters live with relatives and it is not
very often that we meet,” he told The Electronic Intifada.
He attends a nearby school, but playing football with his roommates from
the institute is the best part of his day. He is ambitious but says he
is not sure about what will happen in the future.
“I love mathematics and I wish to become an engineer one day like my
father,” he said. Yousif’s father died of natural causes seven years
ago.
Straining resources
Yousif and Manar are just two of 40 children at Al-Amal who lost one or
both of their parents during the 2014 Israeli onslaught. They joined
another 90 children housed there before the attack and the institute’s
budget is strained to bursting point. In all, 52 children at Al-Amal
have lost both parents and all have lost their fathers, the principal
breadwinners. In Arabic, an “orphan” includes those who have lost one or
both parents.
Iyad al-Masri, Al-Amal’s executive director, told The Electronic
Intifada that the institute follows strict criteria for selecting only
the neediest orphans to be accommodated. “The lack of funding constrains
us,” he said.
Staff meticulously scrutinize data to discern whether it is better for a
child to stay at the institute, and if he or she has absolutely no
other safe place to go. Only then does the administration contact
relatives to offer shelter.
Local individual sponsors and foreign charity groups provide the bulk of
the institute’s funding covering operational expenses and services that
include education, healthcare and entertainment.
But as the number of orphans hosted has risen, meeting those needs is proving more challenging than before.
“[Local] sponsors are fewer than before due to the generally
deteriorating conditions in Gaza,” al-Masri said. “And these days,
foreign support is mainly directed to Syria.”
Dramatic increase
Three successive Israeli military onslaughts in less than six years have
caused a marked increase in the number of orphans in the embattled and
isolated strip of land.
According to Itimad al-Tarshawi, an official at Gaza’s Social Affairs Ministry, of Gaza’s 15,223 orphans, 3,366 lost parents to Israeli aggression.
“Two thousand children lost their fathers or mothers or both in the 2014 summer aggression alone,” she noted.
Al-Tarshawi voiced her concern over the inadequate care provided to
orphans resulting from the lack of resources. Gazan orphans should get
free education, full health insurance and protection, but none of that
can be guaranteed in the desperate financial situation in Gaza.
She appealed to the international community to step in.
“It is totally unacceptable to leave these children in such terrible
living conditions, all of which have resulted from a 10-year-old
blockade driven by unjust political agendas,” al-Tarshawi said.
But a lack of money is not the only problem confronting Gaza’s orphans.
Khaled Tuman, the mental health worker at Al-Amal, told The Electronic
Intifada that the orphans face a number of psychological issues,
particularly the newcomers.
The first three months are the hardest. “Certainly, to grow up in such
an overcrowded place where you have dozens of boys and about eight
supervisors in your ward is not like living with your parents at home,”
Tuman said. “The environment here is a sharp contrast to the tranquil
and private family life they used to have.”
Challenges and determination
The fact that all the children come from different backgrounds is also
challenging to both children and the administration. Disagreements,
fights and conflict can emerge, and supervisors are always alert to
negotiate all the different kinds of issues that may arise with and
between the boys. Some recreational activities can be helpful in this
respect, and staff find such techniques useful to help children
assimilate fully.
“Our duty is mainly to provide parental care. A child cannot live
without it. We do our best to be good fathers to those children,” Tuman
said. “We want them to be able to tell us everything they want so we can
help.”
The unusual circumstances of life at Al-Amal has not meant that the
children who come out of it are not successful or equipped to pursue
ambition in their lives. On the contrary: the opportunity to restore
some faith and confidence after bitter childhoods often spurs them on.
Bashar Abu Quraya’s name trips easily off staff tongues. His is an example they often wheel out for the children there.
Abu Quraya, who spent 10 years at Al-Amal, achieved a very high score in the tawjihi,
the high school examination. He is now studying medicine in Turkey.
Luck plays its part. Unnamed philanthropists are helping him
financially. But it is his own perseverance that has enabled him to even
get to a position close to fulfilling his dream of becoming a doctor.
And while the institute’s children are encouraged to learn the skills
that prepare them for a future independent of and outside the institute —
they cannot stay after the age of 18 — their orphanage does not
completely abandon them. In many cases it donates to pay the college
tuitions for talented former “alumni.”
“Most of our orphans come to pay us visits and tell us what happens with
them,” Tuman said. “We are always happy to remain in touch with them.”
Isra Saleh el-Namey is a journalist based in Gaza.

