Palestinian Americans fundraise for Gaza, as aid groups receive record
donations
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[October 31, 2023]
By Aurora Ellis
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Palestinian Americans and aid groups in the United
States are raising funds for Gaza, which faces a deepening humanitarian
crisis as the Israel-Hamas war enters its fourth week - but they have as
yet limited ability to get supplies into the besieged enclave.
Aid organizations that serve civilians in Gaza say they are receiving
record amounts of donations in a sign of public support for relief
efforts even as a growing stock of supplies remain stalled at Egypt's
Rafah border crossing.
In the Gaza Strip, where 2.3 million people live, civilians are in dire
need of clean water, food and medicine, emergency medics say. Half of
Gaza's population was already living in poverty before the crisis.
"We've seen a significant increase in donations, unlike we've ever seen
before," said Steve Sosebee, president of the U.S.-based Palestine
Children's Relief Fund, which has a staff of 40 in Gaza that provide
medical support. He said the fund, which usually has an annual budget of
around $12 million, had raised $15 million in just 10 days.
However, with a web of political and logistical obstacles on getting aid
in, much of the money and supplies intended for Gaza is in limbo,
forcing aid groups to wait as they amass truckloads of goods.
Hamas militants burst over the Gaza border and rampaged through Israeli
towns on Oct. 7, killing 1,400 people and taking 229 hostages, according
to Israeli authorities. In response, Israel launched its most intense
air bombardment campaign on the tiny enclave, along with a "total
siege," banning food, water and fuel imports.
Aid groups say they are building up supplies in hopes of eventually
getting them through to civilians in Gaza, nearly half of whom are
children.
There has been "a five-fold increase in the total number of donors
versus typical past emergencies," said Derek Madsen, chief development
officer of Anera, a nonpartisan emergency relief group for refugees
throughout the Middle East. The organization, which maintains the
privacy of individual donors, said it had recently received the largest
single donation from an individual in its 55-year-old history.
The majority of support comes from donors based in the United States, he
added, with individual donations averaging around $138. The efforts
mirror those of Jewish groups in the U.S. and Canada who also fundraised
millions for Israel.
Anera was using the last of its stocks this week to distribute meals and
vegetable parcels in Gaza. Its staff of 12, like everyone in Gaza, were
facing "unbelievable, unimaginable trauma," he said.
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A man waves a Palestinian flag during a protest to call for a
ceasefire and an end to the violence in Gaza in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn,
New York, U.S., October 21, 2023. REUTERS/Aurora Ellis
GLUED TO THE TELEVISION
In Ann Arbor, Michigan, Rabia Shafie, national director of the
Palestine Aid Society, said her group was speaking to student and
Muslim groups on local university campuses and community centers to
spread awareness and raise donations for the Red Crescent and UNRWA,
the UN aid agency that serves Palestinian refugees.
"The money is needed to help people survive at this point of time.
Medical support is so essential," she said.
"People are glued to the television ... watching the news moment to
moment and very stressed out over the situation," said Shafie,
adding that it was difficult as a Palestinian American to watch "the
massacre and injustice done to our people back home."
Hamas-governed Gaza is one of the most densely packed places on
earth and its medical authorities say over 8,000 Palestinians have
been killed since airstrikes began, including more than 3,000
children.
Anera's Madsen called for a ceasefire and establishment of a
humanitarian corridor "so that people literally do not starve to
death, literally do not die of dehydration."
Last week, in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, home to one of New York's largest
Muslim and Arab communities, hundreds of protesters called for a
ceasefire with signs written in Arabic, Spanish, Hebrew and Korean.
In Clifton, New Jersey, the Palestinian American Community Center's
priority is advocating for U.S. officials to support a ceasefire and
for the hundreds of Americans trapped in Gaza, said Basma Bsharat,
the education director of the center.
The center has also been collecting cash donations to send on to
UNRWA. It has asked people not to donate supplies, which it has no
easy way of sending to those in need in Gaza.
Last week, a woman came to the center anyway, hauling bags filled
with goods.
"We didn't know how to say no," said Bsharat. "She was like, I just
want to do something. I just want to help somehow."
"It's a very difficult time, and the fact that we do see the support
coming in it, it gives some relief," she said. "It gives some kind
of solace."
(Reporting by Aurora Ellis; editing by Diane Craft and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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