Nidal explains what his organization (1for3) has been doing every day, and the never-ending Israeli hassles it and its flock manage somehow to withstand.
As Nidal explains, the Aida refugee camp is an Israeli construct. Palestinians, robbed of their longtime homes, were pushed into camps like this. It’s under military occupation and constant threat of Israeli violence. Seventy years in, Israel’s leaders continue to pound its victims with lethal violence and theft. For example, fragmentation of the West Bank continues to grow, blocking Palestinian farmers from their farms, and robbing their precious water. Using weapons made in the USA, Israeli soldiers’ war training uses Palestinians as targets. Nidal himself was shot in the foot from an Israeli helicopter.
Nidal reports on two celebrated accomplishments by the Aida community, not yet destroyed by Israelis. One is a fabulous new school which has become famous for the excellence of its special ed program. Architect Hubert Murray (husband of our very own saint, Nancy Murray) played a major part in this project. The other was rooftop gardens, hindered however by more Israeli water theft.
This Week In Palestine (a weekly part of Truth and Justice Radio) is an award-winning three-quarter-hour segment of news from Palestine and discussion of issues relevant to the Palestinians' struggle for freedom from Israel's brutal military occupation and colonization of their homeland. It speaks from the point of view of Palestinians and those who care about them. It's a regular part of Truth and Justice Radio, aired Sundays 6-10am ET on WZBC 90.3FM, Newton, MA, streaming live and archived for two weeks at wzbc.org; Truthandjusticeradio.org has a link to This Week In Palestine archives back thru 1-6-2008. (TJR airs occasional Palestine coverage IN ADDITION to that provided by This Week In Palestine.) We hope you'll write to us at tjradio@fastmail.com if you rebroadcast our work, or have questions or comments.
This Week in Palestine 7-17-2022
We sit down with Nidal Al Azraq, executive director of the organization 1for3, to discuss his work in the Aida Refugee Camp in Bethlehem