Friday 15th March 2019 Christchurch, New Zealand
Following the terrorist attack in Christchurch, New Zealand on 15th March 2019 where fifty people were killed, Australian author, speaker and social activist wrote these words.
“In a year when most of our friendships have been ‘remote’ ones, it’s hard to think of a more opportune or important time to build friendships with the people of Palestine.” Amos trustee Madeleine McGivern writes about making friends in Palestine.
In a year when most of our friendships have been ‘remote’ ones, it’s hard to think of a more opportune or important time to build friendships with the people of Palestine.
For anyone who has ever had the privilege of visiting the Holy Land, you’ll know that warmth, friendship and camaraderie seems to come easily to many in this place. You arrive in a town, a village, a house or a garden, and countless cups of strong cardamom-scented coffee later, you finally leave feeling like you’ve known the people you just met, for years.
Graffiti on the Israeli Separation Wall in Bethlehem
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Feeling like they have welcomed you into their home or their community with generosity of spirit, and with bread fresh from the tabun and olives from the trees nearby. The stories you’ve heard have probably made you cry, but you’ve probably laughed a lot too. The children have grinned and asked for their photos taken or smiled shyly from behind their mothers, the offers of food have never stopped and you, more likely or not, feel compelled to try to do something to help challenge the situation that all Palestinians contend with everyday — living with and under the illegal military Israeli Occupation of their lands.
For anyone who has ever had the privilege of visiting the Holy Land, you’ll know that warmth, friendship and comradery seems to come easily to many in this place.
Where do you start? One of the things you can do is build friendship or twinning links between Palestine and the UK. These links are connections between people, set up to exchange experiences, share culture, develop friendships and express solidarity.
Connections are often place-based (e.g. the sister city link between Derby and Hebron, or the friendship link between Liverpool or Bil’in), but can also be based on a shared interest such as cooking, cycling, shared religious beliefs or links between music, arts, sports and education groups. All these connections have one thing in common — a focus, as Mona from Salfit (linked in friendship with Totnes), says “on finding and being aware of our common humanity.”
An Amos group from the UK visiting Palestine to join the olive harvest
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Twinning and friendship with Palestine is an important way to show support, engage with, listen to, and learn from people who are affected by the Israeli Occupation, and to find out how to help change things, from people in Palestine directly. Zoughbi Zoughbi, from Amos Trust partner Wi’am, spoke recently at a friendship and twinning conference and encouraged us all to “meet, listen, and exchange ideas to recharge our batteries and to travel together on the less travelled road of justice and peace. We should not feel alone. “Days like this...” he said, “give us hope”.
Friendship or twinning is a wonderful and constructive way to show your support, solidarity and appreciation of Palestinian people and their culture. It is a two-way learning, sharing and exchange process between people from both Britain and Palestine. People learn about each other’s music, jobs, food, art and culture; about their families and their festivals, their hopes and dreams, their worries and their hardships.
Twinning and friendship with Palestine is an important way to show support, engage with, listen to, and learn from people who are affected by the Israeli Occupation.
It’s about real relationships — focusing on human connections and building friendships between people from all walks of life. In the words of one friendship group member from Hanwell Friends of Sabastiya, “my friends in Palestine have become like family. I want for them what I want for myself, my family, my community. Everything. It's an incredibly powerful feeling.”
Madeleine McGivern and friend cooking together in Bethlehem
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Friendship and twinning offers hope, raises awareness and gets the stories of real people who are affected by the Israeli Occupation every day, heard in the UK. It’s not always easy. Often people feel like they can’t commit enough time, or that their actions are not big or influential enough to make a difference.
“My friends in Palestine have become like family. I want for them what I want for myself, my family, my community. Everything. It’s an incredibly powerful feeling.”
Sometimes communication is tricky — speaking different languages across different time zones, and trying to keep friendship alive with all the pressures of the Occupation bearing down on Palestinians — can mean things sometimes move slowly or not at all.
But as Amos Trust believes, we don’t have the luxury of despair in the face of injustice. Those of us already involved in friendship and twinning know it takes some effort and commitment, and plenty of good humour! As Mahmoud Darwish put it, “we suffer from an incurable malady: hope”.
To find out more about building or joining a friendship link with Palestine please get in touch with the Britain Palestine Friendship and Twinning Network.
Madeleine McGivern
Welcome to the first On Her Terms update of 2019. This year marks 30 years since the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. This landmark in children’s rights has remained a hugely important reference point for those working for justice for children and young people.
“Climbing Kilimanjaro has been on my bucket list for some time. At 5,895 metres it is both the highest mountain in Africa and the highest free-standing mountain in the world.” Neil Irving writes about ticking-off one item from his bucket list to raise funds for Amos Trust.
18-year-old Millie Rose, who first visited Nicaragua in 2015, is spending 4 months working in CEPAD’s office before starting an International Development course at University. We asked her to share a little about her impressions of CEPAD’s work — particularly after the recent flooding and unrest.
“I’ve been guilty over the last few months of shirking my responsibilities towards a cause that is very close to my heart. On the eve of International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, I’ve decided to renew my commitment to this cause, to seeking justice and equal rights for everyone who calls the Holy Land home.” Sarah Baron writes about how we can reinvigorate our support for Palestine.
“The idea was beautiful and crazy. The logistics alone would be an organisational nightmare. The risk assessment would run for pages. It would be a five-month, 3,300 kilometres trek across eleven countries with mountains, rivers and seas to navigate. And then there was no guarantee that the walkers would even be allowed to cross the border into the occupied West Bank, let alone reach Jerusalem.” Amos trustee Robert Cohen writes the forword for ‘Walking To Jerusalem’ – Justin Butcher’s book about his experience of walking from London to Jerusalem as part of Amos Trust’s ‘Just Walk To Jerusalem’ project in 2017.
Amos Trust
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Email:
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