Gaza: The work continues Ocotber 2025
Following the ceasefire, Gaza begins to rebuild. Amos Trust continues providing aid, medical care, trauma support and education while demanding lasting justice for Palestine.
Ever since he was 16-years old, Bethlehem-born Sami Awad has been asking himself what is so powerful about non-violence. “Can I make a decision that is motivated by the future that I seek — not the past that I experience?” Megan Titley writes.
Ever since he was 16-years old, Bethlehem-born Sami Awad has been asking himself what is so powerful about non-violence.
Speaking to an audience in Stroud as part of his UK tour, Sami, a Palestinian Christian peace builder, told the crowd how his uncle was deported by the Israeli army for his part in non-violent resistance against the occupation.
Sami’s Uncle was deemed a threat to the national security of Israel and to this day is not welcome back except as a tourist. “That is how dangerous non-violence is,” Sami said. And the event has shaped the course of his life.
Growing up in a violent period of history in Bethlehem in the West Bank in the late 60s and seeing his father abused on a daily basis, Sami felt that he “had every excuse and justification to hate Israelis.”
Later on in life, inspired by Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Sami asked himself some fundamental questions. "What makes our enemy our enemy? What shapes the mindset of our enemy? What made the Jewish community come up with this mindset of exclusivity – that they have an exclusive claim to the Holy Land and do not recognise the equal rights of others in and to the land."
That is how dangerous non-violence is," Sami said. And the event has shaped the course of his life. "We need to be able to understand what motivates us to make a decision for the future, to create a possibility for the future."
He wondered if he could truly follow the teachings in the Bible. “When Jesus commands me to love my enemy what does that mean?” The answer to these questions came when Sami’s Jewish American friends invited him to go on the Bearing Witness Retreat to visit the death camps of Auschwitz-Birkenau in Poland.
“My enemy was a group of people that had experienced continued threat, violence, discrimination and racism,” Sami said. “There was never a healing for the Jews. Both groups, the Jews and the Palestinians have a similar type of trauma – an existential threat to their existence – so they can never let their guards down."
"For the first time I began to see that peacemaking is not about making a political commitment, it’s a commitment to a deep healing of deep traumas. Until we do that we can never do peacemaking.”
Calling for a paradigm shift in peace and justice Sami, who established Holy Land Trust with Palestinian and Israeli peace activists, explained how his organisation tries to help people to look into the past with a different lens.
He said: “We negotiate peace out of fear, we resist out of fear. Fear is what motivates and if we are not able to bring about healing there can never be any peace for the future."
There was never a healing for the Jews. Both groups, the Jews and the Palestinians have a similar type of trauma – an existential threat to their existence – so they can never let their guards down.
“We need to be able to understand what motivates us to make a decision for the future, to create a possibility for the future. What is that future in the Holy Land that is free from the past we created – that truly honours the freedom of the Jew, the Christian, and the Muslim?"
"Can I make a decision that is motivated by the future that I seek - not the past that I experience?" It’s a question that Sami hopes to see answered with a “yes” in his lifetime.
The event was organised by Amos Trust and Gloucester-based Spirit of Peace.
Below is a short film about Holy Land Trust that we shot in August 2015 during the Bet Lahem Live Arts Festival. Please watch and share.
Amos Trust is working with Ajyal Association for Creativity and Development, a youth-led organisation in Gaza City, to support families facing displacement and food shortages. From empowering women through microbakeries to providing thousands of hot meals for children and their families, discover how grassroots resilience is bringing hope amid the ongoing crisis in Gaza.
Our partner in Gaza, Al Alhi Arab Hospital, is now running as an emergency centre undertaking 20-35 operations a day with 150 inpatients. It is now the only outpatient hospital and general medical facility serving a vast part of Gaza City. Read our full Al Ahli Hospital update.
“In the past year, I have lost many of the tangible parts of my memories — the people and places and things that helped me remember. Every destroyed house becomes a kind of album, filled not with photos but with real people, the dead pressed between its pages.” Read our latest Gaza update with news of our partners, Al Ahli Hospital, DSPR, the Gaza Sunbirds and We Are Not Numbers.
“We, the undersigned organisations, call upon global leaders to uphold their legal and moral responsibilities in light of the ICJ’s Advisory Opinion and the UN General Assembly resolution.” Read our shared post about how world leaders must act to end Israel’s unlawful presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.
Amos Trust
7 Bell Yard, London
WC2A 2JR
UK
Telephone:
+44 (0) 203 725 3493
Email:
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Registered Charity No.
1164234
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