An Open Letter to Americans of
Conscience
From Eyad
el-Sarraj Founder
and President of the Gaza Community Mental Health Program; Leader of
the International Campaign to End the Siege of
Gaza
In late August, hope came to Gaza in the
form of two small wooden boats and their 40 passengers who had sailed
from Cyprus to break the 14-month-old Israeli siege. They had answered
our call and after months of preparation, it was a triumphant moment
when they entered our waters.
The
passengers on the "Free Gaza" and "Liberty" wanted Gazans to know that
the entire world would not stand passively by while they remain locked
in a huge prison. They would not be quiet while more than a million
people the majority of them children are being deliberately
deprived of urgent medical care and medicines, of electricity and fuel
to run hospitals and sewage systems, of potable water and supplies of
food, clothing and raw materials.
I hope
that you will not stand silently by while the people of Gaza are
deprived of their dignity and all the basic requirements for a decent
life. I hope that you will understand that the kind of collective
punishment that Gazans have endured since June 2007 is morally wrong
and a serious violation of international humanitarian law.
The siege is not just killing the spirit and in some cases
the lives of Gazans. It is also sowing seeds of violence, hatred and
extremism and destroying all hopes for a peaceful future in the
region. Studies carried out by the Gaza Community Mental Health
Program show a frightening rise in trauma, as children fall victim to
night terrors, loss of appetite, insomnia, and symptoms of panic and
aggression. Adults are also suffering from panic disorders, depression
and psychosomatic disorders as they struggle to cope with the deeply
inhuman situation. Former US president Jimmy Carter was right to call
the siege "an atrocity, a crime, an
abomination." In the summer of 2007, the Gaza Community Mental Health
Program took the initiative to create a humanitarian, non-political
campaign aimed at raising international awareness of Gaza's
deteriorating life conditions in order to pressure the Israeli
government into lifting the devastating
siege. We thought that within a year we would have achieved our
aim. We were wrong.The siege continues, and so must the campaign. We
are working to bring another boat to Gaza by the end of September. In
October, mental health workers and other medical professionals will
travel to Palestine for a conference called "Siege and Mental
Health Walls versus Bridges."
Through other "break the siege" solidarity meetings,
cultural activities and demonstrations, we hope to nurture non-violent
approaches that can peacefully transform the brutal reality of caged
lives. The message to end the siege is a message of peace and an
appeal for
justice.
If you believe in freedom, human dignity and peace, we ask
you to support our efforts by making a donation to end the
siege. We particularly call for the support of Jewish people,
whose history of trauma, discrimination and suffering should guide them
to stand up today to help bring an end to the suffering of
others.
Gaza City, September 9,
2008
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