by
SF Emperor | January 22, 2008 at 06:01 pm
1213 views | 6 Recommendations |
4 comments
I spent the afternoon walking the streets and alleys of Sabra Shatila. I met lots of wonderful people who wanted to share their stories with me. Generations of of displaced people trying to make the best of a situation that has 59 years of bleakness attached to it. These people are with out country and stranded in limbo. There is little help from the outside world for these people. The UN has built some apartments, but most live in homes they have built from left over build scraps from around Beirut.
I was invited into the home of Absamid Ali, he was 5 at the time the Israelis took his families farm and sent them packing. His father took the family to Lebanon. He said they moved around for many years trying to find somewhere to raise the family. Absamid has 8 children, 6 girls ad 2 boys ranging from 41 to 25, he has 23 grand children, they range from 19 to 1 years old. He told me he would like to go back to his land, he would like to see the Arab countrys do something to help all the refugees. To give them a place they could settle and live a comfortable life. To have a pension for his grandchildren to have a future, and for his children not suffer the same pain he has had to endure.
To see more you can go to: http://www.flickr.com/photos/wjcendak/sets/72157603600759277/
Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (4)
at 19:19 on January 22nd, 2008
SF Emperor, thank you for posting these great photos and reminding us about the plight of those in Sabra and Shatila. Do you have any other stories you can share about the camp?
at 19:31 on January 22nd, 2008
Yeah: it was a telling story. More please.
at 20:50 on January 22nd, 2008
I just got back give me a minute and I will spell out all kinds of dirty little stuff I learned, I want to give facts from both sides.
Thank you I'm glad you all like it.
at 11:30 on January 23rd, 2008
A email I just received that might shed a little more light.
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
BEIRUT: The Lebanese government and Palestinian leaders have struck a quiet deal that would grant a new legal status to at least 3,000 Palestinians living in Lebanon without any identity documents, The Daily Star has learned. The plan was approved at a meeting last Friday that included representatives from the Interior Ministry, General Security, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), the Lebanese-Palestinian Dialogue Committee (LPDC) and the Palestine Liberation Organization, PLO consul in Lebanon Mahmoud al-Asabi said.
General Security officials are working out the details of the new status, such as the rights and the type of identity documents those affected - known as non-ID Palestinians - will receive, Ambassador Khalil Makkawi, head of the Dialogue Committee, told The Daily Star on Tuesday. Palestinian advocacy groups have pushed for the new legal standing to allow those concerned to work and travel like other Palestinians.
"UNRWA welcomes any initiative to legalize the status of these people and improve their conditions," said UNRWA Lebanon chief Richard Cook.
Those involved with the process have not yet made public the coming change, as the official status of Lebanon's roughly 300,000 Palestinians remains one of the nation's most volatile political issues.
"We are trying to tackle this problem at a low key," said Makkawi, adding that authorities wanted to avoid any potential influx of non-ID Palestinians seeking the new standing. Makkawi's LPDC was established in 2005 during a renewed push by Prime Minister Fouad Siniora to establish diplomatic ties with the PLO and to address the glaring lack of rights among Lebanon's Palestinians.
The change in status will affect between 3,000 and 5,000 Palestinians, a number which includes a large percentage of single men who came to Lebanon in the wake of 1970's Black September clashes with the Jordanian Army or to fight for the Palestinian cause during the 1975-90 Civil War. Lebanese officials want to verify the names of the non-ID Palestinians with authorities in Egypt and Jordan, Makkawi said.
Many of these Palestinians received support from the PLO during the Civil War and did not need assistance until the PLO's ouster from Lebanon in 1982 and when the state started to reassert itself as the war drew to a close. The category of non-ID Palestinians also consists of the children born to fathers without proper documentation, because Lebanese law mandates that children born here inherit the legal status of their fathers.
The people in this group face obstacles in traveling within and outside Lebanon, owning property, graduating from school, marrying or gaining access to adequate health and social services, said a 2007 report from the Danish Refugee Council.
"In practice, most non-ID children attend UNRWA schools; however, due to their lack of identification, they can not be granted official diplomas," the report said.
The plight of this class gained attention following the 2001 shooting death of a young Palestinian man who fled from soldiers at a military checkpoint near the Ain al-Hilweh refugee camp in Sidon because he had false identification papers.