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Messages from Holy Land 09.01.09

Link up with Palestinian pupils a small act of solidarity

by Simon McGeady, Inishowen Independent

MOVILLE woman Rose Kelly has received a number of hand-written messages from Palestinian children living in Bethlehem. The drawings are part of joint project with Moville’s Glasoige Youth Group. The class of Palestinian schoolchildren were asked to draw up cards on the theme: “If the Magi came to Bethlehem today, what would they find?”
The 6th of January is the Feast of the Epiphany, when Christians celebrate the coming of the Magi, or wise men, to witness the coming of Jesus.
Members of Glasoige have erected a nativity scene with a difference in a shop front window on Lower Main Street in Moville. It contains a painting signed by young Palestinians from the Balata refugee camp in the Gaza Strip.
“These messages from the Holy Land are a poignant reminder of how different the lives of children in Palestine are to those of Irish children, especially in light of what is happening in Gaza at the moment,” said Ms Kelly, a teacher at Scoil Eoghan, Moville.
“The crib we put up in Moville is a very small gesture of peace and solidarity with ordinary Israeli’s and Palestinians,” she added.
Ms Kelly is friends with Irish-based Israeli peace activist Naomi Fein and two years ago at Christmas the Moville woman travelled to the West Bank to support the Israeli woman in her campaign.
“I know from my own visit to Palestine this time two years ago just how very isolated the Palestinians feel and how much a welcome we received simply for the fact that we crossed the wall to be there. The fact that we were Irish ensured us an even warmer welcome,” said Kelly, who believes that although the Moville crib is small gesture, it sends out a message of hope to the people of Palestine.
“For the people there to know that it exists is important, and an indication that people in a small town in Ireland know and care about what is happening to them.”
Over the last number of weeks Rose has struck up a friendship with a Palestinian teacher called Lama, who got her pupils to draw up cards like the one reproduced in this paper.
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