*photo: Emad Badwan
BEIT HANOUN, Gaza, Dec 2, 2010 By Eva Bartlett– “We grow on our roof because we are farmers but have no land now,” says Moatassan Hamad, 21, from Beit Hanoun in northern Gaza Strip.
“Our family is large and thankfully what we grow feeds us,” he says. They grow a variety of staple vegetables.
“Cabbage and eggplants in winter, and Mulukhiyah/molokhiyah (a plant used for making soup) and chili and garlic and onions in summer. And other things that we can sell, like flowers and palm tree seedlings.”
The house is a typical cement block house, in the crush of a Palestinian refugee camp. “There is no space in camps, no trees, no public gardens,” Hamad says.
The burst of greenery and colour of his garden contrasts the utilitarian grey of their home and those close around it. Large blue plastic containers sprout date, orange and palm tree seedlings; parsley, cacti and peppers flourish.
“Our friends and guests like to sit up here, because most of them don’t have anything like this,” Hamad adds.
Hussein Shabat, director of the Palestinian Centre for Youth Development, guides families working on rooftop garden projects, sometimes with the aid of outside donors.
“Beit Hanoun is an important place for such gardens. It’s near the border with Israel, and much agricultural land has been destroyed repeatedly by the Israeli army,” he says. The Palestinian Agricultural Relief Committee reports that up to 75,000 dunams (a dunam is 1,000 square metres) of prime agricultural land has been destroyed by Israeli bulldozers and bombings.
“Also many farmers are unable to access their land because of the Israelis,” Shabat adds. The Israeli imposition of a ‘buffer zone’ along Gaza’s borders swallows at least a third of Gaza’s farmland and renders lethal any border regions farmers try to access. This land formerly produced wheat, barley and a variety of fruits and nuts; it was Gaza’s food basket.
“Many people have left their homes and land near border areas, because they are afraid of the constant Israeli shooting and shelling attacks,” Shabat says. Beit Hanoun is now a waterless, treeless landscape.
On the flat, square, cement roof of another Beit Hanoun home, Ahed Shabat, 42, looks after the plants and vegetables growing in tubs and cement planters amidst hung laundry and water tanks.
“We grow things we can use year round, like garlic and onions,” he says. “But also seasonal plants like spinach, parsley, radishes, eggplant, corn, okra, and chili peppers.
“We also grow flowers and herbs to use in tea, like mint, merrimea and zaatar,” he adds. The latter two herbs, that commonly grow wild in the hills of the occupied West Bank, are a staple for most Palestinians’ tea, and have medicinal uses.
The rooftop helps support his family of six, and is a tranquil island. “This garden is mostly for our family’s consumption, and at the same time saves us money,” Ahed Shabat explains. “My family enjoys sitting up here amongst the plants, because most of Beit Hanoun’s plant life has been destroyed.”
Home-grown food projects like rooftop gardens, and raising rabbits and chickens on the roof help combat the severe poverty of Gaza’s 80 percent food-aid dependent population. Those living in tightly-packed refugee camps or overcrowded towns but with access to a roof can potentially stave off malnutrition and at the same time generate a small income.
“I love raising birds,” says Abu Jehad, 17, at his central Gazan rooftop co-op of roughly 100 chickens and a score of pigeons. “In the beginning I learned about chickens watching how my friend worked with his co-op. The only place I had to keep chickens was our roof.”
Abu Jehad’s chicken co-op takes up the northeastern quarter, a ramshackle 1.5m by 3m pen of scavenged bits of wood, metal, and chicken wiring, which he opens daily to let the birds run and peck all over the roof.
“I started with nine chicks my friend had given me, and bought another ten from pocket money that I’d saved. My family gave me a little more money to help out, so I bought another 30.”
The business is not easy. “This spring there were cool winds in the morning. I only had basic materials for a simple cage which was very exposed. Some of my chicks died from the wind and exposure to the intense sun.”
Others became ill. “Medicine is very expensive, because of the siege, and I was already struggling just to bring them food. But I bought medicine, because they all would have died otherwise.”
Surviving a touchy start, his birds have multiplied and thrived. “Now I’ve got around 50 couples, and different types of chickens,” says Abu Jehad.
The eggs and meat are better quality than factory-farmed chickens, he says, because of the natural food he gives them. “I don’t feed them any steroids or chemicals, just vegetable peelings and dried bread and seeds, and I let them walk around on the roof every day.”
Some non-governmental groups in Gaza do assist in such projects, but Abu Jehad took the initiative to start the project himself.
“I spent a lot of money starting with the birds, and didn’t earn anything from them for a long time. When I had more chickens and different types of chickens, I began to earn a little money. If my family didn’t need money, then I’d use the money from the eggs I sold to buy the birds food.”
What started as a project from fascination has developed into a relatively lucrative means of contributing to his family’s needs.
photo: Emad Badwan
photo: Emad Badwan
Thank you for this inspiring story, Eva and Emad. The Palestinian people’s resilience in the face of cruelty and oppression by Israel is a story that deserves to be heard widely.
BRAVO, c’est superbe !!
marie-ange
(ISM marseille,France)
Hapepy miss you kteer kteer , haiaty kol hopy daiman enty Ra3aa kteer ,wa3teky Maleon Afia ala el Shogel el Kteer Qawy bjad el Nas Lazem Tefham Haleshy wMohem , hapepy kony bkherr meshtaq kyteer >> bahkelek VIVA PALESTINO VIVA us, qareeb Rah Nkon Ma3 baed qreeb kteer >Kaman Eshy mohem Rah neshtghel Kteeer Eshy an PALESTINO >
شكرا جدا لك علي كل ما تبذليه من جهد وخاصة في أصعب الأوقات من أجل الحرية لفلسطين والحرية لنا .. كل الحب والاخلاص والاحترام … تذكري الوعد والشرف
ALL LOVE FOR YOU MY SWEETY
E.E.B FOR EVER
The French translation of this article about these highly creative initiatives in the face of great adversity was featured this week as one of the two “blogs of the day” by the Tribune de Genève, Switzerland :
http://carol.blog.tdg.ch/archive/2010/12/12/l-ingeniosite-des-paysans-sans-terre.html#more
Thank you,Eva, for letting the world know about this gardening for survival – ecological, even !
[…] Source : In Gaza […]
This is a great site that someone had just recommended. Thanks for sharing your photos with me.
This brings me closer to the stories that we in the United States are blocked from experiencing in
the news press. It’s a sad situation.
[…] Eva Bartlett suit le développement inouï des cultures sur les toits de Gaza. Comme disent les Anglais, « La nécessité est la mère de l’invention. » […]
[…] “O telhado é o novo campo”, por Eva Bartlett […]