Published: 20 November 2016
Last updated: 4 March 2024
I met Naim recently. My wife and I were part of a small group of volunteers who had come to Jayyous to help Naim with his annual olive harvest.
In addition to his “day job”, Naim El Baida is the volunteer co-ordinator in the West Bank for Road to Recovery, an Israeli NGO dedicated to assisting Palestinian patients get access to hospital care in Israel.
He has been volunteering for Road to Recovery for five years and has become the “go to” person for Palestinian families with children who need treatment in Israel.
Naim is not a medico and doesn’t provide patient referrals. These come from the Palestinian Authority which covers the cost of patient treatment in Israeli hospitals for those Palestinians whose health issues can’t be addressed adequately by Palestinian hospitals. Naim is a facilitator - a vital cog in an important wheel that makes it possible for Palestinian families to make the journey to Israeli hospitals.
In one sense, the close physical proximity of Gaza and the West Bank to Israel is a great bonus for critically-ill Palestinians. But in another, critically important way, the physical closeness highlights the challenges faced by a population living in a third-world country, cheek by jowl with an OECD member.
According to Naim, many of the Palestinian families in need of support have monthly incomes of less than US$800. When they cross the checkpoint they need to make their own way to the Israeli hospital. The return trip can often cost up to US$150. If the child is chronically ill and in need of multiple trips to hospital each week, the cost of transportation alone can devastate a family. Many can’t even afford that first fateful step.
It is in this context that Naim and the 650+ Israeli volunteer drivers with Road to Recovery have made a life-saving difference. Their availability to pick up, drop-off and return the Palestinian patients from and to the checkpoints is the economic salvation for these families.
The volunteer transfers play an additional important role in building bridges to better understanding between people on both sides of the conflict.
Naim tells the story of a West Bank family where the father, a Hamas activist, was shot and killed by the IDF eight years ago. His oldest child was seven. Three years ago the boy was diagnosed with a life-threatening illness which was not treatable in Palestinian hospitals. The mother’s desire to help her son outweighed her desire for revenge and she agreed to have her son treated in Israel.
Over the course of multiple visits to the Israeli hospital the mother’s attitudes mellowed. She has seen that it is possible to engage with the “other” and for each to treat the other in a humane way. Naim stresses the need to end the Israeli occupation but he feels strongly that these people-to-people contacts are key to having his fellow Palestinians see the political process as a far better option than the alternative.
Sitting in the Naim’s olive orchard after five hours of olive harvesting and sharing the wonderful meal prepared by his wife, it was hard to argue with that sentiment.
This The Jewish Independent article may be republished if acknowledged thus: ‘Reprinted with permission from www.thejewishindependent.com.au ’
And see:
Project Rozana + Hadassah – driving change in the Middle East September 27, 2016
A shorter road to peace June 25, 2016
Roads to recovery May 21, 2016
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