New Ethiopian immigrants, who have no family in the country, are suffering greatly from Hamas' ongoing rocket attacks
Although “only” three Israelis have been killed as a result of the ongoing Hamas terror rocket attacks against Israel, hundreds of thousands of people are suffering – perhaps none more than residents of immigrant absorption centers in southern Israel. Unlike veteran Israeli families, these new immigrants – many of them olim from Ethiopia – have no family elsewhere in the country to take them in, and hence nowhere to go.
On Monday, Jewish Agency chairman Natan
Sharansky visited one of these centers. Accompanying a delegation from
the North American UJA-Federation, Sharansky visited the Ivim Absorption
Center in the Sha'ar Hanegev area, one of the hardest hit spots in
Israel over the last dozen years, incessantly targeted by Hamas for
punishment.
The area has not only been targeted by
heavy missile fire over the past week; it has suffered nearly daily
rocket attacks for years, due to its proximity to Gaza.
Some 450 Ethiopian immigrants, most of them in the country only a few weeks, live at the center. The immigrants are the latest ones to arrive in Israel as part of project “Wings of Doves,” dedicated to bringing the last Jews of Ethiopia home to Israel. About 100 of the immigrants arrived in Israel the weekend before Operation Pillar of Defense began.
The Jewish Agency arranged for the
children of these immigrant families to attend a special camp in the
center of the country, where they attend classes and get to know the
country. Their parents were left behind to deal with the daily reality
of nearly endless Red Alert sirens, prompting them to run to bomb shelters and safe spaces.
Altogether, the Jewish Agency said, there were about 3,000 new immigrants living in absorption centers in areas of the south affected by Hamas rocket attacks.
An Agency spokesperson said that all the
housing units in the Ivim center had their own “safe room” for residents
to use in the event of a rocket attack. The spokesperson said that immigrants had undergone thorough training on how to react in the event of an attack, and that doctors and social workers were on hand to help the immigrants deal with the experience.
Commenting on the situation, one of the
officials at the center said that the attacks on the homes of these
penniless and often helpless immigrants by Hamas terrorists were the height of cruelty.
“Besides that, these are racist attacks,”
the doctor said. “Hamas knows full well that the residents of many of
these towns are Ethiopian, and the workers on the farms in this area are
often from Africa or the Far East. That they have targeted these areas
so much over the past dozen years shows that Hamas is not only a
terrorist group – it's also a racist group.”
No comments:
Post a Comment