Help Lebanon Recover
|
|
Summary
IMC is providing medical care (including mental health care for children), training for health care workers, and supplies for medical facilities and for families made homeless by the fighting.
read updates from the field
How Donors Like You Helped
Thanks to donors like you, a total of $900 was raised for this project.
|
Received $900 from 7 donations from people like:
|
More Information About this Project
Project Needs and Beneficiaries
Since the start of fighting in July 2006, over 1,000 Lebanese civilians have been killed, one-third of them children. An estimated 800,000 were displaced by the conflict. The needs in Lebanon in the wake of this conflict cannot be overstated. In southern Lebanon where IMC works, unexploded bombs litter the ground and in some villages 60% of all homes were destroyed. Families have been torn apart, children have been handicapped, and many have been left with nowhere to live or work.
Activities
During the conflict, 95% of IMCs patients were women and small children. One of IMCs most innovative programs teaches children, through play, song, and puppets, how to avoid unexploded bombs and how to cope with loss.
Funding Information
Total Funding Received to Date: $900
Funding Information
This project is now in implementation and no longer available for funding.
Received funds will be used to accomplish concrete objectives as
indicated in the project's "Activities" section. Updates will be posted under the
"Progress Report" tab as they become available.
Donors' contributions and pledges to this project totaled $900. The original project funding goal was $10,000.
Additional Documentation
This project has provided additional documentation in a PDF file (projdoc.pdf).
Resources
Why this Project is Important
Potential Long Term Impact
IMCs work includes training and capacity-building for long term impact. IMC has been chosen as the leading health provider by the Lebanese Ministries of Health and Social Affairs, the World Health Organization, and American University of Beirut.
Project Message
It is important to realize that civilians bear the largest effects of conflicts. Folks here are just like folks anywhere else: they are worried about their families.
- Dr. Neil Joyce, IMC emergency response volunteer
When this Project was Updated
Last Updated
This project was last updated on February 14, 2007.
Date Added to GlobalGiving
This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on October 25, 2006.
Latest Update from the Field
Getting through the winter--with help from IMC
By Julie Poucher Harbin - Communications Officer, IMC Lebanon, February 07, 2007 05:14 PM
International Medical Corps continues to help residents recovering from setbacks they suffered during last summers bitter conflict with initiatives ranging from medical care and psycho-social support to water and sanitation programs. IMC is committed to developing programs in Lebanon that will help build and increase the capacity of local communities and organizations. This winter IMC is assisting hundreds of families to cope with snow and cold winter temperatures.
A Life in Ruins When the people from Chihine returned to their village many found their homes had collapsed ceilings, wrecked walls, broken chimneys or were completely destroyed. Only one kilometer from the Israeli border, tucked into the mountains of the Tyre region, Chihine had received so much incoming fire that 80 percent of the settlement was uninhabitable when the bombing stopped in middle of August last year.
For the 850 people living in Chihine the hardship did not end with the ceasefire. Most of them farmers, they were unable to tend to fields which were either ruined by fire or cluttered with unexploded cluster bombs turning 75 percent of them into deadly minefields. The situation is very bad. After the war, people lost a lot of their fields and now they dont have any other way to live. They just wait for help, the Mayor of Chihine, Akram Awada, told IMC field officer Rajaa Khalaf, in her first assessment meeting with him.
Preparing for Winter – With Assistance From IMC When winter arrived and temperatures started to drop the people of Chihine faced another problem. Winters are cold, wet and often bring a lot of snow. Because of the bombs, collecting firewood to heat their drafty homes was too risky. Like in all of south Lebanon, electricity in Chihine is unreliable and available for maybe six hours a day.
So in early December, before the winter rains and snow, IMC joined with UK-based charity Lebanon United to donate wood heaters and wood to 150 families in Chihine. IMC also provided another 300 families in the largely agricultural southern Lebanese villages of Marouahine, Markaba and Chaqra with firewood.
A few days after her extended family of nine received their wood supply, Maryam Awada, thanked the IMC team and demonstrated how well the newly installed wood heater works. It even heats my tea and coffee, she says. Maryam and her cousin Zeinab Srour, who also received a heater and wood, treated the team to some Turkish coffee as an early afternoon chill set in.
The second floor of her home is completely destroyed. She now shares the only two habitable rooms on the ground floor with her husband, two daughters, her son Hussein and his family of five. Hussein has been able to cover some of the familys expenses by clearing war debris and helping reconstruct houses. But it is not enough to buy the proper medicine for his one-year-old daughter, whose face was injured by a shell, and his three-year-old son, who still suffers from shock caused by the conflict.
Livelihoods in Danger Most villagers of Chihine rent land and make their living from tobacco, burghul (parboiled and cracked wheat), olives and olive oil. Zeinab, a widow who lives with her 16-year-old son Ahmad, says she usually harvests burghul and tobacco on leased land. She showed the IMC team some burghul she stored away from the August 2005 crop. Her 2006 crop was destroyed in the conflict, and because of the cluster bombs there was no land available for the autumn planting season.
Now, having already lost last years crop during the conflict, Zeinab and other villagers are hoping that more fields will be cleared in time for Mays tobacco planting season. The undamaged fields are being plowed, but as IMC field officer Rajaa Khalaf explains, the landowners are not renting out much land—preferring to keep what little is left to themselves.
Waiting For a Normal Life The Lebanese Army and international de-mining NGOs are slowly working their way through villages in the south, clearing field by field the hundreds of thousands of unexploded mines and other ordnance. De-mining officials in the Lebanese Government and the United Nations expect that agricultural land will only be partially cleared by end of 2007. For many families this might mean another year or more without an income.
Zeinab Srour says she is content with her modest life and her faith keeps her strong. She explains how after the conflict she initially relied on international humanitarian aid packages, including those from IMC. Then, late last fall, she got help from her own community. In addition to the wood and heater from IMC, she received a refrigerator from neighbors and Hussein temporarily fixed her wrecked chimney by capping it with concrete. It is still unusable, but at least it keeps the rain and snow out.
Links:
Comment on this update
|
Subscribe to "Updates from the Field" by E-Mail
|