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Please Help the Palestinian People in a Time of Tragedy

Aid Projects, Community Projects, Demonstration Sites, Developments, Education Centers, Village Development — by Nichole Ross January 11, 2009


The Jordan Valley Project site is the triangular section in foreground

As Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip escalate, more and more Palestinian civilians are being displaced by damage or destruction to their homes. The need for refugee shelter has become critical. Geoff and Nadia Lawton are currently working on a PRI project in a Palestinian refugee village in Jordan. The project, known as the Jordan Valley Permaculture Project, is an effort to set up a Permaculture demonstration and education center. Due to the increased influx of refugees that will need food and shelter, this project is essential for survival for these people fleeing to the very arid Dead Sea Valley. Geoff, Nadia and others are working at full speed to get this center established as soon as possible so they can train refugees and impoverished locals to set up similar sustainable systems (food, water, shelter).


Geoff and Nadia Lawton with Palestinian Children, January 2009


A little one-room building is already on site


 
The site is located in the Al Jawfa area in the western Jordan/Dead Sea Valley just 10 km north of the Dead Sea and 6 km east of the Jordanian-Palestinian border, directly east of the West Bank. The local population is made up of traditional Bedouin tribes and long-term refugees stemming from the creation of the state of Israel and displacement of local populations from within Palestine.

Like Geoff Lawton’s previous project in Jordan where he helped transform 10-acres of non productive, extremely dry and salted farmland into a sustainable and productive food source for the local community, this project will also be a model for sustainable arid land development. It will demonstrate that all the basic needs for a healthy, meaningful, peaceful lifestyle can be affordable, understood and achieved by those with little money.


The First Trees Planted Are Now Growing Well


The First Garden is
Producing Some Vegetables

The project site is a typical marginal arid land low-income settlement in the area. It will demonstrate energy-efficient appropriate housing with natural cooling systems and a plant nursery attachment, solar electricity, solar hot water, biological waste water treatment recycling, dry compost toilets, rain water harvesting earthworks and diverse interactive plant, animal and tree systems for local food production and processing. The demonstration house will function as a classroom and administration office for the project and local Permaculture group. Once established, the project will serve as a model that can be replicated within the village, throughout Jordan and other countries in the region.

The project, started in 2008, has already seen significant progress. The first trees were planted and are growing well and the first garden is producing some vegetables. Now, the water tank needs to be expanded, the fence and gate improved and the rest of the project started. The current focus is to set up basic living accommodations for volunteers coming to work on the project. PRI has the people power in place to move on this project, but is in great need of funds to purchase supplies. Any chance of the smallest financial support would be greatly appreciated. In this heightened time of great tragedy for the Palestinian people, this is something positive we can all do to directly affect their survival.

Items you could donate towards (in US$):

  • Water tank: 3x 2 cubic meter tanks needed $120
  • Chain link fence 2 meter with steel posts and gates $2,500
  • Extension to the small house to build a small kitchen, store room and basic shower $720
  • 2 Lockable steel doors for store room and main entrance $200
  • 1 square meter of project land $15
  • Kitchen basic equipment $95
  • 100m of 20mm irrigation pipe $22
  • 1 fruit tree $4.5
  • Mains water connection $315
  • Electricity connection $100
  • 6 cubic meter of drinking and irrigation water $20
  • Basic hand tools $250
  • Truck load of manure $75
  • Solar Hot water $750
  • Plant Nursery $200
  • Compost Tea Micro brewer $250

Other methods of making a donation here.   Thank you!

Comments (4)

4 Comments »

  • Hamas has the power and money to take care of their people and the power to resolve the problem.

    Comment by diane alexander — January 11, 2009 @ 5:08 pm

  • Whatever one’s political ideology, this is a humanitarian effort to help those truly in need now and make a positive change (through education) for the future of all people.

    Comment by Nichole Ross — January 12, 2009 @ 11:46 am

  • Greetings Diane,

    Whether what you say is true or not has nothing to do with the project in Jordan. This is a practical solution to a real problem happening now on the ground. This area is in dire need of the practical solutions permaculture can provide. Once a proper demonstration site is up and running it can be replicated all across the country and beyond. Putting control of basic human necessities, clean water, healthy food, appropriate shelter and energy and proper waste management, back into the hands of the individual. This way no one need rely on any political leadership no matter what it proclaims to represent.

    Israel clearly has more then enough money and power but that doesn’t stop the US govt from sending it $3.5 billion dollars worth of aid each year. Imagine how many sites we could develop with only a fraction of that money.

    cheers.

    Comment by Eric Seider — January 12, 2009 @ 12:02 pm

  • Hello Eric,

    I appreciate your honesty and having been at the project I can say I understand. You write beautifully and with humor. What you are doing inspires us to say less and bloody well do more. Thank you

    Comment by Tanya — February 20, 2009 @ 1:42 am

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