The Long Road to Recovery for the Gaza Border Communities
By Nicole Yoder, Vice President for AID and Aliyah
It’s been over a year since Israelis in the Gaza border communities were overrun by Hamas terrorists last October 7, and they still do not know what hit them. Life has been one big fog ever since.
For Israelis in general, many of their core beliefs were shattered. Israel is supposed to a haven for world Jewry, where there are no pogroms. If Israelis do get in trouble, the IDF will come and rescue them, like at Entebbe.
That all changed last October, and Israelis see worrisome signs of more trouble and uncertainty ahead. Hamas is battered but still holding on in Gaza. Many hostages remain in captivity. The northern border could still explode. Antisemitism is rampant around the globe, and it seems few in the world truly care about the Jewish State and people.
Thankfully, millions of Christians around the world care for Israel, and many have been expressing their love and support for the Gaza border communities impacted by October 7 through the International Christian Embassy Jerusalem. Our ICEJ AID team has been spending much time listening to the leaders and residents of the Gaza border communities to assess where they are and how we can help them on their long road to recovery.
For instance, we recently met with Yossi Keren, head of the Sha’ar HaNegev Regional Council, who served under the previous mayor (and our friend) Ofir Libstein—the first named casualty of this war. Yossi explained how the government has set up a special budget to help Gaza border communities rebuild to what they had before October 7 but added: “We want to build back better. We owe it to our children to plan and develop for their future and not just rebuild what we lost.”
Next door in the Sadot Negev region, security chief Rafi Babian also has the children in mind: “Our lives will return when our children can return safely,” he told us. Rafi noted that most communities away from the Gaza border are slowly returning to normal, but dozens of families from his hard-hit home village of Kibbutz Alumim do not want to return for at least another year. The residents managed to kill 38 terrorists along their perimeter fence but lost 23 foreign workers, and the palpable tension people felt from being surrounded on all sides that day lingers.
Further south, the Eshkol Regional Council suffered the worst during the October 7 massacre and is struggling the most to get families to return. Among the Eshkol region’s 33 communities along the Gaza border, which includes the devastated villages of Be’eri and Nir Oz, 219 residents were murdered and 121 were taken hostage; 54 are still held in Gaza. In a sense, October 7 is not over for many of these families.
Going forward, our friends in the Gaza periphery are asking for our help with certain key areas as they recover and rebuild. This includes:
Education: Currently, there are not enough school staff and no security fences around the schools. Classrooms are crowded, and many children and staff remain traumatized. We have been asked to help sponsor children’s informal educational activities that provide parents rest and frees them up to find work and think about the future.
Employment: As a result of what happened on October 7, many local businesses have failed. Evacuated families may soon start to lose their benefits, and many are living too far away to reach their former jobs. They need help to return to work and restart their businesses.
Trauma care: The Eshkol region alone has seen a tenfold increase in the number of patients needing trauma care, from 300 people per month before the Hamas invasion to 3,600 patients per month today. Far more trained professionals are needed, as local social workers are fighting over every therapist.
First-response: Every community is urgently upgrading their first-response teams. They are changing how they operate, doubling patrols, and seeking newer equipment.
Rebuilding: The government has set up the special “Tekuma” fund for rebuilding battered communities, but there are delays and bureaucracy to overcome. Presently, these plans remain on paper only, with much discussion but no movement. The communities are asking for help to get started on their own.
Agricultural equipment: We are being asked to help replace farming tractors and tools that Hamas burned and destroyed.
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Header image: ICEJ solidarity tour visits one of the Gaza border communities decimated by Hamas militants on October 7, 2024.