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Demand Israel Stop targeting anas arafat


On December 1, 2025 an Israeli drone shot a bullet into the bedroom of Anas Arafat in Gaza City.  No one was injured physically but you can image the family's terror.  Promoting Enduring  Peace has worked with Anas' "Plant the Land" project for years.  Since "Oct. 7" its been giving food, water, and clothing to Palestinians in Gaza City. 


Click here for this Dec. 2, 2025 TSVN interview with Anas Arafat about the attack.  It's an audio interview posted on Youtube.


Stop Israeli terror and assassinations.


Many in Anas' Family Killed in vicious Israeli Bombing

7/21 update


by PEP Administrator Stanley Heller

 

The bombs fell in the Al-Tuffah neighborhood in Gaza City around 2 a.m. on July 14 local time. There was no “battle” or raid, just Israeli annihilation from the air. We have worked with a man named Anas Arafat for several years trying to help Palestinians in Gaza City provide more food for themselves.   Anas’s mother and father were living in a 5-story building that had been partially destroyed. The bottom two floors were livable so they and two sons and daughters-in-law and 7 grandchildren were living there. Then the bombs fell. Everyone in the house was buried under the rubble, thirteen in all.  People tried to help but without construction equipment to lift the heavy beams and debris they could do nothing. One person shot a few seconds of video of Anas’ sister-in-law who could be seen in a gap of the wreckage. She says, “My father, my kids”. She looks at the camera. She looks at us. Then IDF drones appeared, and local neighbors ran. Drones kept on scaring people away.


An article in the Israeli paper Haaretz said that members of the family told their reporter that the IDF kept rescuers away for eight hours. The last two sentences of the article were, “Haaretz reached out to the IDF to receive an urgent response, while at least some of the Arafat family was still alive. The army has yet to respond.” Read that again, “while at least some of the Arafat family was still alive.” But the IDF did not respond to Haaretz until much later. In another article Gideon Levy says that the IDF Spokesman didn’t get back to Haaretz for 12 hours. The IDF absolutely knew the need for immediate rescue but were content to let the family die.


Rescuers from the Palestine Civil Defense eventually arrived but concluded that all 13 were dead. Anas Arafat said 15 other people in the area were also killed by the bombs. 


Apparently, the explosion sent one of the granddaughters right out of the building. She had surgery and is alive. She will be told her family is gone 


Added to the horror is the fact that the bodies can’t be retrieved. That is the Israeli military makes it impossible to do so. For one their jets are still dropping bombs. But more important one needs heavy construction equipment to pick up the steel and concrete of the destroyed buildings. It’s unclear whether the problem is lack of machinery or lack of fuel but either way it’s not available. So Anas’ mother, father, brothers, sister-in-law, and seven nieces and nephews will lie in the ruins indefinitely or until the Israelis bulldoze the area.


Let me tell you about Anas Arafat. He trained to be a lawyer and graduated with a degree, but opportunities to practice law in Gaza are very, very slim.  He’s been working on a mutual aid team called “Plant the Land”. It was an attempt to give Gaza more independence from food imports by growing food locally. It was vegan and had been co-founded by Jewish-American Laura Schleifer. It had considerable support from donors around the world. The team built a water well, provided medicine and sometimes blankets. He also set up an education center. Promoting Enduring Peace (PEP) started helping out three or four years ago. After some time we learned he had a serious medical problem. Anas is a young man but he developed diabetes, type 1. Insulin in Gaza City was expensive and since all of Gaza has been under various levels of Israeli siege, hard to get. He developed vision problems. Gaza doctors couldn’t help him, but he heard that an Egyptian doctor had a treatment involving eye injections and medicine that could lead to marked vision improvement. So fund raising from many sources including PEP got him the funds to get to Egypt. The treatment worked!


Then came the attack from Gaza on October 7 and the forever war from Israel on Gaza. Anas’ home was in the very north of Gaza City. He and his wife and children left right away, going from place to place in Gaza City . He learned in days that he had been correct in fleeing. His house was bombed. The education center he had set up that was serving as a shelter was bombed and six children were killed. Anas said that in that infamous October eleven of his extended family were killed including a sister-in-law. 


His wife was pregnant with their third child. She was due in mid-December. There was no doctor or midwife available. So Anas delivered his son by himself only getting instructions from a doctor by phone. Luckily there were no complications.


After that October Anas had no more insulin. By 2025 vision in one eye was gone. But all that time he worked. He used donations to buy food, clothing, toys and water and gave them away in neighborhoods of Gaza. On occasion they had celebrations. All this bothered the IDF and he was warned twice, but he persisted.


Now he is in deep psychic shock. And his family is hungry. 25 pounds of Pillsbury flour costs around $25 in the U.S.  Recently in Gaza City the asking price for that amount of flour was $235.  Anas has said now the price has skyrocketed to $4,000 for 25 kilos.  Laura Schleifer says Anas told him he hasn’t had food in four days.


In a third article in Haaretz  Nir Hasson on July 21 wrote, “To this day, the IDF hasn't said why it bombed the Arafat home, or why it barred rescue workers from coming.”


^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^


Note: Anas' wife and children were not in the house that was bombed on the 14th.



Living without insulin

The toll

Over the past few years you've seen many pictures of Anas in Gaza working with Plant the Land.  We took part in a fund raiser to get him successful eye treatment in Egypt that grew out of sporadic access to insulin.  He has remained in Gaza City with as many as 300,000 others. We've told you  about  fundraisers for his organization since.


What we haven't talked about is the toll on his body of being totally without insulin since October.   In pictures he looks OK but HbA1c  is over 12.  We asked a doctor what the lack of insulin does to someone with his conditions.  Please at least skim this.  [Note, we put words in boldface for emphasis.]


"Normal blood sugar is about 70-100 mg/dL. When it is higher than that for extended or repeated episodes it causes deposits of sugar-based molecules on red blood cells. The level of these deposits, which are known as HbA1c can be measured and used to estimate what the average blood sugar has been over the previous weeks. A normal HbA1c should be around 5.5 or less. An HbA1c of 6.0 corresponds to an average blood sugar of 115. 9.0 corresponds to 215, and 12.0 indicates an average blood sugar of 315. 12.2 HbA1c is clearly in the danger zone and here’s why.


Blood sugars that are elevated cause damage to blood vessels, especially the tiny blood vessels that supply blood to nerves, the retina, and nephrons which are the functional units of the kidneys. Prolonged exposure to high blood sugars results in harmful deposits in these tiny arteries which over time causes them to get blocked up and quit supplying blood to the structures that they support.

·  In the retina this results in blindness. It also causes cataracts, malformations of the lens of the eye, and blurry vision even if the retina is still functioning relatively well.

·  In the kidneys there are 2 million nephrons. As their function progressively diminishes, the kidneys are no longer able to get rid of excess water and the normally occurring toxins that they filter from the blood. This results in kidney failure and is the number one cause for which people are on dialysis. In addition, the kidneys make a hormone that stimulates the bone marrow to make red blood cells and when it is gone, the person develops worsening anemia.

·  In the brain, overall blood supply is reduced resulting in decreased mental function. There is also damage to larger arteries which develop plaques that can cause sudden obstruction of parts of the brain resulting in strokes.

·  As individual nerves experience decreased blood supply they begin to malfunction resulting in the numbness and tingling of the extremities which is known as diabetic neuropathy. Over time, the loss of feeling in the feet results in increased injury even from minor causes resulting in poor healing, infection, and a high risk of amputation.

·  The heart also suffers from damaged blood vessels and people with poorly controlled diabetes have much higher risk of heart attacks.


These things can and do occur very frequently in people with poorly controlled diabetes. In someone who has diabetes with   no access to insulinand very limited access to clean drinking water, an HbA1c of 12 signifies the presence of a metabolic timebomb. A minor infection, a bout of diarrhea, or any other acute condition which can worsen dehydration and stress on the immune system can rapidly lead to a diabetic coma and death. This is a grave situation."


We have tried to get insulin to him through many different agencies but Israel controls north Gaza and lets very very little in.   What can be done?  First, get Israel to stop its war and get out of Gaza.  Then people can flood the area with food and medicine.  Please devote yourself to that cause.


In the meantime you can donate to the newest fundraiser as Anas uses the money to help others.  Click here for information.


Mayson Almisri and the White Helmets

In Print and on TV

The White Helmets Organized When the Syrian Government Turned its Back on the People

TV Interview, The Struggle,  Feb. 2020 


As a White Helmet, she spent years saving lives in war-torn Syria. Now she’s building a new life in Canada - The Star (Toronto) - Oct 6, 2019


White Helmet hero is haunted by loss and war - Broadview, February 1, 2019, 


 Former St. Charles Student Featured in the News - St. Charles Adult and Continuing Education, Learning for Life


 St. Charles Students Meet the Prime Minister  - St. Charles Adult and Continuing Education, Learning for Life


Subcommittee on International Human Rights Committee  Mayson Almisri testifies,  March 29th, 2018




How to Help Syrians

Peaceful measures

 Fall 2019. Syria is in ruins and for the most part is under control of the tyrannical Assad regime assisted by Russia, Iran and militias under control of the Iranian regime. Cities like Raqqa were liberated from ISIS by the U.S. with horrific costs to civilians. Only three areas are not under total  Assad control, the province of Idlib, the area in the north controlled by a Syrian-Kurdish militia which it calls Rojava, and al Rukban, a refugee camp near the Iraq and Jordanian borders housing some 30,000 people. 


Russian and Assad planes and helicopters are raining mayhem down on the population of Idlib. In May,  25 medical facilities were bombed and around 600 people killed.

 
 

What peaceful measures can be take to help Syrians? Here is a list:

 
 

· Have the U.S. use its radar to warn Syrians in Idlib on approaching air attacks

         It used radar from "Rojava" to keep U.S. and Russian planes safely apart. Use it now to save lives.

· Close U.S. airports to Aeroflot, the Russian airliner

         This measure of economic pressure would send a message to Putin.

· Immediately resupply al Rukban from the U.S. base in Syria 30 or so miles away.

· Get International justice organization to draw up lists of Russians involved in war crimes from politicians to pilots

· Restore U.S. funding to Syrian civil society. Increase funding to the White Helmets.

· Donate to Syrian doctors via MedGlobal

· Turkey and Jordan, Reopen the borders for refugees. 

         Search for weapons, but allow people in. Increase payments to the countries from the international community.

· USA, allow in thousands of Syrian refugees

           It's the right thing to do and the least we can do after killing 1,000+ civilians in Raqqa

· Israel, allow the return of Syrian-Palestinians to their homes

· Make it plain to the Assad regime that there will be no international money for reconstruction until it  empties its prisons

· Investigate current U.N. humanitarian aid to stop the "rake-off" to Assad officials

- Pay for Syrians to rebuild Raqqa

- No pressure by Lebanese or Turkish governments to get Syrian refugees to return to Assad run areas

Link to Marc Nelson's "Disasters of War"

Click here



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