We are thankful for having the volunteer Heather Garlick with us for three weeks, helping with the urgently needed fund raising and documenting. Thank you Heather!
The children of the Bugs of the Future kindergarten are having a party! It is the last day before they finish school for the Eid celebrations and the Sounds of Palestine (SoP) team have been asked along to get festivities underway. The event coincides with my first day helping out the MwB and SoP projects – right in at the deep end…
The children of the Bugs of the Future kindergarten are having a party! It is the last day before they finish school for the Eid celebrations and the Sounds of Palestine (SoP) team have been asked along to get festivities underway. The event coincides with my first day helping out the MwB and SoP projects – right in at the deep end…
We
arrive at the school in Aida camp, Bethlehem to be confronted with the sense of
organised chaos which typifies large groups of small children the world over.
The kids are proudly and perfectly turned out in a rather stylish pastel pink
and brown colour combination. The girls have a range of pink accessories, from
stripey tights to flowery hairbands, complimenting their uniforms. As we stand
talking to the kindergarten teachers I glance up to see a sea of brown and
green eyes gazing at me with anticipation from the nearest classroom. It seems
everyone looks forward to a visit from Sounds of Palestine!
But
the music classes at Bugs of the Future are not just for fun. For her visits
twice a week Fabienne, one of the music teachers, creates detailed lesson plans,
designed to help the children grasp concepts such as short and long as well as to
aide interaction. More than that, the music helps to relieve stress in a
classroom where many of the children have gone through emotional trauma a grown
adult could not handle. Indeed, pink uniform aside, this is not a picture which
should be seen through rose tinted lenses. Many of the children in this
classroom have seen parents or family members injured or imprisoned. Inevitably, these issues are brought to the playground. In our first
session one little girl enters the classroom in tears, not the wails of a
disgruntled toddler but the whimpers of a person suffering intense emotional
distress. In amongst the cheeky and mischievous kids there are children who are
quiet and withdrawn, too scared to take part in the lesson.
Music
helps in these situations and the Sounds of Palestine project has seen
impressive results. On the way home Fabienne tells me of one child who stopped
bedwetting during the nights after the music lessons. A girl had never spoken a word in kindergarten and surprised the teachers when she suddenly said the first line of the welcome song Fabienne sings every week with the children. To assist this process we
are also joined by Magedah, a social worker, who was trained within the MwB/HLT Workshop Leadership Training. She is able to watch the children
closely to note erratic behaviour and even take individual children out of the
class for special support. However, as with many things in Palestine, the
Sounds of Palestine project is over-subscribed and under-funded. There is
simply no money in Palestine. The Musicians without Borders project is able to
train groups of Palestinians to run community groups just like these but there
is not enough funding for the community groups themselves which would extend
the reach of the healing quality of the music.
But
today was primarily about fun, and fun was most certainly had. What did I learn
on my first day with Musicians without Borders? These may be children facing huge
problems both in the present and in the future but they’re also just children,
bright eyed, bushy tailed, naughty, funny, silly children. They deserve all the
opportunities that life can provide, opportunities Sounds of Palestine, Musicians without Borders and Holy Land Trust are striving to deliver.
All pictures are taken by Heather Garlick.
Sounds of Palestine could not have taken place without the support of Katherina Werk, Romisch-Katholische Landeskirche des Kantons Luzern and Romisch-Katholische Kirche des Kantons Basel-Stadt.
Sounds of Palestine could not have taken place without the support of Katherina Werk, Romisch-Katholische Landeskirche des Kantons Luzern and Romisch-Katholische Kirche des Kantons Basel-Stadt.
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