San Diego Union-Tribune

CHRISTMAS OPENS NEW MARKET FOR SMALL GAZA BUSINESS

Holiday masks lift impoverish­ed enclave

- BY WAFAA SHURAFA Shurafa writes for Associated Press.

In the blockaded Gaza Strip, the Christmas season is giving a boost to a small women’s business that produces pandemic face masks decorated with holiday symbols.

The masks, decorated with images of Santa Claus, reindeer and Christmas trees, have found markets as far away as Europe. They also have provided a small lift to a Palestinia­n enclave run by the Islamic militant Hamas group and where the vast majority of residents are Muslim.

“We exported the first 200 masks two weeks ago to France, last week about 300 to Germany and from 300 to 400 masks will be sent to Britain in the coming days,” said Suhad Saidam, owner of the workshop.

It’s a rare success story in impoverish­ed Gaza, where unemployme­nt has reached around 50 percent, and exports are severely restricted by Israel.

Saidam, who has been sewing for 16 years, says she sends the masks to Palestinia­n companies in the West Bank that export the goods. To be allowed out from Gaza through Israel and to the West Bank, the embroideri­es must be made of cloths and fabrics only. Decorated electronic­s,

like watches, are forbidden, she said.

Israel, with Egypt’s help, imposed the blockade on Gaza in 2007 to isolate Hamas. Both countries cite security concerns and fear of arms smuggling to Hamas in justifying the restrictio­ns.

The Christian population in

Gaza, home to some 2 million people, has dwindled to about 1,000 as members of the tiny community have steadily emigrated. However, Christmas decoration­s can be widely seen on store fronts and at restaurant­s across the Gaza Strip.

Saidam, 43, opened the workshop in 2017 with support from Care Internatio­nal humanitari­an agency under a program for breast cancer survivors like herself.

Saidam outsources the work to about 40 women, most of them suffering from cancer, to do the work at home “for a good income.” The Christmas-themed masks are sold for 15 to 20 shekels ($4 to $6). In Gaza, a typical daily wage is about 30 shekels ($9).

Wafa Tarifi, a resident of the West Bank city of Ramallah, learned of the masks from a Facebook page and was pleased when she saw them at a bazaar in Ramallah. “I bought some of them for my children’s Christian teachers and they liked it so much,” she said.

 ?? ADEL HANA AP ?? A tailor stitches Christmas face masks at a sewing workshop in Gaza City, where Christmas is giving a boost to the area.
ADEL HANA AP A tailor stitches Christmas face masks at a sewing workshop in Gaza City, where Christmas is giving a boost to the area.

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