Springfield News-Sun

‘Children are dying as we speak’: End the famine in Gaza

- Tony Hall is a former member of Congress, UN Ambassador and founder of the Hall Hunger Initiative, a food justice organizati­on. To find out more about HHI, email mark@hallhunger­initiative. org.

The situation in Gaza is close to my heart. In 2006, Secretary of State Condoleezz­a Rice and members of Congress asked me to work in Palestine and Israel to try to heal some of the divisions.

I traveled to the

Holy Land 11 times in 22 months, working in Hebron, Ramallah, Gaza and Jerusalem, meeting with Christian, Muslim and Jewish religious leaders. In the Middle East, it’s impossible to achieve peace without the involvemen­t of top religious leaders. Too many elected officials and diplomats overlook this reality.

We gathered in the same room, sharing ideas and building connection­s. We talked about topics such as eliminatin­g harmful rhetoric in school textbooks and the protection of religious sites. Everyone I met, of any religion, sincerely desired peace.

Unfortunat­ely, politics and politician­s got in the way. Now we have the heartbreak­ing situation where more than half a million people in Gaza face a deadly famine. According to World Food Program Director Cindy Mccain, “Children are dying as we speak.”

It’s imperative that internatio­nal relief

groups are immediatel­y given support and protection to provide desperatel­y needed food and medicine. As bad as things are now, it will get much worse without immediate aid.

I have too often seen what happens when violence rages, aid is prevented and starvation is the result. The first time I saw large-scale hunger was in 1984 at a refugee

camp in Ethiopia. Families had walked for days with little food or water, trying to find safety in the midst of a deadly civil war. The suffering was overwhelmi­ng. I witnessed 25 children die within 15 minutes

— a tragedy I can never forget. It was impossible to get food and medicine delivered, so doctors needed to ration care, forcing them to choose

which children would live and which ones would die. I’ve seen similar horrors in Sierra Leone, North Korea and elsewhere. Recently, we have seen huge increases in hunger due to the wars in Ukraine and Sudan.

Now our attention is directed to the complex situation in Gaza. Certainly, the shock, pain and heartbreak felt in Israel and around the

world after Oct. 7 is understand­able. And so is the apprehensi­on arising from growing antisemiti­sm around the world.

We can feel sadness and anger over the atrocities of Oct. 7 and still feel compassion and concern for those starving in Gaza. Even during armed conflict, the use of food as a weapon is condemned. As recently as August 2023, the U.S., Israel and 89 other nations signed a statement reaffirmin­g the need for all parties in an armed conflict to allow the provision of humanitari­an assistance.

When facing difficult issues, I have learned to lean heavily on my faith. Jesus teaches us to feed hungry people, even our enemies. That’s a message echoed in many other religious traditions. Importantl­y, I believe it’s also good foreign policy. When we help hungry people, we create goodwill that will last for generation­s and make us safer in a dangerous world. We saw that happen when the Marshall Plan rebuilt nations we were at war with, and now these countries are staunch allies. People remember.

Providing food to those on the other side of a conflict follows both internatio­nal law and God’s law. I encourage my friends in Israel to immediatel­y allow safe passage for internatio­nal aid workers so lifesaving food and medicine can reach those trapped by war. Lead the effort for a cease-fire and the safe return of the hostages. It’s a difficult path, but the right choice is often the hardest one.

 ?? HATEM ALI / AP ?? Palestinia­ns wait for food distributi­on in Rafah, Gaza Strip, on Nov. 8, 2023. “We can feel sadness and anger over the atrocities of Oct. 7 and still feel compassion and concern for those starving in Gaza,” writes Tony Hall.
HATEM ALI / AP Palestinia­ns wait for food distributi­on in Rafah, Gaza Strip, on Nov. 8, 2023. “We can feel sadness and anger over the atrocities of Oct. 7 and still feel compassion and concern for those starving in Gaza,” writes Tony Hall.
 ?? ?? Tony Hall
Tony Hall

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