Gaza, The Phoenix School | مدرسةالعنقاء

The Phoenix School in Gaza is a mixture of traditional and non-traditional learning.In consultation with students and teachers, we named the school after the mythical bird that rises in glory and power from the ashes of destruction and death. No other name could be more appropriate.

The first few days were focused on getting to know each other, consulting with children about what they want to get out of the school, how they want to decorate the space, and assessing their skills and abilities.

After months of planning and enrolling, and by all accounts, the results are exceeding everyone’s expectations. Grades 1-4 meet every day, 5 days a week in rotating 2 hour schedules. The curriculum includes experiential learning of language, both Arabic and English, math, and science.  Grade 5, along with some in grade 4, meet daily in the afternoon for as long as they’d like to read and discuss novels. It is more of a hands on library for this age group for now, with a focus on Arabic literature.

With time, we plan to expand the school to include more students (currently 120), more space (currently 2 classrooms), and more teachers and staff (currently 5).

Abushkhedim | أبو شخيدم

2024

This playground was built in loving memory of Mariam Sheikha (12.25.2021 — 01.09.2022) by her parents Sabah Yusuf and Mudassir Sheikha. The playground serves four adjacent villages, including Birzeit, Cobar, AbuQash, and Abushkhedim. The approximate number of children who use the playground is 4,300 ranging in ages from toddlers to 15 years.

Bethlehem, Al Freir School | بيت لحم، مدرسة الفرير

2024

Al Frer (De La Salle) is a private school in Bethlehem established in 1893. The school has 1118 students and has an equal number of Christian and Muslim students. The playground will serve preschool through grade 4- approximately 400 students and would be open to the community in the summer time.

This playground is a gift in memory from the family of Edward Theodore Saad. Architect. Humanist. Palestinian.

Beit Liqia | بيت لقيا

2024

This playground was made possible by a generous donation from Abboud family. It sits on a 3000 sqm plot of land in Area C belonging to the Beit Liqia Municipality, with the Sports Club participating in the management and maintenance of the playground.  It is used by the village and surrounding villages with a combined population of more than 20,000 people.

Kufr Ni’mah | كفر نعمة

2023

جمعية نادي الطفل الفلسطيني/ كفرنعمة

PfP is proud to have partnered with Kufr Ni’mah’s Association for the Palestinian Child to building this wonderful public playground and family recreational space.

This playground was funded by the Elfahmawi family in memory of their matriarch and patriarch.

 

Gaza, COVID-19 Relief

2020

In partnership with UNRWA, PfP provided emergency relief to children and their families who were hard hit by the pandemic.

Toura, COVID-19 Relief

2020

On April 21st, 2020, Playgrounds for Palestine sent a survey to our donors about using some of our funds for a COVID-19 emergency direct aid.  The response from our supporters was overwhelmingly in the affirmative.

Families throughout Palestine were hard hit by the pandemic, particularly those who rely on income from day labor in Israel.  The villages of East and West Toura, southwest of Jenin are no exceptions.  They were historically agricultural communities that produced wheat, olives, tobacco, and various produce.  However, as Israel confiscated nearly all village farmlands in the early 2000s, breadwinners were forced to work in Israel as day laborers.  Since the pandemic lockdown took effect in early March, few have been able to work and families have been facing severe shortages.

To help alleviate some of the hardship, PfP worked with the village council to distribute direct aid to affected families with children.  Because of your support and generosity, we were able to give families some breathing room this Ramadan.

We’re happy to report our support of 148 families who are experiencing reduced or no income due to the Covid 19 crisis. The disbursement amounts were determined by a village committee based on two main criteria, including 1) number of children and; 2) whether all income or partial income was lost:

  • 42 families received two payments of $100.
  • 51 families received two payments of $150.
  • 3 families received two payments of $50.
  • 18 families received one payment of $ 150.
  • 34 families received one payment of $100.

We are grateful to Professor Ahmad Qabaha, a resident of Toura and friend of PfP, along with Mr Mahmoud Ziad, on behalf of the Toura Municipality, for their meticulous work identifying needs and disbursing the funds to help families with children get through this extraordinary Ramadan.

Dr Qabaha said, “I would love to express my sincere gratitude to every person who contributed to the survival of Toura’s children whose families suffered from the lockdown. Your support has really demonstrated the inclination of people around the world towards human solidarity.”

From one recipient: “we send our love and appreciation to the PfP for their acceptance of our call for support. We pray for them day and night. We are so grateful.”

We wish them, you, and everyone good health and freedom.

Silwan, Madaa Creative Center | سلوان

2022

This project was funded by and completed in partnerships with PfP—UK.

The Madaa Creative Center was established in 2005 to serve and empower children, teenagers, and women living in Silwan.

Jerusalem, Jeel Al Amal | القدس، جيل الأمل

2022

This is PfP’s second project at Jeel Al Amal School. It was funded by a Book Club in the New Jersey and Pennsylvania areas.

Jeel Al Amal is a boy’s home accommodating 100 orphan Palestinian boys. They are educated at Jeel Al Amal primary co-ed school together with 250 girls. The school is located in Bethany, East Jerusalem, Palestine.

Hebron, Al Sumud Playground | الخليل

2022

 

The Al Sumud playground is located in Hebron and was built by PfP through the generous contributions of Madison-Rafah Sister City Project and Rochester Witness for Palestine. The playground is located in Hebron, an area that is subdivided by checkpoints and settlements. The children often have to pass through checkpoints to get to school. This playground is intended to give them a much-needed source of joy and play.

During the construction of this playground, materials had to be transported through a cemetery because Israeli officials denied the use of Al Shuhada Street. After the opening day party, settlers came in the middle of the night to remove all Palestinian flags. Despite these attacks, our children were able to have fun, laugh, and play.

Jayyous Playground | جيوس

2021

Jayyous is a small agricultural village with a population of around 5,000 people. The Jayyous Playground will serve
approximately 700 youth in Jayyous under the age of 18. The playground will be constructed adjacent to the SkateQilya skatepark on a piece of unused land approximately 450 square meters in size.

SkateQilya is overseeing the construction of the project on the ground and will manage the playground and fitness equipment, and incorporate it into its existing programming. This expansion will make this facility one of the most unique parks in all of Palestine. Here are images of the land preparation in Jayyous for the playground. We will update this post as the playground progresses!

Thank you to the Abboud family who is generously sponsoring the Jayyous Playground with their donation.

Aida 4 | مخيم عايده

2021

“Little Norway” playground is our fourth installation in the Lajee Center Community Garden, which began almost a decade ago with our dear brother Salah Ajarma, who passed away in April 2021.  Salah had just established a kindergarten in Lajee and we were happy to fund a special play area for young children attending the new school.  The playground was completed by his friends and comrades in Aida.

The playground was sponsored by Sven Hegstad in Norway.

Lajee is a community-based grassroots creative cultural centre that works with new generations of Palestinians as they continue their ongoing struggle for justice and rights for Palestine and all Palestinians.

Bani Suhaila | بني سهيلا

2022

 

PfP and PfP-UK collaborated with the Bani Suhaila community to fund a soccer field in this Gaza village in a public playground area.  We also funded foundational electrical and plumbing work, as well as a retainer wall for the property.

Beit Jala, Talitha Kumi School | بيت جالا

2020

 

The Talitha Kumi school is located in Beit Jala, Palestine and serves around 180 students. The school is for students from grade one to tawjihi (grade 12). Playgrounds for Palestine is helping to fund and build an outdoor playground in order to provide the children with a place to play, improve their fitness through outdoor exercise, and instill good habits. The photo below is a proposal of the equipment that may be included in the final playground!

The playground will not only serve the students at the school, but will also be open to the surrounding community in the  Bethlehem area.

Lebanon, Mia Mieh | لبنان، المية ومية

2019

 

This playground was built in partnership with UNRWA at the Baraaem Kindergarten in the Mia Mieh refugee camp is located south of the city of Saida. The camp was established in 1954 and extends over an area of 54,000 sq m.  The camp survived a series of major events in 1982, when the Israeli invasion destroyed many of the camp’s shelters. These shelters were not rebuilt and alternative shelters were built instead along the southern border of the camp.

According to the UNRWA, there are 5,747 registered people in the camp as of June 2018. There is one UNRWA school in the camp which serves more than 400 students. The addition of the playground was extremely significant to the community.

Palestinian Animal League, summer camp | الجمعية الفلسطينية للرفق بالحيوان

2020

 

Established in 2010, the Palestinian Animal League is the only locally-run animal protection organization operating within the Occupied Palestinian Territories (oPt). PAL works with local people, particularly children, to encourage kindness, justice, and compassion for humans and animals alike.

 

This project seeks to create a cultural understanding and appreciation of animal welfare concepts and values in the Palestinian territories through the training of volunteers and education of children in specialized animal care and animal welfare principles.This program allows children to lead the way in community enriching and animal saving activities by providing them a safe and fun way to explore their relationships with animals!

Children’s Ecological Garden | Palestine Museum of Natural History | Bethlehem University

2020

This project is creating a children’s ecological garden for play and learning, connecting existing infrastructure including a community garden, botanic garden, animal rehabilitation center, and compost center to an area of play! The community garden is located down the hill from the children’s ecological garden and playground, which includes a play complex set made of reused materials.

 

The goal of this children’s garden is to facilitate learning though outdoor play in order to develop useful skills! Spending time outside can be vital for the mental and emotional healing of children experiencing trauma, violence, deprivation, and insecurity, as is the case in Occupied Palestine. A PMNH children’s garden works as a model for local schools and community gardens, becoming an important resource for permaculture design and educational curriculum in natural history, agricultural and energy sustainability, and native Palestinian plants and animals, as well as cultural history.

Al Shurooq School for the Blind | مدرسة الشروق للمكفوفين

2020

The Al-Shurooq School for Blind Children was established in 1981 as the educational facility of the society, with the aim of providing the blind and visually impaired with access to appropriate education and equal opportunity. They provide education, mobility training, daily life skills, and counseling service for parents and children. Children enroll in the school from kindergarten until fifth grade and then are integrated into local society. The Al-Shurooq School has students who commute daily as well as students who board at the school from different areas of Palestine. They also support a follow-up program where social workers connect with students and help to integrate them into the school through mobility training, identifying places, and introducing them to their teachers, classmates to facilitate their start of an independent life.

Playgrounds for Palestine is happy to support the renovation of the old playground of the school with newly designed tactile elements that are helpful for the blind children in indicating locations and mobility. The renovation of the playground has been helpful towards encouraging active lifestyles by giving children the opportunity to engage in physical activity, movement, exercise, developing their creativity, and allowing them to experience new challenges and manage difficult situations in a safe place. This supports their exploration of  new approaches to playing and problem solving, giving children the opportunity to investigate, explore, and discover the natural world. Playgrounds for Palestine also funded the building of a comfortable corner for parents to spend quality time with their children outside.

Women’s Union Kindergarten at Burj el Shamali | برج إلشمالي

2019

This playground was funded by PfP-UK, our sister organization in the United Kingdom. The Rashidieh refugee camp is located on the coast of Lebanon, south of the city of Tyre. According to the UNRWA, there are 34,584 people registered in the camp as of June 2018. There are four schools in Rashidieh serving more than 2,000 refugees.

Ein el Hilweh Al Morshid, Lebanon | روضة المرشد، مخيم عين الحلوة، لبنان

2019

Al Morshid Kindergarten is located in Ein El Hilweh

Rashidieh Refugee Camp | ‏مخيم الرشيدية

2019-2020

 

This playground actually represents four separate playground projects in a larger recreational complex that serves thousands of children in Rashidieh.

These playgrounds were a collaborative effort between PfP’s UK and US Chapters which both fundraised for this beautiful public park for Palestinian refugees in Lebanon.  With the help of UNRWA in Lebanon, the four playground systems were installed in the Rashidieh Refugee camp near Tyre. The park is open to the public and serves the whole community.  It was completed in record time so local children woke up to it for Eid al Adha, 2019. Much gratitude to Daoud Korman, in particular, and to Claudio Cordone, Mohammed Khaled and others at UNRWA who helped make this and other playgrounds in Lebanon’s camps possible!

The most recent projects to improve the Rashidieh Playground include the addition of accessible equipment such as the accessible swing to serve children with disabilities.

Aheba el Tefel | أَحبّاء الطفل

2018

Located in a kindergarten in Gaza

Jayyous Skate Park | جيوس

2017

This is our second skate park project working with SkateQilya and SkatePal to create state of the art skateboarding ramps for boys and girls of all ages.  We also support ongoing summer skate camps there.

Circus Summer 2017

Playgrounds for Palestine teamed up with Pallasos en Rebeldía (Clowns in Rebellion), who volunteered through Lajee Center, to send them across the West Bank portion of Palestine to host day long events and acrobatics workshops for local children at our playgrounds.

Kobar | كوبر

2017

This playground was funded by PfP-UK, our sister organization in the United Kingdom.  Kobar is a Palestinian village in the Ramallah and al-Bireh Governorate. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), the total population of Kobar reached over 4,000 in 2015, 60% of whom are under the age of 15 years.  There are four public schools in the village, but no playgrounds or recreational facilities until this one was built.

 

Aida 2 | مخيم عايده

2014

After creating a park space on the property of Lajee Center in the Aida Refugee Camp, we installed this playground, which turned out to be one of two.

Nablus 2 | نابلس

2014

This playground is located in Nablus, as part of the campus of Tomorrow’s Youth Orgnization (TYO), where hundreds of Palestinian children engage in daily educational and creative programming.  Approximately 800 children use this playground.

Play Therapy

2015

Play Therapy was an ambitious project that was launched in Gaza after Israel’s military assault 2014, which left thousands more traumatized children.  The project was funded in part through a generous grant from the Tingari-Silverton Foundation.  While we were able to complete the site and hold some workshops, the project was unsustainable for various reasons, in part due to the severe siege of Gaza.

Silwan | سلوان

2010

This is a park located in Wadi Hilweh, in the Silwan neighborhood of East Jerusalem.

The community of Wadi Hilwah, Silwan has been working to design and construct a sports/playing field and a playground on two of the last remaining parcels of open land their their village. In cooperation with MECA (Middle East Children’s Alliance and and the Madaa Center, Playgrounds for Palestine is proud to be a part of the effort to put the community’s plan in motion to establish the first playing space in this town of over 55,000 residents.

The sports field is used by teams and individuals of all ages. According to the community, these play and sports fields will offer an opportunity for healing and provide a space to procure the vast benefits of play experiences for the children of Silwan who suffer from ongoing psychological trauma, due to the constant threats and harassment from ultra- nationalist Israeli settlers who are trying to take over the neighborhoods of Silwan.

UPDATE: Unfortunately, in 2012, the Israeli military came in and demolished this playground.  It was the only space available for recreation for hundreds of children. Here is a video of the demolition.

Qalqilya, Skate Park | قلقيلية‎

2016-2018

PfP partnered with SkateQilya to construct a skate ramp, buy skate equipment, and conduct ongoing workshops with children to promote skateboarding in Palestine among girls and boys of all ages.  The results have been spectacular!

Jenin, Freedom Theatre | جنين

2016-2018

We are proud to sponsor The Freedom Theatre Child Center in Jenin.  In addition to rehabilitation of the space, PfP made a three-year, renewable commitment to sponsor an annual program that brings together children ranging in age from 4 to 12 in creative expression that focuses on preservation of the environment.  The group conducts team building exercises aimed at overcoming age and gender barriers among children, allowing them to experience the difference of being together rather than apart.

 

Aida 3 | مخيم عايده

2016

 

This is the second playground (in addition to the park itself) we built at the Lajee Center inside the Aida Refugee Camp in the Bethlehem District, Palestine.  Lajee Center’s work with children so inspired us that we decided to partner with them permanently to oversee our installations in other locations.  In particular, Salah Ajarma’s passion and dedication to Palestine’s children has made this center a refugee for thousands of children who come to the center daily, where they spend their summers and after school hours.

Qortuba | الْخَلِيل

2016

This playground is built on the property of an elementary school in one of the most threatened Palestinian cities.  Qortuba is part of the Hebron District, where settler violence and harassment are particularly extreme.  This playground is a rare point of color and play for the children it serves.

Ramallah – Mashjar Juthour | مشجَر جذور

2014-2016

PfP partnered with Mashjar Juthour to build an amphitheater and we continue to work with this excellent organization on some of their projects.  Mashjar Juthor is a “natural reserve that provides much needed space for cultivating the trees of Palestine while also reminding local communities of their very basic and necessary relationship to nature”. We sponsored some of their programs that strives to connect communities and youth with the importance of cultural roots and preserving the land through fun activities such as storytelling, arts and environmental education.

Qibya | قبية‎

2015

This playground was funded in part by the Kuran Family in New Jersey.  It is located on the grounds of the local municipality and serves several thousand children.  Qibya has particular significance in Palestinian history, as this village is the site of massacre of 70 civilians in which an Israeli military unit under the command of Ariel Sharon locked residents in their homes before blowing up their houses on October 14, 1953. It was a horrific act that shocked the world to the point that the UN Security Council immediately passed Resolution 101, specifically condemning the attack on Qibya.

Silwad | سلواد‎

2009

Silwad, located north of Ramallah, is home to approximately 8,000 Palestinians. Most of its population relies on farming and agriculture to support their families and its climate makes it suitable for growing its famous olive and fig trees.

Playgrounds for Palestine installed this playground in collaboration with Maysoon’s Kids, a children’s center in Silwad. This particular playground is accessible to physically challenged children to ensure that all kids have the right to play. Maysoon’s Kids was able to find an exceptional local builder to put together this playground for differently-abled children so all children would have the right to play. This accessibly playground was built outside the Silwad Disabled Center and was built in the city of Silwad because the people in the city excelled in teaching and challenging its student population.

Nahr el Bared | نهر البارد

2009

The Nahr el Bared Camp (NBC) was established in December 1949 by the League of Red Cross Societies in order to accommodate the Palestinian refugees suffering from the difficult winter conditions in the Beqa’a valley and the suburbs of Tripoli. About 31,000 displaced Palestinians and their families live in and around this camp, located 16km from the city of Tripoli and occupying an area of about 20 km2. This refugee camp was named after the river that runs south of the camp.

On May 20, 2006, fierce clashes erupted between armed members of the radical group Fatah Al Islam (FAI) and the Lebanese Army in Tripoli (in northern Lebanon). These clashes quickly spread to the nearby Palestinian refugee camp of Nahr el Bared (NBC), resulting in over 300 deaths. The camp was decimated and became uninhabitable. The human, economic and political consequences of this conflict have been very severe on the Nahr el Bared Camp.

The “new” Nahr el Bared camp was set up to accommodate the refugees of the refugee camp and is in great need of help. PfP has partnered with ANERA and MECA to provide children in this impoverished camp with a safe and fun place to play. A donation to ANERA from the family of the late Mazen Afifi made it possible to establish a park where a Playgrounds for Palestine playground could finally be installed.

Sinjil | سنجل

2015

Sinjil KG is owned and run by the the Women Charitable society and is located the town of Sinjil, part of the Ramallah District in the West Bank.

The KG accommodates up to a 180 children, has 10 teachers of which one of them is the headmistress as well. The KG is made up of two separate houses situated next to each other. The first occupies the ground floor of a two store house, has 6 classes, canteen and kitchenette, an admin room and 2 toilettes located outside the building, the size of the building is 180Km2. The second part of the KG is located in a 50Km2 house made up of 2 classrooms and one toilette.

In addition to building a playground, PfP helped renovate the kindergarten, including tiling the floors, painting the walls, and updating the facilities used by this kindergarten. Work was funded by PfP and completed in coordination with The Welfare Association.

Jenin | جنين

2010

The playground built by Playgrounds for Palestine in the Jenin Refugee Camp is now complete and in use.

PfP received the following letter from the administrators of the camp upon its completion:

The Jenin refugee camp is honored to present our deepest thanks and gratitude to Playgrounds for Palestine for the financing of the children’s playground in the Jenin refugee camp, which was carried out in coordination with the ANERA foundation. It has had a great impact in bringing joy and happiness to the hearts of children in the camp whose difficult and harsh living conditions lack places of play and recreation in their area of residence. Thank you for this generous gesture.

Yours sincerely,

Adnan Al-Hindy
President,
Popular Committee for Services – Jenin refugee camp

Gaza Competition | غَزَّة

In cooperation with ANERA and the Islamic University of Gaza (IUG), Playgrounds for Palestine held a playground design competition among architecture students. In addition to awarding a monetary gift, PfP gave the creators of the top six designs the opportunity to oversee the construction of fun, safe and aesthetically accurate playgrounds using local raw materials and local labor.

Deir Ammar | دير عمار

In memory of Cynthia Laitman

2012

This playground was built in memory of Cynthia Laitman, with love from her sister, Judith, her friends, and the Madison, WI chapter of Playgrounds for Palestine.

Deir Ammar is a rural village in the West Bank, west of Ramallah, with approximately 3,800 inhabitants (based on 2007 census). Just northwest of the village is the Deir Ammar refugee camp, where 2,303 refugees reside. Both the village and the refugee camp lack adequate facilities for water, sanitation, and recreation. Rain-fed agriculture is the main source of income for most families in this village. As other Palestinian villages, Deir Ammar suffers from lack of security, frequent Israeli military incursions, and land confiscations. Approximately 20% of village land has been confiscated thus far for Jewish-only settlement construction.

In cooperation with the Welfare Association, Playgrounds for Palestine funded and constructed a much needed playground in a kindergarten run by the Deir Ammar Athletic Club Charitable Society. The kindergarten serves up to a 100 children and has 3 teachers of which one of them is the headmistress. The KG is part of a three store building which includes the club (athletics and other youth and educational activities) as well. It was built in 2008 funded and built by the inhabitants of the village over 5 years.

Beit Fajjar | بيت فجّار

2013

Beit Fajjar is an old industrial town outside of Bethlehem. It is the home to many rock quarries and used to be a very lucrative town that imported much of its stone to be used by marble masons in Italy. With the current restriction of movement within Palestine, most of the quarries are closed and the town has lost its main source of income. The donated municipality building is also the site of a disabled school. The playground/community space is behind this building and will serve the children of the disabled school as well as the town of Beit Fajjar.

The center works with 40 children with mental and mobility disabilities ages 13-15 years. The playground was made accessible to facilitate activities for these children. It includes an amphitheater, various climbing and crawling structures, slides, make believe areas, meeting spots, and more.

Asira Shamaliya | عصيرة الشماليّة

2016

This playground was built in memory of Hedy Epstein, with funds collected by her friends in the United States. A survivor of Europe’s holocaust, Hedy spent her life fighting for justice, especially in Palestine.

Located in the Nablus District of Palestine, this playground is situated near a school and serves approximately 6,000 children from three intersecting villages.  The Municipality of Asira Shamaliya, together with Dr. Mohammed Sawalha, are the gracious keepers of this park, which also boasts a skate park.   In addition to building the playground, PfP sponsors youth workshops to encourage environmental awareness and volunteerism.

Budrus | بٌدرُس

2013

Budrus is a village of about 1500 people. They have a UN school with a single set of swings for use by the kindergarten children. The children of Budrus spend most of their days inside or playing on the streets. Funds for this playground were raised by the “Midsummer Night’s Dream” team- they held an ultimate frisbee tournament and an auction and raised over $8000 for this site.

Gaza, Shuja’iyyah, Right to Live Society | الشجاعيّه

2010

This playground was built at the Right to Life Society, which serves Palestinian children with Down Syndrome and Autism.  Established in 1993, this non-profit helps to nurture these children to live as productive members of society. Through dance classes, arts and crafts, carpentry, and more, the Society aims to help these citizens of Gaza and to raise awareness throughout the region about what their graduates can contribute to their communities.

Having a safe, outdoor place to play is extremely important for children with Autism and Downs Syndrome. This playground, like most others in Gaza was constructed locally with raw materials that came from recycled metals available inside of Gaza.

Jerusalem, Palestine | القُدس‎

2013

Jeel Al Amal is a boy’s home accommodating 100 orphan Palestinian boys. They are educated at Jeel Al Amal primary co-ed school together with 250 girls. The school is located in Bethany, East Jerusalem, Palestine.

PfP is proud to partner with them to build their only sports court on the school grounds.

Al Aqaba | العقبة

2012

Located in the Jordan Valley, Al Aqaba is an ancient Palestinian village, dating at least to the 6th century.  Designated “Area C,” it has been under complete control of the Israeli military and faces frequent demotion and confiscation orders.  Nearly every building in the village, including the mosque, women’s center, and kindergarten has faced demolition orders.  Villagers, however, continue to inhabit their ancestral lands.  This playground was built for the children of Al Aqaba.  To learn more about the this village, go here.

 

Ein el Tal, Syria | سوريا

2011

This was our first and only playground built in Syria, shortly before the outbreak of the civil war.  It is located in the UNRWA refugee camp of Ein el Tal. The refugee camp is the largest official Palestinian refugee camp in Syria. Established between 1948 and 1950, approximately 19,000 Palestinians live in and around the camp. Built from army barracks constructed by Allied Forces during WWII, the shelters of the camp are some of the most unhealthy and unsafe of Syria’s camps.

Deir el Balah | دير البلح

2004

This is our fourth playground in Gaza, which is made possible by a generous donation, which was collected by Aschehoug Publishing House, the Trade Union and Administration of Aschehoug Publishing House, and the Norwegian Union of Commercial and Office Employees.

The park is owned by Municipality of Deir Al Balah for the benefit of approximately 900 families.

Arroub | مخيّم العروب

2009

This playground was built in celebration of the marriage of Heather and Armen Vartian. In lieu of wedding gifts, the couple asked their guests to make a donation toward this playground in the refugee camp where Heather had previously lived and worked.  Heather and Armen said: “We passionately care about the people of Palestine, having lived and worked there ourselves. We traveled to the West Bank together in 2003, and we want to use this opportunity to give something.”

The city of Arroub is home to three elementary schools and 43% of its population is under the age of 14.

Aqraba | عقربا

2015

Aqraba is a village of approximately 8200 residents, about 18 km from the ancient city of Nablus.  Traditionally, Aqraba had been a rural farming village, with many olive groves and fruit trees.  Israeli confiscation of land from families in this village, as well as ongoing expansion of settlements have led to some degree of urbanization in Aqraba, however, agriculture remains the principle source of income for its residents.  The playground we built is on public land, under the stewardship of the local municipality, and it serves approximately 5450 children.

Ramallah – AlYasmin | رام الله‎

2016

This playground is located at the Al Yasmin Society, which serves the disabled.  Support for this playground comes from the generosity of the Mallouk Family, in memory of Robert Mallouk.

Al Somoa Simya 1 | السموع‎

2007

This was the first of two playgrounds built for Abir’s Garden in Al Samoa-Simya, a village on the southern-most edge of the West Bank, south of Hebron.  The daughter of Bassam and Salwa Aramin, Abir was a 10 year old little girl who was shot and killed by an Israeli sniper.  This playground was built in her honor.

Aida 1 | مخيم عايده

2013

As our community garden and play space was coming together at Aida Refugee Camp, families were overhead saying that “It’s like a piece of paradise”, and that’s even before the construction is completed!

Designs for the site were completed in August thanks to our friends at the Lajee Center and playground architect Sam Kornhauser.  Center was established in Aida Refugee Camp in April 2000 by a group of 11 young people from the Camp who wanted to serve the community. Lajee is a community-based grassroots creative cultural centre that works with new generations of Palestinians as they continue their ongoing struggle for justice and rights for Palestine and all Palestinians.

Al Somoa-Simya 2 | السموع‎

2008

Abir’s Garden, was built in a very small village on the southern-most edge of the West Bank, south of Hebron, called Al Samoa-Simya. This is the second playground to be built in memory of a 10-year old girl named Abir Aramin, who was shot and killed by an Israeli sniper.  Abir was the daughter of peace activist, Bassam Aramin, a founding member of Combatants for Peace.  On the fourth anniversary of her death, villagers of Al Samoa-Simya for the opening ceremony of Abir’s Garden: A Safe Place to Grow.

Ein el Hilweh, Lebanon | لبنان‎ – مخيم عين الحلوة

2009

The Najdeh Association, a local NGO working with Palestinian children in refugee camps, established a preschool in Ein El-Helweh Refugee Camp in Saida, which serves a community of Palestinian refugees. The preschool serves around 90 children, ages 3 to 5, in the mornings Sundays through Thursdays and hosts youth activities on Fridays and Saturdays for 90 to 100 kids, ages 7 to 14. They host youth activities organized by ARCPA/al-Jana, another NGO working in the refugee camps.

This playground was built in partnership with the Middle East Children’s Alliance and American Near East Refugee Aid.

Bethlehem 2 | بيت لحم

2008

Playgrounds for Palestine’s second playground in Bethlehem went through a lot of obstacles to finally reach completion on the grounds of Dar Annadwa. This playground was dedicated to the memory of Hilda Barakat, purchased by her family and loved ones, and built with the help of Rev. Nathan Dannison, who also raised funds for PfP and went to Palestine to participate in construction.

Beit Anan | بيت عنان

2008

There are approximately 1300 children between the ages of three and twelve in the village of Beit Anan. The land where the playground was built is central and easily accessible for all local children, especially since this village has very few car owners.

Nablus 1 | نابلس

2005

Playgrounds for Palestine’s Nablus playground is located in the King Faisal park, a public park that is part of the Nablus Happiness Childhood Center, which serves thousands of children in this Biblical Palestinian city, home to over 126,000 residents, several institutions of higher learning, and the famous Palestinian pastry, Knafe, as well as Palestinian olive oil soap.

 

Hebron | الْخَلِيل

2005

This playground is three-stories high, with numerous activity panels, and structures for climbing, crawling, sliding and imaginative play for a wide range of ages. It is located less than half a mile from the historic Ibrahimi Mosque in the Old City of El Khalil (Hebron). Because children in this area are particularly exposed to settler and occupation violence, the playground here is built strategically between buildings so that the children are better protected when playing.

Due to military restrictions and bad weather, installation was not able to be completed before the Playgrounds for Palestine’s representative left.

UPDATE: Sadly, this playground was destroyed.

Rafah | رفح‎

2004

Children in this battered refugee town had been hit especially hard by the occupation. The playground PfP built here has been essential in bringing some form of normalcy for the children of Rafah. The story behind the building of this playground is a testament to the endurance of the Palestinian people and their abiding love and solidarity for one another.  This playground was made possible through a joint effort between PfP and Madison-Rafah Sister City Program (MSRCP), which was founded in 2003 to foster people-to-people relationships between the citizens of Madison, Wisconsin and Rafah.

Khan Younis | خان يونس

2003

This playground is one of PfP’s most used playgrounds. Located across from the Khan Younis Municipality building in a central location, this playground is used daily by thousands of children. The Khan Younis Municipality assumed responsibility for this playground, including regular maintenance and supervision. The building of this playground was particularly enjoyable since PfP had close to 300 kids helping them everyday.

Bethlehem 1 | بيت لحم

2002

Playgrounds for Palestine’s first playground was acquired from the American Playground Corporation and was shipped to Bethlehem after nearly one full year of preparations. It finally arrived in Bethlehem in November 2002, thanks to the efforts of ANERA (American Near East Refugee Aid). Once there, however, it could not be erected in time for Christmas as planned due to Israeli closures and curfews. Despite this, two affiliates of Playgrounds for Palestine, Susan Abulhawa and Mark Miller, traveled to Bethlehem to oversee its installation, which was finally completed mid-January.  A group of dedicated local contractors and laborers worked day and night to get as much done during the few hours they were free from a forbidding curfew. Finally, two weeks later, PfP’s first playground was erected.

This playground now stands at Dar Al Kalima School in the shadow of the famous Millennium Stage. Thanks to the support of Dr. Reverent Mitri Raheb, the playground is available to all the local children of Bethlehem.

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Play, while it cannot change the external realities of children’s lives, can be a vehicle for children to explore and enjoy their differences and similarities and to create, even for a brief time, a more just world where everyone is an equal and valued participant.