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Disabled Gaza couple make dolls to give their children 'decent life'

By AFP - Aug 04,2020 - Last updated at Aug 04,2020

Nihad Jarboa, 37, and his wife Zeinab, 35, Palestinians living with a physical handicap since their childhood, sit on their wheelchairs as the stitch cartoon-inspired costumes at their home in the Rafah refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip, on July 19 (AFP photo)

 

RAFAH, Palestinian Territories — With skilled fingers, disabled Gazan couple Nihad and Zeinab Jarboa have supported themselves by sewing finely detailed dolls and costumes, but coronavirus has hurt their already meagre income.

Making a living is a challenge for all residents of the Israeli-blockaded Palestinian territory, which is ruled by the Islamist movement Hamas and where the poverty rate exceeds 50 per cent.

But the Jarboas face added adversity.

Nihad, 37, has been physically disabled since childhood while Zeinab, 35, had both feet amputated after contracting a rare disease while giving birth to her second child.

Both use wheelchairs, further limiting their work options in the Gaza Strip, where the unemployment rate is above 50 per cent, according to official statistics.

The Jarboas have perfected a craft of making dolls and costumes inspired by cartoon characters.

They generate a modest income by selling the dolls and by sending costumed performers to nurseries and schools.

Before the pandemic, “we sold around 20 to 30 dolls a month at 10 shekels [$2.90 dollars] a piece”, Nihad told AFP.

They also charged about 20 shekels (around $6) each to send actors to perform at events.

“But everything stopped with the pandemic,” he said.

Access to Gaza was already tightly controlled by Israel and Egypt before the virus, which has left 78 confirmed infections and one dead in Gaza.

Hamas has imposed lockdown restrictions since March, including bans on gatherings and the closure of schools and mosques.

 

Won’t ‘give up’ 

 

Maher Al Tabaa, an economist at Gaza’s chamber of commerce, said COVID-19 has further weakened Gaza’s fragile economy.

“Unemployment and poverty rates are expected to increase,” Tabaa told AFP, adding that 80 per cent of the population was already dependent on food aid.

Even though some restrictions have been lifted, the Jarboas said they have only received two requests for shows while doll sales are down 75 per cent.

“We won’t give up, even if it’s hard,” said Zeinab as she prepared tea on a stove in their one-bedroom apartment in Rafah refugee camp of southern Gaza.

“Things are harder with coronavirus [but] I am strong enough,” she said, her hair covered with a pink scarf.

“I want to raise my children so they have a decent life.”

Like nearly 50 per cent of Gaza residents, the Jarboas receive food aid from the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA).

Over 700,000 Palestinians fled or were expelled from their land at Israel’s creation in 1948. Survivors and descendants are considered refugees by the UN.

But UNRWA’s support is “not enough to buy food”, said Zeinab as she sewed a brightly coloured costume inspired by Donald Duck.

 

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