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Message by UNRWA Commissioner-General
Karen Koning AbuZayd
Service to Palestine refugees:
Honesty, courage and other lessons
Valley Forge Military Academy Chapel; 21
October, 2007 |
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Thank you, President McGeorge for your very kind
introduction. And thank you for inviting me to this beautiful campus for
a moment of reflection.
I come to you from Gaza where I head the United
Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East.
While the United Nations performs many different roles across the globe
(political, economic, humanitarian, developmental, standard setting),
there is a common thread running though all these missions, and that is
to promote world peace and understanding and to make the world a more
just, secure and healthier place. My agency’s particular task is to care
for those who fled from conflict in Palestine fifty-nine years ago.
Since then, Palestine refugees have lived as guests in many other
countries, yearning for a solution to their condition of exile. And
while they wait, we help them to lead their lives as normally and as
independently as possible.
I hope that some of you have read the documents my
office sent some weeks ago to your library. You will know that my
agency, which goes by the unpronounceable acronym of "UNRWA", works in
Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and the occupied Palestinian territory (more
commonly known as the West Bank and the Gaza Strip). We run schools for
Palestine refugee children, many of whom are your age and have the same
dreams and hopes as you do. We take care of the health needs of refugees
and give special attention to the poorest and most vulnerable among
them. We build and help to repair refugee homes, and we offer credit and
financial assistance to refugees with small businesses.
To help us reflect on the themes of honesty and
courage this morning, I would like to draw from some of the lessons that
my staff and I have learned over the years. Most of these are learned in
hard times, times that are out of the ordinary, times of stress, sorrow,
hardship and war. Very often, it is from such times that the richest
gems of life’s lessons are uncovered. These lessons have given direction
and strength to our mission to serve Palestine refugees and to seek
their well-being at all times. I trust that you will find in them a
measure of motivation and encouragement for your personal development
here at Valley Forge and in your future endeavors.
One of the first lessons those of us in the
humanitarian field learn is the deep fulfillment that comes from service
to others. After 26 years of working with refugees, I harbour no doubt
that to render support to those in crisis or need is a rewarding path to
pursue. Why is this so? The adjective "humanitarian" says it all. To be
sensitive to human suffering and to be motivated to serve others is to
realize the essence of what we mean by "humanitarian". This kind of
service resonates with the universally recognized advice to do unto
others as you would have others do unto you. And it is a sure way to
give expression to the tenets of love and compassion that is shared by
all faiths.
Humanitarian service is at its best and the rewards
of service to others are brightest when we keep in view the
individuality of those "others". The lesson here is one that goes to the
very heart of rights and freedoms on which this country was founded.
UNRWA serves a population of some 4.4 million Palestine refugees.
Elsewhere in the world, there are another nine million refugees and over
23 million persons displaced inside their own countries. The true
challenge of humanitarian work is to see the names and faces behind
these staggering numbers. We must continually recognize the
individuality of those we serve, for it is from that individuality that
human dignity and entitlements to rights and freedoms flow.
Acknowledging this human distinctiveness guides us towards the
affirmation of certain important truths. It reminds us that the people
we serve are women, men and children in their own right and therefore
worthy of our respect; and that far from being a favour to be
patronizingly given, true service to humanity is a privilege.
Most importantly, recognizing the humanity of the
people we serve goes hand-in-hand with acknowledging the sanctity of
every human life. This is the essence and ultimate lesson of
humanitarian work – a lesson that reverberates through every dimension
of human endeavor. The time will soon come when you graduate and go
forward to find your place in the current of life. Many of you will
become leaders in your chosen fields.
You will find that your lives are driven by powerful
and competing forces. You will see that contests for power, influence,
wealth, territory and other desires dominate the attention of
individuals as well as nations. You will observe that when in the
pursuit of our desires we override considerations of humanity or
disregard the sanctity of human life, a high price in human suffering is
not the only consequence. We also pay a price in frustration of our
plans and failure to reach our goals. Compassion and humanity are
central to who we are and should be a part of everything we do. These
attributes must govern our material pursuits and constrain our exercise
of power wherever we find ourselves in life, if our efforts – as
individuals and as nations - are to work to the greater good.
I wish to share with you one more lesson – perhaps
the most obvious one - from the experience of Palestine refugees. This
is the lesson of perseverance. I mentioned earlier that for fifty-nine
years, Palestine refugees have been waiting for the creation of a state
they can call their own and to which they can return. I think we have
something to learn from their determination never to give up their dream
in spite of all the hardships, obstacles and frustrations they have
experienced over the years. The strength of Palestinian resolve is a
reminder to us all that when things do not go according to plan, when
hopes and prayers seem to go unfulfilled and unanswered, these are the
times when we must remain steadfast, holding on to our aspirations and
never allowing our faith to flag.
The themes of honesty and courage run through the
lessons I have shared with you this morning. Honesty means knowing
yourself and being true to your desires. If at some point in your life,
you feel a call to serve others, be true to yourself and heed that call.
I believe you will experience in that service deep satisfaction.
It takes courage to recognize the inherent frailty of
human existence; to understand that we share this frailty with all of
humankind; and to draw humility of service from that understanding. It
also takes courage to place considerations of humanity above all else.
Remember what the scripture said: "No one can be the slave of two
masters; he will hate one and love the other; he will be loyal to one
and despise the other". Life confronts us with hard choices. Whichever
path you choose to take, I pray that you will have the courage and
honesty to allow compassion and humanity to guide you along the way.
May God bless you all.
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