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In Wake of US Funding Freeze, UNRWA Launches Global Fundraiser; Belgium Offers $25m

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JERUSALEM, Israel – Belgium pledged $25m to help counter the US administration's $65m freeze on funds to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA).

The US provides about a third of UNRWA's annual budget, along with neighboring Arab states, Arab NGOs, the European Commission, and a variety of international organizations and private foundations.

Soon after the US announcement, UNRWA launched the fundraiser for what it described as the "most dramatic financial crisis" since its inception, The Times of Israel reported.

"For a lot of Palestinian refugees, the UNRWA is the last life buoy," the Times quoted Belgian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander De Croo, who promised to disperse the funds without delay.

Along with Belgium's donation, various news agencies posted stories highlighting UNRWA'S humanitarian work.

There are two contrasting views of UNRWA. One side sees the agency as disingenuous – perpetuating the "refugee status."

The other side – with widespread media support – sees it as a legitimate humanitarian agency that provides medicine, food, shelter and education to these "refugees."

Nearly 70 years after UNRWA's establishment, descendants of less than 600,000 Arabs who left for surrounding countries have been kept in limbo, denied citizenship to keep the "Palestinian entity" alive to ultimately use against Israel demographically. Today, they number around 5 million.

During the now-defunct negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, the PA demanded a return to the pre-1967 armistice lines, dubbed "Auschwitz borders" because they're indefensible, putting Jewish and Christian holy sites under Palestinian control and flooding the truncated Jewish state with thousands of "refugees," effectively eliminating it.

UNRWA's anti-Israel slant has been well documented over the years. The agency sees itself as the representative of a disenfranchised people, living in refugee camps in the Gaza Strip and surrounding countries, who must one day return to their former family homes.

Many UNRWA critics say both the US and Israel are seeking genuine solutions for a people too long manipulated by those with little interest in their future.

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About The Author

Tzippe
Barrow

From her perch high atop the mountains surrounding Jerusalem, Tzippe Barrow tries to provide a bird’s eye view of events unfolding in her country. Tzippe’s parents were born to Russian Jewish immigrants, who fled the czar’s pogroms to make a new life in America. As a teenager, Tzippe wanted to spend a summer in Israel, but her parents, sensing the very real possibility that she might want to live there, sent her and her sister to Switzerland instead. Twenty years later, the Lord opened the door to visit the ancient homeland of her people.