Instilling Hope in Gaza: The Legacy of Dr. Eyad el Sarraj
The Gaza Mental Health
Foundation presents:
A Memorial Tribute
Tuesday, October 28, 2014 at 7
PM
First Parish in Cambridge,
Harvard Square (corner of Mass Ave and Church Street)
Featuring:
- NOAM CHOMSKY, Professor Emeritus, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- JESS GHANNAM, Clinical Professor of Psychiatry and Global Health Sciences at the University of California at San Francisco
- SARA ROY, Senior Research Scholar, Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Harvard University
- NANCY MURRAY, Co-founder, Gaza Mental Health Foundation , Gaza Mental Health Foundation
- BILL SLAUGHTER, President, Gaza Mental Health Foundation
Dr. Eyad el Sarraj (1943-2013) was the first psychiatrist in the Gaza Strip
and a renowned campaigner for peace with justice who recognized the
vital connection between mental health and human rights. The founder in 1990 of
the Gaza Community Mental Health Programme (GCMHP), he received the first human
rights award given by the US Physicians for Human Rights, among many other
international honors. His courage, decency, independence of mind, and vision of
a better world made him a beacon of moral conscience and hope for those Israelis
seeking peace with Palestinians and Palestinians struggling with both
the occupation and their own ruinous political divisions.
Nearly a year after his death on December 17, 2013, “Instilling Hope in
Gaza” will examine the conditions in the Gaza Strip that shaped his life and
work, how the Gaza Community Mental Health Programme is today forging ahead with
his work, and what more can be done to build on his legacy in the years
ahead.
Suggested donation at the door: $10 - or more! Funds will support the work
of the Gaza Community Mental Health Programme.
Host: The Middle East Education Group at First Parish
Cambridge. Co-sponsors: American Friends Service Committee -
New England Region, Boston Coalition for Palestinian Rights, Grassroots
International, Harvard School of Public Health, Jewish Voice for Peace - Boston,
Physicians for Human Rights, United for Justice with Peace.
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