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Over 10 UK charities to run in Glasgow for Gaza support

Over 10 UK charities to run in Glasgow for Gaza support

Glasgow Times6 days ago
Led by The Well Foundation, the initiative will feature Islamic Relief, World Care Foundation, Muslim Charity, Sadco Foundation, Unity, SPMA, HIYA, Wheels to Heels, Sarwar Foundation, Mearns Cycle Group, and Glasgow Ansar.
Boss Pizza and the Asian Business Chamber are the official sponsors of the event, with Oceanic Media as the official media partner.
Read more:
Glasgow bus services axed after 'stone lobbed' at bus in city centre
A spokesperson for The Well Foundation said: "This isn't just about running.
"It's about solidarity, raising awareness, and showing Gaza that people thousands of miles away care deeply and are ready to act."
The participants will set off at 8am on Sunday, October 5, and registration costs £39 - although financial assistance will be available for those unable to pay.
Participants are encouraged to set their estimated finish time to 1 hour and 1 minute so they can start as a united group.
The campaign will feature a single JustGiving page, www.justgiving.com/page/wfs10k, where participants can donate.
There will also be walking groups and a dedicated 'sisters' group for those unable to run but still want to participate.
A representative from Unity said: "The power of collective action can't be overstated.
"This campaign isn't about one organisation or one individual.
"It's about humanity, unity, and compassion in action."
The Great Scottish Run is one of Scotland's most iconic road races, attracting thousands of runners from around the country every year.
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Over 10 UK charities to run in Glasgow for Gaza support
Over 10 UK charities to run in Glasgow for Gaza support

Glasgow Times

time6 days ago

  • Glasgow Times

Over 10 UK charities to run in Glasgow for Gaza support

Led by The Well Foundation, the initiative will feature Islamic Relief, World Care Foundation, Muslim Charity, Sadco Foundation, Unity, SPMA, HIYA, Wheels to Heels, Sarwar Foundation, Mearns Cycle Group, and Glasgow Ansar. Boss Pizza and the Asian Business Chamber are the official sponsors of the event, with Oceanic Media as the official media partner. Read more: Glasgow bus services axed after 'stone lobbed' at bus in city centre A spokesperson for The Well Foundation said: "This isn't just about running. "It's about solidarity, raising awareness, and showing Gaza that people thousands of miles away care deeply and are ready to act." The participants will set off at 8am on Sunday, October 5, and registration costs £39 - although financial assistance will be available for those unable to pay. Participants are encouraged to set their estimated finish time to 1 hour and 1 minute so they can start as a united group. The campaign will feature a single JustGiving page, where participants can donate. There will also be walking groups and a dedicated 'sisters' group for those unable to run but still want to participate. A representative from Unity said: "The power of collective action can't be overstated. "This campaign isn't about one organisation or one individual. "It's about humanity, unity, and compassion in action." The Great Scottish Run is one of Scotland's most iconic road races, attracting thousands of runners from around the country every year.

Gaza baby triplets survive nightmare birth in warzone as starvation rages
Gaza baby triplets survive nightmare birth in warzone as starvation rages

Daily Mirror

time25-07-2025

  • Daily Mirror

Gaza baby triplets survive nightmare birth in warzone as starvation rages

WARNING: DISTRESSING CONTENT Gaza's latest baby triplets are seen as miracles amid the ongoing war - born into a world of mayhem and death after their brave mother dodged explosions to give birth Born in the world's most dangerous of birthplaces these tiny miracle warzone triplets offer a glimmer of hope amid the horrors of the Gaza war. Children die every day in the conflict-battered Strip but little girls Israa, Ayla and Aylol, despite being born underweight, are surviving. Just beyond their shelter the death toll in the Palestinian Strip is soaring towards the bloody milestone of 60,000, with 59,587 killed - another 62 dead on Thursday. ‌ This family is still in danger and loving mother Alaa, 31, says she was terrified of losing her girls as she and her husband fought to bring them into the world. She says: 'There were nights I went to sleep crying, not knowing if my daughters would still be alive in the morning or die. Two of my cousins had miscarriages this year – one lost her baby in the eighth month. I was sure I'd be next.' ‌ ‌ Alaa and her family – her husband Louay, 36, and their two children, 7-year-old Alma and 2-year-old Ahmed – have been displaced forcibly three times by the relentless Israeli bombing and military orders. Their neighbour's house was bombed, so Alaa, heavily pregnant with her girls and her family fled. She said: 'We ran in silence. I held my stomach with both hands and prayed my babies wouldn't slip away while I escaped death.' Alaa and her family found shelter in an overcrowded school building. ‌ Inside, there was hardly any food, no clean water and no medical care and she became increasingly malnourished, her hemoglobin plummeting to dangerously low levels. Despite the horrors, an Islamic Relief project to provide pregnant women with maternal care delivered the triplet girls – all born underweight but alive. Now their mother says: 'They are my miracle. My proof that even in war, life insists on being born.' During one of the checkups, doctors told Alaa she needed an emergency caesarean section. Alaa and her family couldn't afford it so Islamic Relief covered the costs, as well as the cost of the emergency blood transfusions. ‌ She says, 'I lost a lot of blood. I could feel myself fading. But I heard a cry from one of my daughters. That cry brought me back. Without this project I wouldn't be here, and neither would they. This wasn't just a medical intervention, it was a rescue mission for four lives.' The triplets, born in April were premature and underweight at 3.9lbs. They are now relatively healthy but remain at risk from the dangers that face all babies and children in Gaza. ‌ Alaa has received regular check-ups, blood tests, vitamins and ultrasound scans at Al Awda hospital, where Islamic Relief has previously provided vital equipment such as incubators that are still being used now. New incubators are among the many medical supplies that are now effectively banned under the Israeli blockade – as well as other vital maternal care equipment such as ultrasound devices and oxygen pumps, and fuel to keep hospital services running. Most pregnant women in Gaza are now unable to get any pre- or post-natal checks. Medics at hospitals like Al Awda are risking their lives to keep services going. The Israeli onslaught has killed more than 1500 health workers and forced two thirds of primary healthcare centres and half of all hospitals to completely shut down. ‌ The rest struggle to keep even partial services functioning. Al Awda has been besieged and hit by Israeli bombs dozens of times, injuring staff and patients and destroying medical supplies and storage facilities. Alaa says that despite the extreme challenges she was treated with care and dignity. She says: 'The medics didn't just ask about my babies, they cared about me. They reminded me that my life matters too.' Child malnutrition is rocketing, with Israel accused of allowing the starvation, blocking humanitarian aid. ‌ Meat, fruit, eggs and dairy products are near-impossible to find, while the scarcity of vegetables means that prices are up to 15 times more expensive than before the crisis, at a time when few people have jobs or access to cash. Israeli attacks have destroyed Gaza's ability to feed itself, with most agricultural land, greenhouses and fishing boats destroyed and most cattle killed. This has left all civilians in Gaza reliant on humanitarian aid, but hardly any has been allowed to enter since 2 March. A recent survey of 43 aid agencies in Gaza found that 95% have been forced to reduce or suspend activities due to the total closure and the relentless indiscriminate bombing that has killed thousands and targeted hospitals and shelters. ‌ The Israeli assault on Hamas followed the appalling slaughter of almost 1,200 when Hamas broke out of the Palestinian Strip, along with Islamic Jihad gunmen and went on a killing spree in southern Israel October 7 2023. During the atrocity that shocked the world they kidnapped 251 people, at least 51 of them still held in the Strip although only 20 are believed still to be alive. Now Israel and Hamas are negotiating a shaky 60 day ceasefire, although it is thought that proposal is not imminently going to be settled. And Israel is under increasing pressure to stop the war as Gaza is under threat of famine with more than 100 people now dead from starvation, according to reports. Hundreds of thousands of families are now forced into just 12% of Gaza's territory, with children at greatest risk as diseases spread amid the overcrowding. Israel's assault and blockade have turned Gaza into the worst place in the world to give birth. Dozens of babies and infants have starved to death. Pregnant women are now too malnourished to stand, and even doctors are facing starvation. The Israeli blockade has cut off essential supplies, forcing pregnant women to undergo operations without anaesthetics. Nurses have to squeeze three or four babies into a single incubator. Doctors also report a huge increase in miscarriages. As many as 28 children are now dying every day they claim.

Holocaust survivor who was burned in the Colorado terror attack breaks her silence
Holocaust survivor who was burned in the Colorado terror attack breaks her silence

Daily Mail​

time04-06-2025

  • Daily Mail​

Holocaust survivor who was burned in the Colorado terror attack breaks her silence

An 88-year-old Holocaust survivor who was burned in the shocking terror attack in Boulder, Colorado broke her silence with a message of unity. Barbara Steinmetz spoke out to condemn the attack on Sunday, where at least 12 people were injured when suspect Mohamed Soliman allegedly threw Molotov cocktails at a pro-Israel protest, but said the community would recover. 'We are better than this,' she told NBC News. The 88-year-old said she and other members of the Run for their Lives event were 'peacefully' demonstrating when the attack unfolded. 'It's about what the hell is going on in our country,' Steinmetz continued. 'What the hell is going on?' Steinmetz's family fled Italy and Hungary to escape the Nazis decades ago, but said the attack on Sunday had 'nothing to do with the Holocaust, it has to do with a human being that wants to burn other people.' The outlet said Steinmetz appeared to still be rattled by the shock attack, but said she just wanted 'people to be nice and decent to each other, kind, respectful, encompassing.' 'We're Americans,' she said. 'We are better than this. That's what I want them to know. That they be kind and decent human beings.' Police said Soliman screamed 'Free Palestine' as he threw the Molotov cocktails at the protestors, and he is now facing 16 counts of attempted murder as well as federal hate crime charges. Rabbi Marc Soloway, the leader of Congregation Bonai Shalom in Boulder, where Steinmetz is a member, said the elderly woman suffered minor burns but is 'going to be okay.' Soloway added that although Steinmetz will recover, he wondered how someone who survived the Holocaust would process the anti-Israel attack. 'Can you imagine the trauma that that reactivates?' the rabbi said. 'It's just horrendous.' Steinmetz, an active and visible member of Boulder's Jewish community since she and her late husband moved from Michigan 20 years ago, was born in 1936 in her parents' native Hungary. Shortly after her birth, they returned to Italy, where they'd run an island hotel since the 1920s – but as Steinmetz progressed through her toddler years, it was becoming more and more dangerous for Jews in Europe. Steinmetz fled with her parents and sister in 1940 to Hungary, but her father saw the dangers there, too, and quickly planned to get out of the country. 'My dad encouraged the rest of my family to leave,' Steinmetz told CU Boulder students at a 2019 talk. 'They were scared — they simply couldn't envision what was to come…or that their friends [and] customers would turn on them.' As their family and Jews suffered increasingly under Hitler's regime, her 'cousin stole a Nazi uniform and brought food into the ghetto and caused plenty of mischief to the Nazis,' Steinmetz wrote in 2014 in a Holocaust film review. Her father eventually fled with his wife and children to France, then Portugal, then the Dominican Republic, stopping at Ellis Island on the way just for processing. The island nation's dictator, Rafael Trujillo, had agreed to accept Jewish refugees, and a Jewish resettlement organization established a community at Sosua. 'Sosua was an abandoned banana plantation … and these bedraggled refugees, doctors and lawyers and professors, came to this piece of land where there was one building we all slept,' Steinmetz said in an interview posted to Instagram in April. 'And there was water, and the women did the cooking, and the men tried to do the agriculture.' After four years of attending a Dominican Catholic school, telling no one she was Jewish or European, Steinmetz and her family were granted visas to the US. She and her sister immediately began attending Jewish summer camps, where they 'knew no one and didn't speak any English,' Boulder Jewish News reported five years ago, as Boulder JCC prepared to honor Steinmetz at its annual gala. The camps 'offered the opportunity to excel in sports and exposed them to what it means to be a Jew,' it continued. The family eventually settled in Detroit, where her mother ran the lunchroom at the Jewish Community Center (JCC), which became Steinmetz's 'home in America,' the outlet reported. 'Barb met and married Howard while still a teenager and college student. They moved to Saginaw, Michigan when she was a young mom,' it continued. 'They built a life there around Jewish community.' The Steinmetz had three daughters – Ivy, Julie and Monica – and lived in Saginaw for decades before moving to Boulder two decades ago. They left Michigan after filing suit against Dow Chemical over alleged dioxin poisoning on their property. Both Ivy and Howard Steinmetz died of cancer, ten months apart, in 2011. Steinmetz has been a frequent featured speaker in Colorado, sharing her experience as a Holocaust survivor for students and local groups as recently as March. She has been a vocal Jewish presence in Boulder for decades. Steinmetz's son-in-law, Bruce Shaffer, is a co-lead of Run for Their Lives, which orchestrated the event attacked on Sunday. The Shaffers split their time between Boulder and Jerusalem. Steinmetz had previously expressed fears about anti-Semitism and hate finding her in Boulder, writing to city authorities in 2016 to oppose the establishment of Nablus, in Palestine, as a sister city – which ultimately went ahead. 'I AM NEAR 80 YEARS I ONCE AGAIN HAVE TO DEAL WITH ANTI - JEWISH SENTIMENT IN MY OWN TOWN?' she wrote to Boulder's council in a letter publicly available online. 'HAVE I NOT COME TO AMERICA WHERE I CAN FIND DON'T TAKE THAT AWAY FROM ME AND MY COMMUNITY OF VERY ACTIVE CIVIC CITIZENS.'

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