[ Our other work - in Albania and
in Ukraine (Chernobyl) ]
In April 1999, a small group of
people had been watching all the horrific news reports from Kosova
for as long as they could bear. They had conversation which ran: "We've
got to do something!" - and that sentiment exploded
into action.
We made lots of contacts with
existing aid organisations very quickly, as we tried to avoid
re-inventing the wheel, but were determined to be driven and
directed by real, local people and to avoid all the waste and
red tape which scares people about charities.
We had a fantastic response. Experienced
aid workers were quick to give advice, and we have been able
to see the realities, on the ground, of how different sized organisations
are all essential, complementary parts of the picture.
We make real friendships between the UK and foreign communities,
and we are certain our aid goes where it is intended. More importantly,
the relationships we have forged bring hope and great prospects
for development.
Other charities running aid convoys
have shared their stories (and we've sent vehicles with them)
and above all, the people of Britain have amazed us with their
generosity and support.
None of us have ever worked on
a project which has so captured everybody's imagination.
Our first convoy delivered
it's aid to Kosovan refugees in Albania in April 1999.
We were ecstatic to be able to make the delivery and positively impact on people's lives. Since then we've
delivered to refugee camps and villages in Macedonia, and volunteers
have spent several weeks in Kosova itself, meeting with (and
delivering aid with) families, Trades Unions, the students of
Prishtine University, doctors and nurses at Gjlane hospital,
and politicians from the provisional Kosovan government. We have
been stunned by the generosity of the welcome we have received
- as real people travelling with eyes and minds open. We are
also indebted to the people of the International Medical Corps
in Mitrovice, who have been able to distribute our aid after
our departure.
Given the ethnic divisions, it
is important to note that we do not only deliver aid to Albanian
communities. With no hesitation, where there are still Serbian
people living [in Kosovo] - who have suffered from the war as
much as anyone else - we work with them too, of course. For example
in the enclave in Gjlane, and in the outlying villages in the
mountains in the north. Everybody has a political opinion, but
that is never what our work is about. Incidentally, we use the
spelling, "Kosova" simply because the vast majority
of the population now do so. The spelling, "Kosovo" is
used by the Serb peoples and the UN, whilst the status of the
region remains a point of disagreement.
What's next?
There
is so much still to be done. We intend to keep on working to
help the people of the region, paying particular attention to
Macedonia and Albania, where they have received less concentrated
international support than Kosova itself. We must work with them
after the fighting to help them rebuild their lives. Make no
mistake - over ten years of apartheid and systematic rape and
murder have been perpetrated against these people. Our volunteers
have heard chilling stories, and seen the evidence in grim detail.
In many villages every home was burnt.
Every town has hundreds of orphans. Children of rape victims
require special attention and care. Schools and
Universities are re-stocking libraries for the first time in
ten years.
K-FOR and NATO are not there to
prosecute war criminals, and we have met civilians too scared
to assist the War Crimes Tribunal in The Hague. Our volunteers
- ordinary people from the UK - have found bodies which nobody
is equipped to bury. We are in for a long haul of dealing with
traumatised civilians.
Please help
us to deliver food, clothes, toys, tools, and to buy building
materials and assist in rebuilding and recreating jobs.
How? Try
this: whatever you do for fun - keep doing it, but get it sponsored!
It's the easiest way to make a huge contribution!
We've had supermarket sweeps;
pub crawls with 10p on the pint, thanks to a string of local
pubs; a cake sale & raffle. In the summer of 2001 we set
in place a plan for a sponsored walk of the length of Britain!
Sports events are planned too. Bands have played benefit nights;
there was even a play at the Edinburgh Festival which donated
one night's takings. And we are very grateful for a very generous
donation from a school in Hong Kong, which used some of our photographs
to explain to it's pupils what was going on.
Get in touch and help us to work
directly with real people like you. |