Veiled women make Santa dolls in Gaza Strip - GulfToday

Veiled women make Santa dolls in Gaza Strip

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A Palestinian artisan sews a Christmas toy at Zeina Association and Cooperative for Handicraft.

The scene on Tuesday morning in the northern Gaza Strip could at first look incongruous -- a group of women in black niqab veils sewing Santa Claus dolls for Christmas.

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They work at a small factory in the Palestinian enclave that is providing employment to women, many of whom are forbidden from leaving their village.

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Artisans work on toys at Zeina Association and Cooperative for Handicraft in Beit Hanun in the northern Gaza Strip.

Around 20 young women are employed at the factory, which is a project of the Zeina Cooperative in the village of Umm al-Nasser, close to Beit Hanoun in northern Gaza.

They have been given three years of vocational training, learning to make gifts for a series of holidays -- including the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and Christmas, supervisor Asma Abu Qaida told AFP.

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Many of the customers are foreign delegates working in international organisations in the Gaza Strip.

This festive season they produced a range of goods, including Santa models and wooden Christmas trees.

Seven of the women have been taught carpentry.

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This festive season they produced a range of goods, including Santa models and wooden Christmas trees.

The gifts are wrapped and put in gift boxes marked "Merry Christmas" in Arabic and English.

"We make Christmas gifts with love and precision," Abu Qaida said.

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The gifts are wrapped and put in gift boxes marked "Merry Christmas" in Arabic and English.

Many of the customers are foreign delegates working in international organisations in the Gaza Strip, she said.

The 6,000-person village is in a conservative part of Gaza, which has been controlled by the Islamist movement Hamas since 2007 and has been under an Israeli blockade for more than a decade.

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Around 20 young women are employed at the factory.

Many of the women wear the niqab, a type of veil that leaves only the eyes visible.

The programme is an opportunity to work and leave the house, with cultural norms prohibiting them from leaving their village except in emergencies, said Hanin Rizk al-Sammak, Zeina's executive director.

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A Palestinian artisan puts the final touches on a Christmas toy.

"This gift-making project gives them an opportunity to showcase their abilities."

Agence France-Presse

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