Sharing love with families from Gaza

The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) in Victoria hosted 86 families of recent arrivals from Gaza at a Family Fun Day on July 14.

According to ADRA Victoria director Rebecca Auriant, the aim of the day was to “share love through food, games, music and social interaction”.

Ms Auriant tells the story of the connection with the community from Gaza through Cathy Bassal, a Muslim woman who volunteered at the ADRA Carrum Downs Samoan Centre. “Sadly, she passed away in 2022 but her whole family has been volunteering with ADRA since,” she says. “It was her daughters who introduced us to the families from Gaza, so we could provide support to them.”

ADRA volunteers and members of local Adventist churches have been supporting the families with food, furniture, clothing and bedding. “The Family Fun Day was a highlight to spend time with these families,” says Ms Auriant.

Hosted at the Narre Warren campus of Heritage College—an Adventist school in south-eastern Melbourne—buses collected families from the south-eastern, western and northern suburbs of Melbourne. The Fun Day featured lunch provided by members of the Samoan Adventist community, live music, referrals to legal services, and art and games for the children, as well as household goods and food that the families could take home with them.

One of the local leaders of the Arabic community expressed her appreciation for “an enormously successful day . . . Your humanity and generosity of spirit in giving up your Sunday to make the lives of Palestinians that little bit brighter was a truly Christian thing to do.”

According to Pastor Moe Stiles, who volunteered at the Fun Day, the opportunity to spend time with the families from Gaza was mutually beneficial. “To be able to humanise issues that are often so far away is powerful!” she says. “To engage in conversation, to hear stories of their journey, to sit and share a meal is a privilege. For Australians—whether by birth or migration—to show up like this is another way to say, ‘You are welcome here.’”