Posted on 02/09/2021 11:47:13 AM PST by SJackson
As the 14-year Israeli blockade continues to inflict hardship, Palestinians in the coastal enclave are finding innovative sources of income.

Khan Younis, Gaza Strip – Some people here are finding creative new ways to earn a living in the face of high unemployment that is destroying the present and future of many.
Ibrahim Abu Odeh, 34, from the city of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, is one of them. Refusing to lose hope even as unemployment reached nearly 50 percent, he started the first quail farm in the besieged coastal enclave.
unting migrating quail on their way from the freezing climes of Europe to the warmth of the Middle East has become a vital source of income for many unemployed people in Gaza who sell them in local markets to make ends meet.
Abu Odeh was looking further ahead, however, and instead bought some quail eggs from hunters five years ago and began raising the birds in a few cages on the roof of his family’s house.

“Then the work expanded, the demand increased, so I decided to rent a small piece of land near the house to raise more quail,” he told Al Jazeera. “I gain a profit of about $500 per month, which is supporting me to feed my four children and fund my master’s degree, as I’m finally preparing my thesis in accounting from the Islamic University of Gaza.”
It was not always smooth sailing – Abu Odeh said it took time to figure out how to raise the birds and there had been some setbacks.
“When I bought the first 1,000 eggs, half of the newborn birds died. I learned from YouTube channels and websites the principles of raising the quail, so I overcame these obstacles,” he said.
“I buy the eggs from the quail hunters, then I put them in the hatchery and after 18 days the newborn quail is produced. The sale of quail is very demanded by Gaza residents for its low price and its good food value,” he said.
“When the new bird’s weight reaches 250 grams, I sell it for 2.5 Israeli shekels [80 US cents].”
Abu Odeh’s farm raises about 16,000 thousand birds a month, which are sold in the local market.
He and his 66-year-old father, Nasser, take care of the birds either in person on the farm or remotely through their mobile phones connected to surveillance cameras.
Rising unemployment Gaza has been under an Israeli blockade for 14 years, severely restricting economic activity, especially fishing which used to be a major source of income for Palestinians in Gaza.
Now, the fishing nets are being hung between wooden poles along the shore, allowing the “quail hunters” to catch the migrating birds as they arrive from Europe.
According to a report published by the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor in January 2021, the unemployment rate in Gaza Strip jumped to 56 percent after 14 years of the Israeli blockade of Gaza, compared to 40 percent in 2005.
Abu Odeh’s father, Nasser, is one of the people who had to stop fishing as a result of the Israeli siege.
“The quail-breeding project has provided me with a source of income … the Israeli sea restrictions and the bans on importing new boats and fishing material have destroyed the fishery industry,” he said.
Even though they no longer fish, the family still faces major challenges because of the blockade.
“The biggest challenge is the electricity outage for more than 16 hours per day, so I installed a solar energy system to decrease the operational cost of using fuel for lightening. In addition, the price of feed has steadily increased,” said Abu Odeh.

Vital food source Salim Nassar, a livestock trader, said the low price of quail has made it more in demand than chicken for local consumers.
“Quail is easy to raise and does not need a lot of space and its reproduction is rapid in addition to being less diseased,” said Abdul Fattah Abd Rabbo, associate professor of environmental sciences at the Islamic University of Gaza’s biology department.
He added: “Its prices are low and satisfies a large segment of the population of the Gaza Strip as they live in difficult economic conditions.”
Abd Rabbo told Al Jazeera the small birds breed in Europe in the summer then migrate in the autumn to Africa and Asia.
They are proving to be a vital food source in the enclave where more than 68 percent of households, or about 1.3 million people, are severely or moderately food insecure, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, OCHA.
By 2017, the PCBS reported that the poverty rate in Gaza had reached nearly 60 percent with severe poverty at more than 42 percent.

‘Valuable treasure’ Abdullah Jamal, 31, is a sports education graduate from Gaza City. He could not find a job after graduating so he started hunting quail.
“At the beginning of September each year, I put my nets out in the early hours on wooden pegs on the beach and wait until we catch the birds coming from Europe as they arrive tired on the seashore to rest,” said Jamal.
“The season of bird migration is a valuable treasure for us as it is a temporary source of income for the two months of September and October.”
He says he normally catches 10 to 20 birds a day and sells them quickly, with the quail fetching prices of 15-25 Israeli shekels ($4.50-$7.60) depending on their size.
“It’s a good seasonal job opportunity given the scarcity of work in the Strip, and we are eagerly awaiting the next season,” said Jamal.

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It’s a shame they destroyed the greenhouses left by the Israelis.
Chickens go a little further.
They could make peace with Israel and have full employment.
But they prefer their fourth generation of grievance.
I’ll bet the kitchen sink that they taste like chicken.
Instead of accepting any peace offer over the past 50 years the palestinians have insisted on the total destruction of Israel.
They are a leach upon society and many in the mid east have turned their backs on them and made peace with Israel.
Yo Gaza, what happened to all of those Jewish nurseries that were providing all the food? Didn’t the Israels give them to you?
Oh nevermind, Hamas wants you to starve.
Enjoy your intifada.
5.56mm
It’s a shame they destroyed the greenhouses left by the Israelis.\
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But the greenhouses made magnificent munitions factories for their favorite past time of killing evil Jews
They could make peace with Israel and have full employment.
But they prefer their fourth generation of grievance.
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They are totally dependent on Iran so they do what they are told.
Chickens go farther but aren’t anywhere near as Biblical.
I ordered European quail in a restaurant one time.
I received two small carcasses on a plate that I’d swear were sparrows from the parking lot...................
I hope they all starve to death in the dark.
L
My hat’s off to a man who is working hard and innovatively on food production to make a living for his family and to educate himself.
Feel good Muzzie fluff piece of the day. BTW, How are Fidel Castro's mini-cows working out in Cooba? 60 Minutes raved about the success.
Agreed. The farmer has come up with almost every conceivable way to make something better, cheaper, and more readily available.
But when your overlords prefer to use food as a weapon, not so much.
Quail, “nature’s popcorn”, are a very peculiar bird. Because of sky high predation, they have a very high reproductive rate, but only in safe circumstances. So typically, breeding pairs are isolated.
A group of quail is called a flock, bevy, covey, or queer. In nature this usually means that a group needs a small clearing, completely surrounded by dense bushes. But if one exists, there will soon be an abundance of quail in the area. And likewise, predators will soon arrive.
Quail are most fertile and productive between the ages of 2 and 8 months, when hens usually lay one egg daily. At 9 months and beyond, fertility declines, although the average hen may still produce 200 or so eggs annually.
Hey Pali’s, just an FYI - DO NOT complain about the quail...
*** My hat’s off to a man who is working hard and innovatively on food production to make a living for his family and to educate himself. ***
Agreed, I hope he continues to succeed.
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