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Painters bring new life to hard-hit areas in Gaza

The Shati refugee camp in Gaza City has always been a symbol of poverty, a grey concrete jungle with 87,000 people packed into half a square kilometer, or about one fifth of a square mile.

The Shati refugee camp in Gaza City has always been a symbol of poverty, a grey concrete jungle with 87,000 people packed into half a square kilometer, or about one fifth of a square mile.

But now, overlooking the sewage-contaminated Mediterranean beachfront, the camp's houses are covered in vibrant colors.

About two dozen artists have painted the walls, doorsteps and facades of all the houses along a 1.5 kilometer-long (mile-long) edge, including in the area where Hamas chief Ismail Haniya lives.

Gaza has not been a colorful place to live in recent years. The Islamic militant Hamas group conquered the seaside territory by force in 2007 and has since fought three major wars with Israel, the deadliest and most destructive of them in the summer of 2014.

Gaza suffered heavy damage in the fighting, and most of what was destroyed has not been rebuilt. An Israeli and Egyptian blockade of the territory, a bitter rift between rival Palestinian factions and a failure by international donors to deliver on promised pledges of aid money have compounded the crisis.

The painting campaign was funded by Palestinian investment company Padico. It is the latest and largest of four similar initiatives to color Gaza's neighborhoods ravaged by last year's war. Artists said the effort was inspired by similar projects in Mexico and Venezuela.

“It's a voluntarily work to bring joy and happiness for our families and children in the Shati camp,” said Mohammed Dahman, a painter who worked for a month on the project.

The artists drew flowers on the pastel yellow, pink and purple walls, used recycled wood to create slanted window frames, and converted old tires into flower pots. On one wall, they drew an elephant with its back as high as the wall. When children sit atop the wall, they appear as if they are riding the elephant.

“They cleaned the camp. I came here and they were coloring, and I was like, ‘What's this ’ I did not recognize the area,” said Karam Abdel-Bari, an unemployed camp resident.

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