From the Corrie family to Rafah - On the 40 day memorial of Rachel's death
To the people of Gaza
From the Family of Rachel Corrie
Greetings to all of our friends in the Occupied Territories. We, the parents, sister and brother of Rachel Corrie, want
to thank you for all you did for Rachel while she was working in Rafah and for all you have done to honor her memory
since she died on March 16. We understand that you will be remembering her especially on the fortieth day anniversary of
her death. Know that we will be thinking of all of you
We are grateful to those of you who became Rachel’s friends and who welcomed her into your homes and shared your tea and
food with her. She wrote to us about you and about your wonderful families. She admired how you supported one another
even as you struggled against the cruelties of the occupation. Writing about you, Rachel told us, “ I am nevertheless
amazed at their strength in being able to defend such a large degree of their humanity—laughter, generosity,
family-time—against the incredible horror occurring in their lives and against the constant presence of death……I am also
discovering a degree of strength and of basic ability for humans to remain human in the direst of circumstances…. I
think the word is dignity.”
We are grateful to those of you who cared for Rachel as she died and after. We will always remember the respect and love
with which she was treated in life and in death by the people of Gaza.
We are grateful to all of you who have honored Rachel’s memory during these past weeks. It lifts our spirits to hear of
the Rachel Corrie Children and Youth Cultural Center in Rafah and the Rachel Corrie Center for Women’s Empowerment. We
know there are now newborn babies named Rachel and streets that bear her name, too. We cannot find adequate words to
tell you how much these things mean to us. Thank you for the many ways in which you have honored our daughter and
sister.
Rachel wrote to us that coming to Rafah was one of the best things she had ever done in her life. She told us that she
would stay in Rafah longer than she had originally planned. She had watched another ISM volunteer say goodbye to the
families she had grown close to, and Rachel said she saw then how hard it would be to one day leave all of you. She had
dreams of making connections between Rafah and her hometown in the United States—Olympia, Washington. She had started
planning to make Rafah and Olympia sister cities. She had gone to her old elementary school in Olympia and had
encouraged the children there to write letters to the children in Rafah. She was hoping to help the women in Rafah who
make handcrafted items to sell those items at a fair trade store in Olympia. Rachel wanted your voices to be heard in
the United States. Had she lived, Rachel would have worked to mak
Our family wants very much to come to Rafah. We plan to do so as soon as we are able. When we come, we hope to meet the
children who taught Rachel Arabic words, the grandmother who watched out for her health, and the families with whom she
shared meals and tea. We hope to visit the Rachel Corrie Children and Youth Cultural Center and the Rachel Corrie Center
for Women’s Empowerment and maybe to meet a newborn baby named Rachel. We are eager to look into your eyes and to have
you look into ours as we remember Rachel together.
We want you to know that each day here in the United States we are doing all that we can to make Americans aware of your
suffering. We will continue to work here for a just and peaceful resolution to this conflict that has caused so much
loss for each of you and now for us, as well. We know that Rachel will forever be linked to the Palestinian people. She
brought your story to us so that now, you will always be in our hearts.
Sincerely,
Cindy, Craig, Chris, and Sarah Corrie
Rachel’s Family