Palestinians irked as US-based Christian group offers Holy Land pilgrimage to its medical volunteers on weekends.

A US charity building a tent hospital in the Gaza Strip is making Palestinians uneasy by offering foreign medical volunteers the opportunity of weekend tourism in Israel, just across the fence east of Gaza.

The facility, to be operated by the US evangelical Christian group FriendShips, had won rare joint support from Gaza’s rulers Hamas and Israel, which maintains a blockade along its frontier with the enclave.

However, a Holy Land pilgrimage pitch on the Louisiana-based organisation’s website is raising eyebrows in Gaza.

The organisation, which is working to improve health services strained by years of conflict, is setting up a 50-bed encampment hospital in northern Gaza, across from Israel’s Erez checkpoint crossing, also known as Beit Hanoon.

Volunteers will have “a wonderful opportunity to work in an important and productive project and, at the same time, to see and enjoy the Biblical sites of Israel,” the website said.

The volunteers at the facility would be expected to work and live onsite Monday through Thursday, but they “will be free to go to Israel and tour” on their days off, it said.

Asked about the NGO’s tourism perk to volunteers, Hamas official Basim Naeem said: “We are certainly against using our people’s suffering to market Israel or attracting employees at our people’s expense.”

There was no suggestion from Hamas that it was about to scrap the project as a result of the sightseeing offer.

A de facto truce brokered between Israel and Hamas by Qatar, Egypt and the United Nations after deadly cross-border fighting in May included the mediators’ support for the field hospital.

Gaza’s 13 hospitals often lack equipment for specialised treatments, while its two million residents need hard-to-obtain permits from Israeli authorities to get medical care in Israel and the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

The FriendShips encampment will provide “telemedicine for worldwide consultation with specialists” and eventually offer cancer treatment and PTSD therapy, among other services, the NGO’s website says.

“It will either be an uplifting humanitarian tool for our people, or it will be asked to leave immediately,” senior Hamas official Khalil al-Hayya said.

FriendShips, which previously operated a tent hospital along Israel’s border with Syria, did not respond to multiple requests for comment and it was not clear when the facility would open.

Israel declined to comment on the project.

It keeps Gaza under a blockade, citing security concerns posed by Hamas, with which it has fought three wars and waged dozens of other deadly skirmishes over the past decade.

The hospital’s construction with private US funding drew criticism from Hamas’s rivals in the Palestinian Authority (PA), which exercises limited self-rule in the occupied West Bank.

“It will be an American-Israeli military base put forward on the land of the Gaza Strip,” said Mai Alkaila, the PA’s health minister.