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Monday, June 7, 2010
Emek Hospital saves a Palestinian boy from Jenin

Emek Hospital saves a Palestinian boy from Jenin

Foreign Ministry 6 June 2010
[IMRA: The item is written in the first person - apparently by a doctor at
the hospital]

"My son and I are not the same as we were before this happened and I will
share this with my family and friends."

On Thursday, June 3, 2010, 15 year old Muhammed Kalalwe was working in his
family's fields. They live in Jenin, a Palestinian city in the northern West
Bank, bordering Israel's Jezreel Valley and the city of Afula. The boy
noticed a deadly viper snake and tried killing it with a rock, but the
dangerous creature struck out and bit his right palm. Screams and panic
ensued and within minutes, the boy's father, Hafed, grabbed his stricken son
and rushed him to the Jenin Hospital. They were ill-prepared to treat the
boy, had no anti-serum and decided to send him by ambulance to the Emek
Medical Center in Afula. Hafed later related that he was genuinely afraid to
be taken to Emek because he was sure that they would be ignored and not even
spoken to. His son's palm and arm were critically swollen and the pain was
unbearable.

The humanitarian reality of Emek shocked both the father and son as they
were immediately greeted in Arabic, rushed into the ER where Emek's
multi-ethnic staff administered life-saving anti-serum and brought the boy
back from the brink of death. Muhammed lay for the next two days in the
pediatric intensive care unit and is now resting comfortably in Emek's
pediatric surgical department from where he will be released in the next
couple of days.

I asked the father how he felt now about Emek Hospital and the Israelis he
has come into contact with. Staring me straight in the eyes he said, "Our
people do not know the truth about you and our medicine has a long way to
go. My son and I are not the same as we were before this happened and I will
share this with my
family and friends. May Allah bless all of you." As he spoke, he
gesticulated determinedly in a classic Middle Eastern style and when we
shook hands as I wished them both well, the grip was firm and real. I have
shaken many such hands and gazed into many Palestinian eyes that had seen
here a reality that they never expected to see.

While walking back to my office, I passed one of my best friends - the Head
of our Emergency Services, Dr. Azziz Daroushe who is a Muslim from the
nearby Israeli village of Iksal. I asked him what he thought about this
latest case where we were able to save another life from Jenin. With a
twinkle in his eye and a knowing grin he answered, "It's a good thing there
are snakes."
* * *
Established in 1924, Emek Medical Center is a community hospital that serves
a culturally rich population that is equally divided (50/50) between Jews
and Arabs. With a mixed medical staff of Jews and Arabs, its guiding
philosophy is Coexistence Through Medicine.

Among the IDF medical staff that was rushed to establish a fully equipped
field hospital in Haiti following the earthquake was Emek's Dr. Asher
Pressman, a senior pediatric surgeon. Upon the Israeli medical teams' return
home, Dr. Pressman shared stories of the devastation and human suffering
they witnessed as they battled to save hundreds of lives of children and
adults.

A defining moment in his experiences there was when a little girl whose
chest was caved in arrived near death and the surgeons were not sure if she
could be saved. After many hours of delicate and painstaking surgery
followed by anxious post-op moments, the little girl finally opened her eyes
and smiled at him. ''It was moments like that that rejuvenated me and the
others and we knew how important our being there was.''

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