Doctor Khadra Salami He knows that there are lives under the rubble in Gaza that should not be lived, and he saves them. “This is inhumane, really inhumane,” he laments first pediatric oncologist related to Palestine. “These families gave everything for their children to have access to the internet. therapy to treat cancer and after all this suffering, they were cured and eventually died in a war caused by man,” condemned his clinic. Augusta Victoria Hospital East Jerusalem, housed in an old German-style castle with its own church and bell tower on the Mount of Olives. One of the main medical centers accepting patients from Gaza still has some sick children and adults. Maybe stay caught Between these smooth walls since October 7 I saved them life.
Magnet and his daughter Amira arrived in this room more than two months ago. After diagnosis glioma In Gaza, an 11-year-old girl was able to travel with her mother to receive treatment at the only hospital in Palestine that provides radiation services. “We only received permission from Israel for one day, and that is the day we will enter Jerusalem. we can’t go out “From the hospital area,” Iman explains from the narrow bed where she sleeps. Shaking hands with Amira in one night. “We thought we would finish the treatment as soon as possible and return home to Raman with my husband and another six-year-old daughter,” she recalls for this newspaper. But then 7 October Hamas was attacked IsraelIt killed 1,200 people and the Israeli Army fought the fiercest battle against the area.
“We can’t go back now because not safe: our entire city [en el centro de la Franja] When it collapsed, my family moved to tents in the south and No connection“We haven’t been able to talk to them for a week,” he laments. Every time the phone rings he jumps out of bed until he sees the name on the screen and hangs up in frustration. “You know what it’s like. a mother’s heart“I constantly worry about my other daughter,” she admits anxiously from this hospital, located in a castle built in 1907 as the center of the German Protestant community in Ottoman Palestine. The story of Iman and Amira is the story of many others trapped. “Patients from Gaza are accepted in hospitals in East Jerusalem.” block For the last 17 years, Israel has prevented many people from entering medical equipment and its constituents and prevented Gazan medical professionals from traveling there format; “For this reason, many Palestinians in the region have to go to Jerusalem for treatment,” he explains. Aseel Baidounthe organization’s spokesman in the West Bank Medical Aid to Palestinians (MAP, English abbreviation) From Prensa Ibérica group to El Periódico de Catalunya.
Hospital arrests
Some of these patients cannot obtain permission to leave Gaza. MAP noted in 2021: 36% of permits patients rejected or postponed. “Before the war, we saw cases where a child’s brain tumor was operated on at Al-Shifa Hospital, but then all security checks were carried out. They postponed their arrival He went to the center of Jerusalem and when he managed to arrive two months later, the tumor has returnedand we had to start from scratch,” Dr. Salami laments to El Periódico de Catalunya. Since October 7, some 200 Gaza patients They were trapped in hospitals in East Jerusalem. Almost all of them have a friend.
An incident occurred at the beginning of November. influx Israeli security forces Al Makassed Hospital arresting several patients Staying “illegally” in IsraelAfter their medical leave ends. While near this medical center located in El Periódico de Catalunya, East Jerusalem, hospital staff reported: There are no patients left in Gaza on the premises. Many were allegedly transferred against their will to hospitals in the occupied West Bank, without further notice from them. Hospital sources who prefer to remain anonymous fear of retaliation They reported that these people would probably be sent back to Gaza.
“Talk for hours”
On the pediatric oncology floor of Augusta Victoria Hospital, Five families from Gaza. They have been each other’s main support during times of uncertainty and heartbreak. second salvation. “We didn’t know each other before,” Iman admits, “but sitting and talking for hours about the situation on our land made everything so much easier. we never get bored“. The relief of meeting peers in such difficult moments appears on his young face. As darkness falls, rain On the other side of the window, this young mother thinks of Gaza and thanks God. “The kids are there very happy “It’s raining because they can fill bottles and buckets with water to drink,” he celebrates.
Dr. While Salami walks around the floor, he stays in the rooms of these five patients for a while longer. “I always remind them that here we are a family“We are here to talk and explain everything you need in this frustrating situation,” he says. sweetness Typical example of those who speak honestly. Local Ramallah, admits that he feels fear and insecurity every morning when he passes the checkpoint in his car with Palestinian license plates to go to work. “I’m depressed, I’m afraid of the future But the first thing is that this genocidal war ends in 2023,” argues Dr. Salami.
This mother of two does not share these fears with the mothers and grandmothers who come from afar to save their children’s lives and, unknowingly, their own lives. Always connected to what’s going on HouseSince we don’t have it anyway, a return seems distant. “We would like to returnbut only if there is peace and tranquility“, confesses Iman. “It will take a long time to rebuild hospitals and houses, there is no place to live, Where would we go if we went back?” he asks into the air. In this white room livened up with colorful blankets and a few Amira stuffed animals, the war is far away. He reappears in her body when her phone screen lights up while she is waiting for news from her other daughter.
Source: Informacion

James Sean is a writer for “Social Bites”. He covers a wide range of topics, bringing the latest news and developments to his readers. With a keen sense of what’s important and a passion for writing, James delivers unique and insightful articles that keep his readers informed and engaged.