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Media Coverage
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A Tiny Symbol of Change for Iraq
Los Angeles Times
November 27, 2003
By Ken Ellingwood
HOLON, Israel — Just over a week old, Bayan Jabbar is proof that
some of the rules have changed since the fall of Saddam Hussein.
The ailing Iraqi girl, born with a life-threatening heart defect, was
recovering in an Israeli hospital today after emergency surgery
Wednesday and a journey that would have been unthinkable under an Iraqi
ruler who treated Israel as the most bitter of enemies.
Volunteers who worked to ferry the infant from her Kurdish village near
the northern Iraqi city of Tikrit said the open-heart procedure here
appeared a success. However, they cautioned that postoperative bleeding
meant that Bayan's condition was fragile.
The fact that the volunteers were able to secure her quick transfer
here from Iraq to get medical treatment was being cast as one sign, at
least, that some barriers had crumbled along with the Hussein regime.
"This would not have happened nine months before," said Simon Fisher,
executive director of the Israel-based Save a Child's Heart, which
arranges emergency heart surgeries for children.
"It's especially good for the patients who need help," said Bayan's
father, Jasem, as he and his wife, Iman, waited out the surgery amid
the glare of television cameras. "Before, we couldn't even think of
coming to Israel."
The operation to repair Bayan's reversed arteries — a potentially
fatal condition — was done under the sponsorship of the Israeli
charity, which has made a name for itself over the last decade by
shuttling more than 900 children from foreign nations, as well as from
the West Bank and Gaza Strip, for heart surgery at Wolfson Medical
Center here in Holon, outside Tel Aviv.
Although the group is accustomed to the bureaucratic headaches that
accompany transfers of fragile patients, Bayan's case was especially
difficult. The volunteers who encountered the girl in Iraq had to
figure out a way to move her through Jordan to Israel, bearing freshly
minted travel documents that were unfamiliar to immigration officials
in those countries.
"The only hope I had was getting her here," said Jonathan Miles, an
American volunteer who works with a Christian charity and who came
across Bayan and her family during a trip to Iraq.
Last week, Miles and other members of his group, called Shevet Achim,
met Bayan while visiting a children's clinic in Tikrit where a U.S.
Army physician was providing volunteer treatment. The infant had been
brought in two days after her birth on the recommendation of the
delivery doctor, who saw that she was not well.
The Army physician, identified by the volunteers as Lt. Col. John
Scott, performed a sonogram that indicated the artery problem. The girl
was moved to a hospital in Baghdad that, while better equipped, was
unable to carry out the complicated surgery required to give her a
chance at survival.
Miles contacted Save a Child's Heart, and a physician at Wolfson
advised the Baghdad doctor on an interim surgical procedure Friday to
keep Bayan alive until she could be taken to Israel.
The volunteers arranged travel documents, issued by U.S.-appointed
Iraqi officials, while the Israeli group hurriedly worked diplomatic
channels to ease the family's entry. After flying to Amman,
Jordan's capital, the infant and her parents traveled by taxi to the
Israeli border and then by cab to Holon, arriving Tuesday.
By Wednesday night, the parents appeared road-weary and disoriented
from worry. Jasem Jabbar, 28, who makes a living selling ice during the
summer, nibbled peanuts and sipped tea in a waiting room outside the
hospital's intensive care unit. On the other side of the swinging doors
lay three babies from Gaza and the West Bank who also were undergoing
heart treatments under the auspices of Save a Child's Heart.
Jabbar said he had been made to feel comfortable in Israel so far and
acknowledged that his family's trip was the result of a changed
geopolitical landscape.
"The change was good," he said in Arabic through an interpreter. But he
stopped short of predicting whether his family's experience carried
broader implications for the future of the two nations.
"This is a political problem," he said. "This is not my problem."
An hour later, word came that the surgery was over, but with
complications that meant the parents' anguished waiting was not. Jabbar
stared ahead, his wife, teary-eyed beneath a scarf, at his side.
"It's not going to make a difference whether I'm worried or not," he said. "It's all in the hands of God."
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Our name Shevet Achim is taken from the Hebrew of Psalm 133: How good and how pleasant for
brothers to dwell together in unity...for there the LORD commanded the blessing--life forevermore. |
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© 2007 Shevet Achim
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