16 January 2006 Philip
Berg, director of the Shevet Achim Jerusalem office, went to his reward
early this morning after feeding his children breakfast.
1 November 2005 Delevan
from Iraq makes it to Israel. I wrote you on Sept. 22 about Delevan, the
17-year-old Kurdish girl from the north of Iraq who has somehow survived
since birth with a congenital heart defect.
17 October 2005 Twelve-year-old
Murthadha and his father returned home to Iraq tonight by GMC, following
his return from heart surgery in Germany.
4 September 2005 Mercy
arrives in Jordan. Another Iraqi child has just arrived in Amman, Jordan
en route to heart surgery in the US. This little girl is named Rahma (“mercy”)
and she is from Mosul (biblical Ninevah) in the north of Iraq. I’ve
just snapped the picture below of her father Taha attempting to let family
back home know that they have arrived safely.
24 August 2005 The thoughts
of many of us have turned toward Gaza as Jewish settlers have been forcibly
removed in the past week. Since my family and I lived for nearly five
years with the Arab people of Gaza, directly alongside the Jewish settlements,
several have asked me how to understand what they are seeing. “Is
this a good thing? What will happen?”
24 June 2005 Do you feel
sometimes pressured and discouraged like me? It helps to pause and appreciate
the fruit of what God is doing through our shared work together.
10 June 2005 Today was
the last possible day for the seven Iraqi children and their families
to travel to Israel before our volunteers Dirk and Manuela left for their
summer trip home to Germany. And at this hour the children have just arrived
in Israel, praise God! Dirk’s report below gives us a picture of
the battle that was involved. He called it “A Tough Day.”
31 May 2005 As we stood
worshipping at a church in Amman a week and a half ago, I felt a rising
conviction: now is the time for the church to move into the Islamic world
in a decisive, committed, focused and sacrificial way.
26 May 2005 I praised
our staff for doing the equivalent of a year’s work within a few
weeks; one replied, not too unkindly, “Next time let’s do
a year’s worth of work within a year.”
20 May 2005 We’ve
just finished screening 25 Iraqi children in Jordan. Every single one
we invited showed up, even though it meant a risk-filled and difficult
journey.
18 March 2005 Now there
is a homograft of a young Israeli girl in the heart of this Iraqi young
man. The surgeons think that it will last for many years, hopefully all
of his life.
11 March 2005 It is Friday
evening in Jerusalem and Shabbat is settling in. This Shabbat we are privileged
to have four Iraqis staying in our home here on Prophets Street. Our guests
from Iraq include Majed who has been released from the hospital after
successful heart surgery along with his father.
24 January 2005 Two weeks
ago I wrote you that Majid, the Kurdish Iraqi young man with a long-neglected
congenital heart defect, had finally made it the hospital in Israel. Philip,
Steve and I visited him there a week ago to pray with him on the eve of
his surgery.
7 January 2005 Twenty-seven
year-old Majid from Iraq made it to the hospital in Tel Aviv, Israel about
1 AM Friday. Yesterday morning Majid's father (Rauf) spent five hours
with the Jordanian secret police and then Majid, Rauf and Amy made the
arduous journey from Amman across the Israeli border to the Tel Aviv hospital,
a journey that proved to be 10 hours long.
6 January 2005 After dinner
I sat with him and his dad for a while and they told me about their life
in Kirkuk and their hopes and fears. "What kind of Islam is this?!"
the father said, referring to the 4 hours wait at the border in the cold
and rain. Since then Majid has been cold frequently, suddenly he begins
to shake and continues to do so even though wrapped in a heap of blankets
with his father rubbing his shoulders and body.
8 December 2004 When I
last wrote you, little Kawther from Iraq had just had her heart surgery
in Israel. She has since recovered perfectly and is now safely back home
in Iraq with her family. Such a contrast to how she first arrived.
14 October 2004 Our
volunteers Dirk and Amy in Amman, Jordan sent for Kawther last week after
scheduling her surgery and arranging for her visa to Israel. When Kawther
arrived over the weekend, they found: She is very small and frail—not
even able to stand up and often in the fetal position.
25 August 2004 Abdul Jabbar’s
heart operation is over and described as a perfect surgery and a complete
success, thank God. Today (Wednesday) a press conference will be held
in Tampa to introduce him to the world.
23 August 2004 On the
first of June we received an e-mail from Col. Russell Zelman, a US army
surgeon in Iraq. He told us that an infantry patrol had discovered an
eight-year-old Iraqi boy who needed heart surgery:
10 July 2004 Meanwhile
two more Iraqi children, Ali and Baraa, came to the US with their mothers
in June and have both had successful donated surgeries. They are staying
with believers in Peoria, Illinois, and New York, and are due to return
to Iraq in two more weeks. We have a growing team of Christian volunteers
in Amman, Jordan who are helping the Iraqi children en route with lodging,
visas, and travel arrangements, so the families are being cared for in
Jesus’ name from the time they leave their homes in Iraq until their
return.
15 May 2004 But Janan’s
medical exams were in fact encouraging. She is very weak and blue, and
doctors judge that her long-neglected condition would likely take her
life within the next year if untreated; but with surgery they believe
her life can be saved and in fact dramatically changed. They’ve
spoken with her of the hope that she can marry and have children, something
Janan (who has practically never been outside of her home) could scarcely
have dreamed of.
22 April 2004 Three children
were invited this morning from the Gaza Strip into Israel for heart treatment.
I escorted them and it was an eye-opening experience. Shortly after arriving
at the Erez crossing at 7:15 am, homemade rockets were fired from nearby
orange groves toward Israeli targets.
12 April 2004 In the
pre-dawn hours of Easter Sunday I paced back and forth along the roadway
in Amman, Jordan, near the GMC Suburbans which carry passengers into Iraq.
Their drivers, normally desperate for business, had drawn back when asked
if they could take me, an American citizen, into Iraq on this day. “Turn
around,” one said. Finally another offered that he could take me
as far as the outskirts of Fallujah, at double the normal price.
17 March 2004 Brian,
Erich, and I are just back from a trip into Iraq which was blessed
in many regards. Firstly I am thankful that the three of us are able to
return to our families. Drivers on the Amman-Baghdad route fly along at
100 mph, and on the trip out our driver missed a curve at 3:30 a.m. and
we went off the road, spinning around...
29 January 2004 It is
quite humbling to see how the Lord can use you when you go on a journey
in the name of Jesus. I don't speak Arabic so I was traveling with Jonathan
to observe and to learn how things are done in Iraq. Our first night in
the home of baby Bayan's parents will long be remembered.
15 January 2004 This was
no ordinary hospital run, since not only was it my first trip, but it
also moved me regarding the work that goes on, helping to restore the
hearts of the children of this land. “Sometimes it feels like you’re
only a taxi driver,” said Elia, “but then you realize you
helped save a child’s life.” Logistics can save the day and
life of a child.
5 January 2004 On the evening
that Bayan's parents returned to their home in Iraq, I spoke with the
father by telephone. His first words were "When are you coming?"
18 December 2003 Bayan's
parents have arrived safely back in their village in the north of Iraq,
with Bayan's body. I've just gotten off the phone with the nurse who is
traveling with them. She said, "You wouldn't believe what ambassadors
they are for Israel.
17 December 2003 Bayan's
heart went into arrest during the night. She was resuscitated but deteriorated
throughout the night and died at 6:40 this morning. The doctors in Israel
who fought for her life the past three weeks have met with the parents
and are deeply grieved.
15 December 2003 Baby
Bayan had a "major accident" this morning while being suctioned,
with a hard time oxygenating and her blood pressure dropping. But now
(Monday evening in Israel) ICU director Dr. Sion Houri says she "is
behaving in a decent way."
13 December 2003 Dr. Sion
Houri, head of the ICU in Israel which is giving round-the-clock care
to the Iraqi baby Bayan after her heart surgery, reports that over the
last 24 hours she is "a touch more stable, but still very fragile."
27 November 2003 Bayan
spent more than 21 hours on the operating table before she was stable
enough to move this morning to the pediatric ICU. I stopped in several
times throughout the night and found the team of doctors full of energy
and focus and doing every thing they could to save her. I could only say
to myself that they are heros.
25 November 2003 God continues
to unfold an amazing story in the life of baby Bayan from Iraq. This morning
the deputy chief of mission at the Israeli embassy in Amman, Jordan, called
us in and personally wrote out by hand visas for Bayan and her mother
and father to enter Israel for her emergency heart surgery. He spoke very
warmly of his wishes for better relations with the Arab world and sent
Bayan off with his blessing.
22 November 2003 Wednesday
a team of us were in the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk to meet American
army cardiologist John Scott, who has been screening children in the region
with heart defects. A two-day-old baby girl named Bayan was brought into
the clinic while we there.
12 October 2003 Each time
we have tested the waters in Iraq we have found God's grace. This time
the hospital there gave us use of a conference room and access to their
files. At night I would call the families of children who need surgery
and ask them to come meet with us. It's a very strange thing in Iraq for
an American to call up at 11:00 at night and ask you to come see him the
next day.
30 September 2003 I'm
writing from an airplane over the Atlantic, heading back to the Middle
East. Since I last wrote you, we've received invitations for ten Iraqi
children to come out for donated heart surgeries in the US, Belgium, Germany,
and India.
9 September 2003 I
am in Baghdad escorting pediatrician Lee Huhn and pediatric nurse Angela
Rickards, who will be staying here through September to prepare children
to travel abroad for heart surgeries.
8 August 2003 My heart
is burdened by what I saw during my visit to Baghdad. My daughter Renanah
and I went to the Ibn Al Nafis Hospital, one of only two heart centers
serving the 25 million people of Iraq. All surgeries there have ground
to a halt due to a lack of supplies, including such basic necessities
as oxygen. The doctors received us openly, but also expressed some skepticism.
Many groups had come to visit, they said, but never returned with any
help.
24 June 2003 Is this
the time as well to reach out in Jesus' name to the long-suffering people
of Iraq? This would take the work of Shevet Achim to a whole new level.
I believe that the doctors and people of Israel, who long for better relations
with their neighbors, would be enthusiastic partners.
15 May 2003 My family
and I are in beautiful Colorado, having some family time and helping get
another daughter ready for college in the fall. Several weeks ago I cracked
a rib while wrestling with my three boys, bringing my regular jogging
to a halt. Just this last week I've gingerly been breaking myself back
in. Tonight I tried to add another mile to get back to my usual run of
four miles.
30 April 2003 Yesterday
the Shevet Achim volunteers brought four babies from Gaza to Israel for
evaluation of their heart problems. The doctors at the Wolfson Medical
Center, temporarily understaffed and overbooked, didn't want to take on
any new surgical cases. But after seeing these little ones...
8 April 2003 As events
accelerate in the Middle East, so do our opportunities to act in Jesus'
name. So far this year we're sending one Arab child each week to Israel
for lifesaving heart surgery.
7 March 2003 We have
just finished production of an 11-minute video about the role that Christians
are playing in bringing together Israeli doctors and Arab children in
need of lifesaving heart surgeries.
20 February 2003 From
the funds given for baby Mohammed's heart surgery, we were able to help
sponsor another emergency newborn case from Gaza. Baby Karam had his heart
surgery in Israel this week...
13 February 2003 On the
heels of the news that baby Mohammed had died in the hospital in Israel,
we learned that newborn Juma also succumbed to the metabolic disease which
had claimed three of his previous siblings. Yesterday Phil, Elia, and
I went to visit the families in the Gaza Strip.
6 February 2003 Less than
an hour ago little Mohammed died in the hospital in Israel.
1 February 2003 I told
Dr. Gilad that the kidneys were the area that we together had been focusing
our prayer on. "Let them focus on all the body," he said. "The
chances are very grim."
26 January 2003 Over
the weekend Mohammed's kidneys have come back to life. Friday he produced
1-2 ccs of urine, more on Saturday, and today he's up to 1cc per kg per
hour, "a decent amount" according to Dr. Khoury.
24 January 2003 Little
Mohammed from Gaza, now 15 days old, is getting stronger in the ICU in
Israel. He's taking less medication and his blood pressure is better,
but after five days on dialysis he's still not urinating. We continue
to pray for the restoration of life and function to his kidneys.
22 January 2003 An update
to help guide our prayer for newborn Mohammed from the Gaza Strip:
21 January 2003 When
Mohammed arrived in Israel Sunday his kidneys and liver were no longer
functioning. Moments ago Dr. Tsion Khoury from the pediatric ICU called
and said, "Mohammed is going to die on us. Why wasn't he given prostaglandin
in Gaza?" This medicine would have kept open a ductus which was supplying
critical oxygen to his organs. Twice I passed on word to the hospital
in Gaza that prostaglandin was needed while Mohammed awaited transfer,
but there they felt it was unnecessary. In hindsight I should have insisted.
19 January 2003 Baby
Mohammed turns ten days old this morning. He became blue and gasping after
his birth, and Dr. Bashir Afana in the Khan Yunis hospital was just able
to diagnose his heart defect in time and stabilize him through medication.
19 December 2002 Phil
and I were both stunned as we stood at the foot of the bed of an infant
recovering from heart surgery, and Eli folded his arms and said "I
hope we will survive." The doctors themselves run a non-profit group
to raise funds to help subsidize the surgeries, and Eli told us that since
the September 2001 terror attacks giving has fallen way off. They no longer
have the backing they need to continue reaching out to Israel's neighbors.
17 November 2002 Khalil
has a large hole between the ventricles of his heart, which has kept him
from growing normally. His legs look like toothpicks sticking out from
under his clothing. With open-heart surgery Khalil can be fully healed
and lead a normal life;
18 October 2002 I didn't
know what to think or feel when I read that six or eight residents of
our former hometown of Rafah were killed yesterday by IDF tank fire. It's
difficult sometimes to know what to believe. Were those killed non-combatants?
Was the tank fire an appropriate response to gunmen who chose to fire
from within populated areas?
14 September 2002 Walking
through the doors of the hospital it does not take long for one to sense
that politics is truly left outside. Having lived in Israel for a few
decades this is an immensely satisfying experience. I had heard about
it and now I saw it with my own eyes. A Palestinian mother standing by
the bed of her 2 week old daughter and immediately next to her an Israeli
mother attending to her 5 month old son. Light years apart ideologically
but brought together by the love for their critically ill child.
22 August 2002 Philip
and Martha Berg, and their three small sons Adam, Asher, and Nathaniel,
have safely reached Jerusalem to take up work in our office on Prophets
Street. They'll help keep the door open to Israeli hospitals for children
from the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.
31 July 2002 Rowa is
the first child that we've been able to refer directly from Jordan. While
excellent medical care is also available there, many families are unable
to meet the costs.
11 July 2002 Rowa was
hospitalized three days after birth, blue and gasping. Doctors found on
echocardiogram a severe coarctation (narrowing) of her aorta.
16 June 2002 When I
returned to Israel last week following a speaking tour in the U.S., I
was not allowed to re-enter the country.
19 May 2002 Some
have written to ask us what's happening here. The good news is that in
the midst of conflict our opportunities to love our neighbors are only
expanded.
23 February 2002 Nada's
mother had lost two other newborns in the first week of life to an undiagnosed
metabolic disease, likely caused by the close relation of the parents.
Baby Nada herself arrived in Jerusalem lethargic and unresponsive, with
an ammonia level in her blood four times the normal.
23 December 2001 We're
also thankful as the year ends to see that some 40 Palestinian children
have come to Israel this year for heart surgeries.
22 November 2001 This
morning I visited little Khaled in the ICU following his eight-hour heart
surgery last night.
20 November 2001 Please
would you pray with us tonight for a newborn Palestinian baby boy named
Khaled from the Gaza Strip.
12 September 2001 The
first phone call came shortly after the World Trade Center towers collapsed.
It was Abu Jihad, who in the past had been involved in a terrorist group
and spent time in Israeli prisons, and who became a close and sensitive
friend during our years in Gaza. Speaking in Hebrew, he shared his shock
and sadness at what he was seeing on television.
7 September 2001 The
photo below shows eight mothers from the Gaza Strip gathered today in
an Israeli hospital for lifesavingheart surgeries for their little ones.
31 August 2001 Two
weeks ago, another little Arab girl named Riman ("two gazelles")
was rushed from the same hospital to Israel. She was born with a heart
defect, and the only hope to save her life was for Arabs and Jews to come
together.
21 August 2001 Our
greatest partner in Israel for performing open-heart surgery on Palestinian
children has been Dr. Ami Cohen, a US Army surgeon who immigrated to Israel
in 1992. It was a shock to hear on Friday that Dr. Cohen died suddenly
of apparent altitude sickness, at the age of 47, while climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro
in Africa with his daughter.
15 August 2001 Yesterday
a reporter working for both the Jerusalem Post and the BBC World Service
Radio religion program asked to come with us into Gaza to meet some of
the little ones who are being rescued. While on the road together we received
an urgent phone call: a two-month-old girl in the Khan Yunis hospital
had just been diagnosed with a heart defect that could take her life at
any moment.
7 August 2001 Hala
was born with multiple holes in the wall between the ventricles of her
heart, and as a consequence still weighs only 10 pounds.
23 July 2001 The
long struggle for Hussein's life ended last night at 7:15 Israel time,
when he died at the age of three months. Doctors and nurses in the pediatric
ICU in Haifa had worked for 38 days in the effort to pull him back from
death.
20 July 2001 Little
Hussein from Gaza is still clinging to life in the pediatric ICU of the
Rambam Medical Center in Haifa.
17 July 2001 Hussein's
father, the Palestinian Authority policeman who waited years for this
firstborn son, has just called. He's worried about his wife, who is in
the hospital with Hussein, and has asked us to help shield her from the
news if Hussein should die.
11 July 2001 To
my surprise Ahmed's father began weeping as we spoke on the phone yesterday
before his son's surgery, just as Hussein's father did a month ago. This
is uncommon in Gaza, a sign that the fathers' hearts are deeply touched
at this most sensitive point: the life of their only son.
14 June 2001 I called
the father back and told him that doctors in Haifa wanted to help save
his baby. "That's where I was in prison," he said. Tomorrow
morning the baby will be on his way there, as old adversaries unite in
the effort to save a precious life.
18 May 2001 Mohammed
was thought to be healthy until he suddenly collapsed while playing sports
several weeks ago. He went into a deep coma and his aorta was found to
be severely restricted.
11 May 2001 Samer's recovery
from surgery was slow and difficult, and she remained on mechanical ventilation
for two weeks in the pediatric ICU. She was hookedup to a frightening
array of tubes and monitors, which kept her mother from holding her.
15 December 2000 Tears
came to my eyes yesterday as we brought back another little one, one-year-old
Ahmed, who was rescued right at the point of death by heart surgery in
Israel. I stood in the doorway as the Israeli soldiers at the checkpoint
processed his mother's papers, huge M-16 rifles slung over their soldiers.
And little Ahmed was just beaming, full of joy, calling out and waving
to the soldiers!
8 October 2000 Even on
this most difficult day, two little girls and their mothers made it across
the border from Gaza this morning to find lifesaving heart surgery in
Israel: one-year-old Ahlam and three-year-old Riham.
5 October 2000 Television
viewers across the globe have become familiar this week with the Netzarim
junction, where a 12-year-old boy was caught in crossfire and died in
his father's arms, and helicopters have launched rockets at gunmen in
an apartment building.
15 September 2000 During
the difficult operation oxygen was cut off to her brain and she now appears
to be brain dead. "In the US we would have already disconnected her
from life support," a doctor told me this morning.
8 September 2000 A week
ago a baby girl named Reem was born to a poor family living in a remote
section of the Gaza Strip. She was cyanotic, and tests showed that the
oxygen saturation in her blood was 25% (compared to the normal of 90%+).
1 September 2000 My family
and I have returned to the Gaza Strip following a month in the U.K. and
U.S. We found two precious little ones, Arsula and Oday, clinging to life
in the neonatal ICU in Gaza, born the same week that we were being blessed
and refreshed at a camp high in the Rocky Mountains.
18 June 2000 Three months
ago I wrote you about a late-night visit to a baby boy born in Gaza with
transposed great arteries of the heart, blue and struggling to breathe
on 100% oxygen in an incubator, so newborn that he was not yet named.
18 May 2000 This Shabbat
a young Arabic couple came to visit us in our home in Rafah, in the Gaza
Strip. Bundled in the mother's arms was their first tiny baby, a girl
named Iman ("Faith," which we had given as the middle name of
OUR first baby girl 17 years ago). They had just returned from the Wolfson
Medical Center in Israel, where Iman underwent heart surgery.
6 March 2000 I'm just
back from a late-night trip to the Gaza hospital to see a baby boy born
today--so new that he hadn't yet been named. The child came out blue and
remained blue, and his family was stunned and frightened to learn from
an urgent echocardiogram that the great arteries leading from his heart
are switched. He's now in an incubator with his eyes screwed shut, breathing
100 percent oxygen.
18 January 2000 Funds
have come in to cover all our commitments for the rescue of Gaza children
in 1999. We are humbled and grateful and amazed by God's goodness.
23 December 1999 Now
looking through our list for 1999, I find that 51 children have undergone
major heart treatment this year, and there is every reason to believe
that the 52nd will undergo surgery this coming week.
10 December 1999 He
wanted to tell us about a six-year-old girl named Rahma ("Mercy").
"She's one of those children who stay in your mind," he said.
"She's always smiling, and comes up to me every time she's in the
ward."