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Media Coverage
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Heart Rescue Americans, Israelis Help to Save Iraqi Infant With Deadly Heart Defect
ABC World News Tonight
November 28, 2003
By Hilary Brown
 TEL
AVIV, Israel, Dec. 6 - In the intensive care ward of the Wolfson
Medical Center, a tiny Iraqi child is fighting for her life.
She
is less than two weeks old. And she would almost certainly be dead
today, without the help of an American humanitarian, a U.S. Army
doctor, and an Israeli charity called Save a Child's Heart.
Bayan
Jassem was born in Kirkuk, in northern Iraq, with a heart condition
known as "transposition of the great arteries." It's fatal, without
surgery - surgery that is not available in her country.
"The
only thing that keeps them alive is a little duct," says Jonathan
Miles, of the Christian group, Brothers Together [Shevet Achim]. "But
it starts closing and pfft! After two weeks, basically, you're done."
Palestinians and Iraqis
Miles'
organization is based in the Gaza Strip and for the last seven years
has been sending Palestinian children into Israel for life-saving
operations. Now Miles wants to help children in Iraq.
Bayan's
condition was spotted by a U.S. Army cardiologist who runs a weekly
clinic for children in Kirkuk. He contacted Miles, who managed to
arrange travel for the baby and her parents out of Iraq, through
Jordan, and into Israel, to the Wolfson Medican Center south of Tel
Aviv.
Iraqi doctors talked directly to Israeli surgeons using
Miles' satellite phone for guidance on how to prepare the baby for the
trip. On arrival, the Israeli group, Save a Child's Heart, took over.
It took 21 hours to complete the delicate open-heart surgery.
The
doctors, nurses and anesthetists all offer their services for free. One
of the doctors is himself the son of Iraqi Jewish immigrants here.
Of
course, the baby's parents are overwhelmed by the kindness they have
found in a country that used to be their country's enemy. They spend
their days and most of their nights at the hospital, praying for their
baby's recovery.
Miles, who is from Colorado, says that whatever happens, he takes comfort in one thought.
"The
family will know that everything humanly possible was done," Miles
says. "And that's a lot better than knowing that something could have
been done, but wasn't."
Save a Child's Heart has been doing just
that since 1996, performing life-saving heart surgery on children from
all over the world - not just the West Bank and Gaza, but from African
countries, eastern Europe, Russia, Ukraine, even Vietnam and China. Its
doctors have treated more than 900 children.
In the meantime,
surgeons said early this week that little Bayan was still in critical
but stable condition. They're confident that another child's life has
been saved, thanks to a remarkable, shared commitment across three
borders - by Christians, Muslims, and Jews.
This report originally aired on World News Tonight on Nov. 28.
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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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