Treating wounded Syrians who arrive in Israel is ‘holiest of holy’

"We give the fastest and best care with the most advanced equipment, but sometimes there is nothing we can do.”

IDF SOLDIERS provide medical care to a wounded Syrian. (photo credit: IDF)
IDF SOLDIERS provide medical care to a wounded Syrian.
(photo credit: IDF)
As the brutal war across Israel’s northern border rages on, Syrians desperate for medical care continue to make the treacherous journey to the border of a country they were raised to see as their enemy.
IDF soldiers in the Golan Heights transfer injured Syrians from Syria into Israel for medical treatment on April 6, 2017 (IDF SPOKESPERSON"S UNIT)
While Israel has largely stayed out of the fighting on it’s northern border, more than 3,000 Syrians have been treated here in the four years since the IDF began allowing in the wounded who make their way to the border.
Those who arrive at the Syria-Israel border, both combatants and civilians, are given emergency field treatment to stabilize them before the IDF transfers them to medical centers, where medical care is provided free of charge and patients are treated under strict anonymity out of fear that they and their families could be targeted in Syria if their time in Israel becomes known.
While most are transported by ambulance to Nahariya’s Western Galilee Hospital or Ziv Medical Center in Safed, there have been several times that medical officers have called in helicopters to transfer patients with extreme injuries who could only be treated in hospitals in the center of the country.
According to Captain Aviad Camisa, deputy chief medical officer of the 210th Bashan Division, while troops do intensive checks of patients – because the safety of soldiers is paramount – “the holiest of holy” is to provide medical care to those who need it, especially those who come from a place where even children are targets.
More than 25% of the wounded treated here have been women and children, Camisa told The Jerusalem Post.
“We are doing the best that we can in this situation. We give the fastest and best care with the most advanced equipment, but sometimes there is nothing we can do,” he said, noting that there have been many cases of children with bullet wounds or blast injuries but has not seen any wounds from chemical weapons.
“It’s hard to see this so I go into a professional mindset and give them the best treatment I can. I treat them as I would any Israeli civilian or Israeli soldier,” said Camisa, who has served in his role for the past year has personally treated hundreds of wounded Syrians who made the risky journey to the border.
“Once I bring them to the hospital I try to stop thinking about the patient. But it’s hard not to think of them, especially when children come. As a father, it touches me personally.
“When you see a boy who was critically injured and had a slim chance of surviving, and then you see him walking, the feeling is just incredible,” he said.
Syrian patients are sent back across the border once they finish their treatment.
Despite a recent World Health Organization resolution that singled out Israel over “health conditions in the occupied Syrian Golan,” Camisa is confident that those who put their lives in the hands of IDF soldiers and hospitals are spreading the word about the enemy country that saved their lives.
The war in Syria has claimed more than 400,000 lives. UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Stephen O’Brien on Tuesday said that, while there have been significantly fewer reports of violence in some parts of Syria, the Assad regime is increasingly using civilian suffering as “a tactic of war,” denying aid to civilians and pushing those in besieged cities to choose between starvation and death or fleeing to locations that are just as dangerous.
The international community, he said, “must not stand silent while violence flares up elsewhere in the country and parties continue to use starvation, fear tactics and the denial of food, water, medical supplies and other forms of aid as methods of war.”