Israeli Arab patients in time of war

Someone less than familiar with Israel   might wonder how during this crisis we handle Israeli Arab patients who walk around the hospital in a bright red kaffieh  and use the helicopter pad as a place to pray. After all, we are in the midst of a war on our borders involving an Arab Islamist group bent not only the killing of Jews, but publicly and proudly sworn to  the destruction of the Jewish state.Can one detect  any hostility expressed  towards  our Israeli Arab patients? Do we provide second class service ? Is there  a problem at all ? The simple  answer is that both before and during the war, Arab   patients were and are treated in our hospital no differently  than are their  Jewish counterparts. In fact,  Soroka Hospital’s  staff is made up of both Arabs and Jews and whatever our politics,  in our day to day work we  actually get along quite well. In fact, all over the country, Israeli Arab doctors  operate on Israeli Jewish patients. For there part,  Israeli Jewish paramedics  look after Israeli Arabs when the Hamas missiles fall in the south, or Hizbullah rockets in the north. And they   can and do  strike  both Israeli Arabs and Jews. Evidently our enemies believe in equality.  

In fact,  relations between the two nations here in Israel  reminds me of  the charged social/political climate when I lived in Quebec in the fractious 1980s. Then (and now)   Anglos and Francophones,   despite sometimes powerful political disagreements,  pragmatically worked together.

It is true that for the most part, Jewish and Arab folk here in my  hospital  avoid  talking  much about politics. But we do talk about our patients and their needs. I will not deny that  Israeli society  suffers  from friction between her nearly 6 million Jews and more than 1 million Arabs as well as displaying both social and economic  gaps.  But then again other countries are burdened with  not   dissimilar problems: for example United States with whites and blacks; Canada and Australia with their aboriginal populations; or the UK with her Moslem minority. And these countries do not have a war raging on their borders nor missiles lobbed at them from just outside.

That being said, neither within the  health service in general nor Israeli  hospitals in particular  have I ever noticed any problems; furthermore despite the tensions,   this war has not produced any in this domain. My wife, also a doctor  who works in a  Jerusalem hospital  feels the same.  Despite the conflict, Israeli  hospitals remain  bastions of civic and civil sanity.

When this war started the hospital administration decided to close down several wards including my own Geriatrics department  because they were relatively non secure against a missile attack. (A direct hit would of course pulverize any building here.) As well the neonatal intensive care unit also had to be  transferred.   The scene was an evocative one indeed:  a variegated  caravan of mothers and fathers — half of whom were Beduins with their long flowing robes mixed in with Jewish mothers and fathers, dressed in more conventional styles, all pushing their babies in incubators to their new home in the hospital. Five of the  neonates  were attached to  ventilators  Along with parents were staff, both  Arab and Jewish  helping them along.

We all hope  that one day,  despite this recent round of fighting,  peace will break out  between Israel and her neighbors,  including the Palestinian Arabs  of the Gaza Strip. Until then, despite all pressures, our hospital as well  as all health institutions in Israel remain an excellent model for future coexistence between Arab and Jew.