Unlikely Facebook friendships save Afghan baby with heart defects

An Afghan baby living in Peshawar had been born with his two main arteries reversed and two holes in his heart


News Desk August 18, 2016
PHOTO: NEW YORK TIMES

HOLON, ISRAEL: A young English teacher in Jalalabad, Afghanistan and a retired State Department official living in Haifa, Israel joined hands to save a baby in Pakistan with life-threatening congenital heart problems.

A 14-month-old Afghan baby living in Peshawar was born with two reversed main arteries  and two holes in his heart. Yehia’s parents found a local specialist who could perform the necessary surgery at a cost of $7,000. With just $200 in savings and already indebted with costly medical bills, the family requested a relative for help in Afghanistan during a visit to Jalalabad.

PHOTO: NEW YORK TIMES

Heartbreaking photo of Syrian boy draws attention to Aleppo

Farhad Zaheer, a teacher in Jalalabad who speaks English and is active on social media agreed to help the family. “No problem,” Zaheer, 29, recalls telling them. “I said, I know lots of people and I will contact them.’”

Among the people he contacted was Anna Mussman, 69, who has both American and Israeli citizenship. Zaheer had sent Mussman a friend request in 2012 after he worked on a project training teachers in Afghanistan's Nuristan province, which Mussman was overseeing for the State Department. He remembered her, he said, because she commented kindly on his posts.

“Hello dear Madam!” Zaheer wrote in a Facebook message with a photo of young Yehia attached. “This boy is my cousin who has been suffering from a hole in heart. If you can do anything for his good health, we would be very thankful to you.” Mussman, who was born to Holocaust survivors at a camp for the displaced in Germany, jumped at the opportunity. Within a few hours, she had contacted Simon Fisher, the executive director of Save a Child’s Heart, an Israeli charity that she had once heard about  on CNN. The organisation provides free surgery to children from developing countries.

Children in Syria’s Madaya await urgent medical help

“I realise helping a child from a country which Israel has no diplomatic relations is not easy, but perhaps possible,” Mussman wrote to Fisher in an email. “Thanks so much and Shabbat Shalom.”

Fisher, drawing on years of contacts, obtained Israeli visas for Yehia and his father after Mussman contacted him. But this entailed travelling through Turkey, since Afghanistan has no diplomatic relations with Israel.

Mussman had put Zaheer in touch with Iranian-American Fary Moini who had worked in Jalalabad and had connections there. Mussman had met Moini during a stint in Jalalabad. At Zaheer’s request, Moini wrote a moving letter to the diplomat, who she did not know, pleading for visas for Yehia and his father. Within a day, Zaheer picked them up.

Heartwarming pictures show children celebrating Eid in war-torn Syria

Unaware of the efforts underway, back in Jalalabad, Zaheer contacted Michael Davidson, another Israeli Facebook connection he had never met. Davidson, 70, emigrated from India in 1978 — and speaks Urdu. Along with Davidson, Moini, Gul, a relative of Fisher’s friend Yossi Betsalel, was also at hand in Holon for the surgery.

PHOTO: NEW YORK TIMES

PHOTO: NEW YORK TIMES

PHOTO: NEW YORK TIMES

Yahyu Mekonnen, 33, an Ethiopian surgeon, opened Yehia’s chest. Lior Sasson, who headed an operating team of nearly a dozen people, hummed an Israeli song while they stopped his tiny heart to patch it up. Eventually, they wheeled Yehia out, covered in bandages, even over his eyes. His father was surrounded by a makeshift family he had only just met. “You can cry,” Davidson urged.

This article originally appeared on New York Times, a partner of The Express Tribune.

COMMENTS (3)

Hamza | 7 years ago | Reply Humanity unites us all ! Good job done .
Ali | 7 years ago | Reply Thanks alot for this act of humanity . There is no border, religion and country limits for the humanity .
VIEW MORE COMMENTS
Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ