[WCUSP] what would happened if Mary came to Bethlehem

Odile Hugonot Haber odilehh at gmail.com
Tue Jan 2 23:36:36 CST 2007


It was not great in the time of Mary either, all the first born
were massacred by the Herod, the king under Roman occupation.  Who
ever dared to think got crucified. I guess it it is a karmic reversal
to see nowadays Romans kneeling and praying to a crucified mystic Jew
that Christians called the son of G-d.
Odile
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The Independent (UK)

Independent Appeal: 'What would happen if the Virgin Mary came to
Bethlehem today?'

Johann Hari on the plight of pregnant women in the West Bank, where
babies are dying needlessly

Published: 23 December 2006

In two days, a third of humanity will gather to celebrate the birth
pains of a Palestinian refugee in Bethlehem - but two millennia later,
another mother in another glorified stable in this rubble-strewn,
locked-down town is trying not to howl.

Fadia Jemal is a gap-toothed 27-year-old with a weary, watery smile.
"What would happen if the Virgin Mary came to Bethlehem today? She
would endure what I have endured," she says.

Fadia clutches a set of keys tightly, digging hard into her skin as
she describes in broken, jagged sentences what happened. "It was 5pm
when I started to feel the contractions coming on," she says. She was
already nervous about the birth - her first, and twins - so she told
her husband to grab her hospital bag and get her straight into the
car.

They stopped to collect her sister and mother and set out for the
Hussein Hospital, 20 minutes away. But the road had been blocked by
Israeli soldiers, who said nobody was allowed to pass until morning.
"Obviously, we told them we couldn't wait until the morning. I was
bleeding very heavily on the back seat. One of the soldiers looked
down at the blood and laughed. I still wake up in the night hearing
that laugh. It was such a shock to me. I couldn't understand."

Her family begged the soldiers to let them through, but they would not
relent. So at 1am, on the back seat next to a chilly checkpoint with
no doctors and no nurses, Fadia delivered a tiny boy called Mahmoud
and a tiny girl called Mariam. "I don't remember anything else until I
woke up in the hospital," she says now. For two days, her family hid
it from her that Mahmoud had died, and doctors said they could
"certainly" have saved his life by getting him to an incubator.

"Now Mariam is at an age when she asks me where her brother is," Fadia
says. "She wants to know what happened to him. But how do I explain
it?" She looks down. "Sometimes at night I scream and scream." In the
years since, she has been pregnant four times, but she keeps
miscarrying. "I couldn't bear to make another baby. I was convinced
the same thing would happen to me again," she explains. "When I see
the [Israeli] soldiers I keep thinking - what did my baby do to
Israel?"

Since Fadia's delivery, in 2002, the United Nations confirms that a
total of 36 babies have died because their mothers were detained
during labour at Israeli checkpoints. All across Bethlehem - all
across the West Bank - there are women whose pregnancies are being
disturbed, or worse, by the military occupation of their land.

In Salfit, on the other side of the West Bank, Jamilla Alahad Naim,
29, is waiting for the first medical check-up of her five-month
pregnancy. "I am frightened all the time," she says. "I am frightened
for my baby because I have had very little medical treatment and I
cannot afford good food ... I know I will give birth at home with no
help, like I did with Mohammed [her last child]. I am too frightened
to go to hospital because there are two checkpoints between our home
[and there] and I know if you are detained by the soldiers, the mother
or the baby can die out there in the cold. But giving birth at home is
very dangerous too."

Hindia Abu Nabah - a steely 31-year-old staff nurse at Al Zawya
Clinic, in Salfit district - says it is "a nightmare" to be pregnant
in the West Bank today. "Recently, two of our pregnant patients here
were tear-gassed in their homes ... The women couldn't breathe and
went into premature labour. By the time we got there, the babies had
been delivered stillborn."

Many of the medical problems afflicting pregnant women here are more
mundane than Jamilla's darkest fears: 30 per cent of pregnant
Palestinians suffer from anaemia, a lack of red blood cells. The
extreme poverty caused by the siege and now the international boycott
seems to be a key factor. The doctors here warn grimly that as
ordinary Palestinians' income evaporates, they eat more staples and
fewer proteins - a recipe for anaemia. There is some evidence, they
add, that women are giving the best food to their husbands and
children, and subsisting on gristle and scraps. The anaemia leaves
women at increased risk of bleeding heavily and contracting an
infection during childbirth.

Earlier this year, conditions for pregnant women in the West Bank -
already poor - fell off a cliff. Following the election of Hamas, the
world choked off funding for the Palestinian Authority, which suddenly
found itself unable to pay its doctors and nurses. After several
months medical staff went on strike, refusing to take anything but
emergency cases. For more than three months, the maternity wards of
the West Bank were empty and echoing. Beds lay, perfectly made,
waiting for patients who could not come.

In all this time, there were no vitamins handed out, no ultrasound
scans, no detection of congenital abnormalities. Imagine that the NHS
had simply packed up and stopped one day and did not reopen for 12
weeks, and you get a sense of the scale of the medical disaster.

Some women were wealthy enough to go to the few private hospitals
scattered across the West Bank. Most were not. So because of the
international boycott of the Palestinians, every hospital warns there
has been an unseen, unreported increase in home births on the West
Bank.

I found Dr Hamdan Hamdan, the head of maternity services at Hussein
Hospital, Bethlehem, pacing around an empty ward, chain-smoking. "This
ward is usually full," he said. "The women who should be in this
hospital - what is happening to them?"

They have been giving birth in startlingly similar conditions to those
suffered by Mary 2,000 years ago. They have delivered their babies
with no doctors, no sterilised equipment, no back-up if there are
complications. They have been boycotted back into the Stone Age. The
strike ended this month after the PA raised funds from Muslim
countries - but the effects of stopping maternity services are only
now becoming clear. Hindia Abu Nabah says: "There is a clear link
between the deteriorating health situation and the international
boycott.

Amid this horror, one charity has been supporting pregnant Palestinian
women even as their medical services fell apart.

Merlin - one of the three charities being supported by the Independent
Christmas Appeal - has set up two mobile teams, with a full-time
gynaecologist and a pediatrician, to take medical services to the
parts of the West Bank cut off by the Israeli occupation. They provide
lab technicians and ultrasound machines - the fruits of the 21st
century.

I travelled with the team to the Salfit region - scarred by Israeli
settlements pumping out raw sewage on to Palestinian land - to see
women and children desperately congregating around them seeking help.
Amid the dozens of nervous women and swarms of sickly children, Rahme
Jima, 29, is sitting with her hands folded neatly in her lap. She is
in the last month of her pregnancy, and this is the first time she has
seen a doctor since she conceived.

"The nearest hospital is in Nablus, and we can't afford to pay for the
transport to get there through all the checkpoints," she says,
revealing she is planning - in despair - to give birth at home. Even
if she had the cash, she says she is "too frightened of being detained
at the checkpoint and being forced to give birth there". She sighs,
and adds: "I will be so relieved to finally be seen by a doctor, I
have been so worried." But when she returns from seeing the doctor,
she says: "I have anaemia, and they have given me iron supplements,"
supplied by Merlin. She can't afford to eat well; she lives with her
husband and four children in a room in her mother-in-law's house, and
her husband, Joseph, has been unemployed since his permit to move
through the checkpoints expired. "The doctor says I should have been
seen much earlier in my pregnancy. My baby will probably be born too
small."

All the problems afflicting these 21st century Marys are paraded in
Merlin's clinic. One terrified, terrorised mother after another
presents herself to the specialists here, and leaves clutching packs
of folic acid, calcium, iron and medicine. Dr Bassam Said Nadi, the
senior medical officer for this area, says: "I thank Merlin for the
specialist care they have brought. Not long ago, we didn't even have
petrol in our cars. Alongside other organisations, they are helping us
survive this terrible period in our country's history."

Merlin can only maintain these mobile clinics with your help. Leaning
in the doorway of her bare clinic, Hindia Abu Nabah says: "Tell your
readers that we need their help. There are no Hamas or Fatah foetuses.
They don't deserve to be punished. I couldn't stand to look another
anaemic woman in the eye and tell her that her baby will be
underweight or malformed and we don't have iron supplements to give
her. I can't go back to that. I can't."

http://news.independent.co.uk/appeals/indy_appeal/article2097790.ece

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