What's new

Kentucky doctor gathers medical aid for Syrian refugees

Aepsilons

ELITE MEMBER
May 29, 2014
24,960
118
35,589
Country
Japan
Location
United States
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Kheder Kutmah has helplessly watched his native Syria destroyed by civil war, his relatives caught among an authoritarian regime, rebel fighters and Islamic State militants.

He has also seen it spark a massive refugee crisis, pushing 3.3 million Syrians into Lebanon, Turkey and Jordan, where many now struggle to survive amid overwhelmed hospitals, refugee camps, housing and schools.

And that's where the Louisville doctor decided he could help.

Mobilizing the Kentucky-based Mercy Foundation, which he helped found, the Catholic Sisters of Charity of Nazareth and Louisville's Supplies Over Seas, Kutmah last week helped pack a 40-foot, ocean-going shipping container with $190,000 worth of donated medical supplies bound for Lebanon.

Filled with beds, stretchers, suction equipment, wound care supplies, sutures, anesthesia machines, crutches and scrubs, the container will be distributed to hospitals and clinics serving sick and wounded refugees — Mercy Foundation's fourth such shipment to Lebanon and Turkey since 2012.

"It could help save lives, and give them some hope. Even if it's almost nothing" compared to the need, he said.

Melissa Mershon, president of Supplies Over Seas, said the "health and hope" aid made possible by a Muslim doctor and Catholic group serves as a powerful symbol in a conflict saturated with divisive politics and religion.

"I think what's really remarkable is you have two very diverse faith groups who have come together who just want to help," Mershon said.

635527128642095512-112114-HealthAndHope05-FS.jpg


Michael Ludwig carries an armload of crutches onto an shipping container with other medical supplies and equipment bound for Syrian refugees in Lebanon. (Photo: Frankie Steele, The (Louisville, Ky.) Courier-Journal)

The aid comes as the war continues to drag on after it began in 2011 with protests amid the Arab Spring uprisings. A crackdown by President Bashar al-Assad led to an armed conflict with rebels that spiraled into bombings of residential areas and the use of chemical weapons.

More recently, the Islamic State, also known as ISIL or ISIS, has taken control of portions of the country. Some rebel groups also still hold ground, as does Assad's regime. More than 190,000 people have died in the war.

"It's a mess," said Kutmah, who left Syria in the 1990s but still has parents and siblings outside of Damascus, where travel is dangerous because each faction maintains dangerous roadblocks.

Meantime, the heavy flow of refugees is increasingly straining their resources and threatening political stability in nearby countries. Lebanon, with a population of just 4.5 million, has taken in more than a million refugees, causing severe shortages of housing, health care and jobs.

“I think what's really remarkable is you have two very diverse faith groups who have come together who just want to help.”

Melissa Mershon, president of Supplies Over Seas
A Washington Post story recently portrayed refugees living in a half-finished shopping malls and garbage-strewn junkyards with hand-dug latrines and unsafe water.

Amnesty International earlier this year highlighted a severe shortage of medical care, noting that few can afford Lebanon's private, expensive health system.

As a result, many "suffering from serious health conditions requiring hospital care or more complicated treatments often go untreated," the group said. That's where Kutmah's supplies will help.

"We're trying to collect medical supplies to help people who have been injured and been suffering" and hopefully save lives, he said, noting the supplies were donated from Kentucky and Indiana hospitals. "Hopefully they know from where it's coming" to build ties with the U.S.

He said his parents, brother and sister are still living in a government-controlled suburb of Damascus. Food, power, natural gas are all hard to come by.

The U.S. has funded relief efforts, and has signaled it plans to take more Syrian refugees — though likely only a tiny sliver of those in need.

For now, Kutmah said he hopes his efforts send "a major message, that's it not (about) fighting between religions. We can work and live together," he said.

Ky. doctor gathers medical aid for Syrian refugees
 
@Syrian Lion , @1000 and all, Just want to show to you that not all Americans or people from the West are without love for Syria and for the Syrian people. I hope more and more of such acts of mercies continues in size and strength. God Bless our friends in Syria and may they remain safe , that the fighting in Syria ceases.
 
@Syrian Lion , @1000 and all, Just want to show to you that not all Americans or people from the West are without love for Syria and for the Syrian people. I hope more and more of such acts of mercies continues in size and strength. God Bless our friends in Syria and may they remain safe , that the fighting in Syria ceases.

The only way is political settlement. But because some see it at as a zero sum game, it has become too bloody proxy conflict with no end in sight.
 
The only way is political settlement. But because some see it at as a zero sum game, it has become too bloody proxy conflict with no end in sight.

That is the only way, most importantly, these militant groups have to be de-armed, and disbanded, and a UN peacekeeping force should be mobilized to bring some sort of stability. Until the country rebuilds.

Till then, the medical aid sent by private citizens should keep on coming. The people in Syria (ordinary people caught in the middle of the fighting) need it more than ever.
 
That is the only way, most importantly, these militant groups have to be de-armed, and disbanded, and a UN peacekeeping force should be mobilized to bring some sort of stability. Until the country rebuilds.

Till then, the medical aid sent by private citizens should keep on coming. The people in Syria (ordinary people caught in the middle of the fighting) need it more than ever.

I dont know if you realise it but you are adopting the same exact position of that of Iran.
Iran has tried to mediate between the government and opposition forces ("fsa") and try to make them see that a negotiated settlement based on power-sharing is the only solution.
But they have all or nothing mentality.
The armed insurgence need to lay down their arms and negotiate with the state. No one cares about Assad. He is one single individual and insignificant in the grand scheme of things.
The genuine political opposition that demonstrated against the government, discouraged from taking up arms from the get go.
 
@Syrian Lion , @1000 and all, Just want to show to you that not all Americans or people from the West are without love for Syria and for the Syrian people. I hope more and more of such acts of mercies continues in size and strength. God Bless our friends in Syria and may they remain safe , that the fighting in Syria ceases.
True but the main point is that they allow their government to support this bloodshed... The Congress doesn't listen to the ordinary people... You know there are sanctions against Syria, and yet these governments are complaining against Syria for not doing much... Well remove the sanctions... Do you think sanctions against medical supplies is the right thing to do to "save" Syrians?

And there are many organizations that are taking donations, we need to watch out, most of them are sending the money to terrorists group... The only ones to trust is churches and Syrian churches those are the only ones sending supplies to the people
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Total: 1, Members: 0, Guests: 1)


Back
Top Bottom