Being a doctor in Gaza - can't keep going without your help
Published on October 21, 2024 by Mohammed Mansour
I am a doctor in Gaza. I spend every day of my life thinking about cause and effect. A collapsed lung causes a patient to be unable to breathe. Relieving the pressure causes the patient to be able to breathe again. A missile into a bedroom causes severe burns and broken bones. Support from hundreds of people in the form of donations for medication and treatment has caused hundreds more people to be alive than would have lived otherwise.
Among Muslims, it is believed that if you gift a prayer mat to a person, all the prayers they pray upon it will count towards your own soul, as well. If a person saves the life of another human, with medicine, with food, with money, all the good that that life will go on to do becomes a part of them-- cause and effect.
The rising price of medications in Gaza is causing it to become more and more difficult to continue running the clinic. Your help, today, will cause the clinic to remain open-- and lives to continue being saved.
Among Muslims, it is believed that if you gift a prayer mat to a person, all the prayers they pray upon it will count towards your own soul, as well. If a person saves the life of another human, with medicine, with food, with money, all the good that that life will go on to do becomes a part of them-- cause and effect.
The rising price of medications in Gaza is causing it to become more and more difficult to continue running the clinic. Your help, today, will cause the clinic to remain open-- and lives to continue being saved.