By JADE LEWIN
The children from Africa arrive in groups. Those up to the age of 5 arrive with their mothers. Those older than 5 are considered, owing to funding constraints, to be old enough to travel alone. They arrive with other children, accompanied by a nurse.
The children, nurses and mothers arrive weary, exhausted physically and mentally from 48-hours of travel. The children who are most unwell are taken straight to the hospital. The rest are taken from the airport to the Save A Child’s Heart children’s home in Holon, Tel Aviv, where they are encouraged to sleep for a few hours. In the morning, they are driven to the nearby Wolfson Medical Centre for a day of medical tests and cardiology screenings.
One cannot imagine what it must feel like, to arrive in a country so foreign to you that you have likely never even heard of it. To be leaving your village for the very first time to travel abroad to a strange country. To be five or six years old, in Israel without your mother or your father, and about to undergo a life-saving heart operation.
For most of the 250 plus children helped by Save A Child’s Heart each year, this is the only chance that they have at life.
There are millions of children around the globe suffering from rheumatic and congenital heart disease. At any given moment, thousands of children die due to a lack of adequate health care, clean drinking water, and access to medication.