United Hatzalah

Aharon Ben Harush – My 64-Hour Mission Two Save Two Newborn Babies In War-Torn Ukraine

Aharon-and-Vicky-with-presenting-the-first-baby-to-his-Israeli-parents-at-the-airport-in-Romania

Aharon Ben Harush – My 64-Hour Mission Two Save Two Newborn Babies In War-Torn Ukraine

Aharon and the second set of new parents preparing to leave Moldova with their new daughter

Chisinau – On Friday night, just before Shabbat (the sabbath), I received a phone call from my dear father-in-law Eli Beer, the President and Founder of United Hatzalah. He told me that there is a two-day-old baby whose mother is in Israel and that the baby needs to be rescued from Kyiv. “You must drop everything and assist in this matter,” he told me.

This was to be the beginning of a 36-hour expedition without sleep.

In my first phone call, I got the details that I needed to mount the rescue mission. Our team, which is based here in Moldova, is focused mainly on providing humanitarian aid and emergency medical care to Ukrainian refugees who are coming across the border into Moldova. However, as we know from our experiences in Israel, as well as in other international relief missions, when something needs to be done quickly and lives are at stake, we step in wherever we can.

In this case, a new baby had been born to a surrogate mother with the biological mother residing in Israel. After the baby was born, the surrogate mother had abandoned the baby in the hospital and left the country due to the war. The nurse in charge of the baby at the hospital informed us that if we didn’t collect her by 9:00 a.m. on Saturday morning, she would leave and the baby would be placed in an orphanage. They simply couldn’t stay in the hospital, as it was unsafe.

Instead of enjoying the Shabbat meal with other members of the United Hatzalah mission who were returning from their efforts at the borders, I began phone calls to no less than 29 local ambulance companies. After a few hours I succeeded in locating a company that was willing (for a large sum of money) to proceed to a meeting point 80 km from Kyiv, but they refused to enter Kyiv due to the heavy shelling taking place there.

Thus began a secondary rescue operation in order to evacuate the baby from Kyiv to the meeting place. Through various connections, I succeeded in finding a doctor who was willing to help and took the baby, under armed escort, to the meeting place. During this time, the arranged meeting place with the ambulance company had been changed due to bombing attacks that were taking place in the region. After eight hours had passed, the baby reached the ambulance I had hired. For an additional nine nerve-racking, tense, hours involving tons of phone calls and coordinating, the baby safely reached the border with Moldova. Together with Israel’s Foreign Ministry representative Itzik Kagar, who committed to helping us here, and with the assistance of former Israeli ambassador to Ukraine Joel Lion, we obtained all of the necessary documents to have the baby transferred to our care in Moldova. The border police, who by now have gotten to know us pretty well, were also informed and coordinated together with us on the operation.

The mission was accomplished, the baby crossed the border. United Hatzalah volunteer EMT Vicky Tiferet, a mother of 4, and I myself, received the baby.

However, the problems were not yet over. We drove towards the Romanian border, since the Moldovan airport which is adjacent to the Ukrainian border, was closed to air traffic. Vicky and I were interrogated at the border, which was to be expected – after all, they wanted to know what we were doing with a 3-day-old baby who had no connection to us.

Thankfully after 10 additional hours, we arrived at the Iasi airport in Romania on Monday morning, where we waited for the mother and father who were arriving on a special flight from Israel, arranged by United Hatzalah. The flight was coming into Romania together with additional medical teams and supplies for our mission in Moldova. The reunion was tearful for all involved. A complicated rescue mission that involved four countries, multiple teams, and two full days of effort on my part, and the part of many others, came to fruition. But while the challenges for this family were over, another family’s challenges were just beginning.

Onboard the flight from Israel was a second set of parents who were coming to rescue their surrogate child. Their child was also born to a surrogate mother in Kyiv. With my assistance, they were hoping to retrieve their child as well. I had to go back to work.

I cannot provide the details of the entire operation since they cannot yet be published, but after 28 hours the second baby, an infant girl, was also, thank G-d, on her way to Israel. The tears of joy and delight of both sets of parents moved and deeply affected us all.

I have organized many different operations in my life but this is definitely one that I will never forget as long as I live. Saving two newborn infants, stuck in the middle of a war, is something that will stay with me forever. I cannot explain the feeling I have when I look back on the events from this past weekend, but the work put in, and the humanity shown by all involved, was simply mind-boggling.

I’m delighted that two sets of parents have been united with their new children and are sitting and happily enjoying their babies in Israel. I’m proud and excited to be part of the United Hatzalah rescue mission helping the refugees from Ukraine however old, or young, they are.

Aharon Ben-Harush is a United Hatzalah volunteer EMT from Israel. He left his recently married wife in Jerusalem to act as the Deputy Commander of United Hatzalah’s Medical Aid and Humanitarian Relief mission ‘Operation Orange Wings’ to the Ukrainian-Moldovan border.

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