Israel’s Ramadan Responders – Fasting and Saving Lives
On June 13th, the penultimate day of the month of Ramadan, the holiest month in the Muslim calendar, five United Hatzalah emergency medical volunteers responded to a large-scale fire in Umm al-Fahm. The blaze took place in an auto-body parts store and quickly spread to other buildings and even engulfed part of the wooded area behind the store. The resulting fire was massive and endangered a number of buildings, residents and passersby. In addition to the stores and the traffic who were almost engulfed in flames, a number of teenagers who were in the area became trapped and were threatened by the blaze. Numerous children sustained light injuries and suffered from smoke inhalation.
United Hatzalah volunteer EMT Sanaa Mahameed who lives in Umm al-Fahm said: “I wasn’t in the city when the blaze began, but shortly thereafter, rescue services asked for all available responders in the area to come as they were fearing that it would turn into a mass casualty incident (MCI). Luckily that didn’t happen and only a few people were lightly injured. We provided those suffering from smoke inhalation with high-flow oxygen and treated the light injuries that the teenagers had sustained,” said Mahameed.
Sanaa was joined at the scene by fellow Muslim responders from the area, Dr. Dahar Agbariyah, and EMTs Yassuf Giselle, Lotafi Mahameed and Nada Muslimiani. Sanaa, as well as the other responders, finished treating those injured in the fire and then almost immediately received an emergency alert directing them to a car accident that took place on Highway 65 outside of Umm al-Fahm towards the direction of Afula.
“It is hard to go from call to call during a fast,” Sanaa said. “It’s not that I’m hungry, but it is hot outside, especially during the summer and after responding to emergencies, especially a large fire like today, one gets very thirsty. I’ve seen a lot of people faint due to the combination of the heat and the fast and the lack of essential vitamins.”
While Jews fast for six days a year throughout the calendar, Muslims fast for 30 days straight, not eating or drinking anything during the daylight hours for an entire month. Only after night falls can they eat or drink. It is a marathon of fasting and one that makes keeping with a daily routine extremely difficult. Responding to emergency calls in the middle of that routine is even more challenging yet the close to 400 Muslim volunteers of United Hatzalah do it every day.
“For me, it is not a question of whether to respond or not. Fast or no fast, if there is someone who needs help or a life needs saving, then I will do whatever I can to help the person and save their life. That is why I do what I do,” said Mahameed.
Murad Aliyan, who sits on the board of the organization and plays a vital role in coordinating all of the Muslim volunteers and chapters in the organization said: “Ramadan is one of the hardest things for a Muslim first responder. Between the heat and the continued fasting every day for a month, a person feels at a certain point that they have no more energy to do anything that is not absolutely necessary. In spite of all that, there are some people who are filled with motivation to go out and save lives in the quickest and most professional way possible. At the end of the day, our goal is to save lives and it doesn’t matter to us who those lives belong to or where they are located. If we can help them, we will. The motivation of our Muslim volunteers which is usually exceptionally high is even more so this month. We have gotten used to giving everything we have got even while fasting and facing the intense heat of a Middle-Eastern summer.”
President and Founder of United Hatzalah Eli Beer spoke about the unique dedication of these volunteers. “It is certainly not an easy thing to respond to calls while fasting. For me, to do it while fasting for a month is unfathomable, yet here we have 400 volunteers who do it every year, every day, for a month. It is certainly a true sign of selflessness and nothing makes me prouder than seeing our volunteers responding and saving lives regardless of what circumstances they were in beforehand. Whether it is responding to a fire such as the group from Wadi Ara did yesterday, or responding to a CPR call in Abu Gosh that many of the responders who live in that area did this morning, these Muslim volunteers really are going above and beyond the call of duty to help others regardless of religion, national association or politics. They truly are heroes.”
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(Photos – Top photo: Muslim volunteers of United Hatzalah and the local ambulance team of Kfar Kara pose together after a training session. (Sanaa Mahameed 3rd from right) – Credit Sanaa Mahameed/United Hatzalah
2nd photo – Fire in Umm al-Fahm on Wed. June 13th – Credit Sanaa Mahameed
3rd Photo – Murad Aliyan – Credit United Hatzalah
4th photo – Murad Aliyan accompanies Nadel Sadir who received Jerusalem’s Citation for First Responders in May due to his fast response during the Temple Mount terror attack last summer. – Credit United Hatzalah
5th photo – Sanaa Mahameed and another responder from Kfar Kara treat a young boy in a local school. – Credit Sanaa Mahameed/United Hatzalah)