When Israel entered
the Yom Kippur War a flood of volunteers arrive to Israel to help the war embattled
nation. When the war ended most of the volunteers packed their bags and left back
to their countries. At that time Prime Minister Golda Meir, in a speech in the
Knesset, questioned the phenomenon: “They come to fight our war and risk their lives
for us but they will not stay to live among us?!”
This is, for you, Hadassah
hospital, opened in 1932 on Mount Scopus. Women and men from around the world, members
of the Hadassah Woman Zionist Organization make sure the hospital delivers its
duty to take care of Israel’s medical needs.
For
nearly 100 years, Hadassah Medical Center has been a leader in medicine and
nursing in Israel, laying the foundation and setting the standards for the
country's modern health care system. Hadassah has developed Israel's community
health services, established the first modern hospital and medical and nursing
schools, and set the climate for medical research in Israel.The majority of medical breakthroughs in Israel have taken place at Hadassah. The first successful heart transplant was performed at Hadassah - as was the first robotic surgery and the world's First Computer-Assisted Hip Replacement Surgery.
Today, Hadassah is known for instituting and implementing "The Medicine of Tomorrow" - incorporating advanced solutions with personalized treatment.
Despite world turmoil,
depression and the Holocaust, Hadassah kept facilitating services to the
citizens of Eretz Yisreal.
After
1948 War of Independence, though Israel has held presence in Hadassah Mount
Scopus it was no longer operating as a hospital. So, in 1961, the extensive
campus of the Hadassah University Hospital was opened in Ein Kerem, a new part
of the city. The 800-bed tertiary care hospital treats virtually every
conceivable aspect of modern medicine and serves as a national referral center
for complex and challenging medical cases. With over 130 departments and
clinics, Hadassah Ein Kerem provides Israel's most advanced diagnostic and
therapeutic services for the local and national population and a significant number
of international patients.Apart for medical Hadassah supports other organization related to women, such a Jewish National Fund (JNF) and others.
At the magnificent
Beverly Hills home of Shiva and Joseph Daneshgar, the Haifa Malka Hadassah
Chapter of Southern California (http://www.hadassahhaifamalka.org/), held its “Celebrating
Life, Become a Guardian Angel and Sponsor a Child at Hadassah Hospital“ Annual Fund
Raising Dinner Gala, co-chaired by Sima Pakravan, Sima Toubia and Mariam Emrani.
The large attendance and raising $120,000 in one evening, spoke volume of the
support this medical institute is honored with by its members from around the
world. This proves, once again, that the Hadassah Southern Californian chapter remains
in its solid top position, among all other chapters, as top fundraiser in the
USA and the world.
Guest speaker was Dr.
Wendy Walsh who entertained the guests with a serious discussion about
intimacy, relations and sexual economy.
Just as the Torah, which
the nation of Israel received and shared with the world, kept the Jewish nation
alive throughout a millennia, it is Hadassah Medical Center in Jerusalem that
keeps, and is synonymous to the advance medicine and medical treatment Israel
is known for and which she shares with the entire world.
Hadassah Medical Center
is an institute every human being is to be proud of. The support the Haifa
Malka Hadassah Chapter of Southern California amasses for this institute is the
ultimate example of charity.
At present Hadassah
is going through a financial crisis. Women all over the world invest a
tremendous amount of time, efforts and assets to keep the institute open and operating
so it can offer its services to everyone, Jews and any other minority residing
in Israel. Yet, the sad part is that the world ignores Hadassah’s indiscriminating
modus or operandi, vilifying Israel and accusing her for being an apartheid
state.
Ask a Jew why he does
that? Because that is the way of a Jewish culture, to help others until,
hopefully one day the world will recognize their goodwill. But my question is,
till when, we, Jews, Israel, will need to hear the false blame game applied to
us?
No comments:
Post a Comment