(AP/Ariel Schalit)
Palestinians in Israeli hospital

Palestinian Gaza Patients in Israel

Ahmed, left, and Hadeel Hamdan enjoy an Israeli medical clown at Rambam Hospital. (AP/Ariel Schalit)

In contrast to how Israel is generally portrayed, this story highlights the truth about Israeli human rights. Even while facing terrorism from Gaza, Israel allows Gazan civilians in need of medical attention to receive care in Israeli hospitals.

The bedroom of Palestinian siblings Ahmed and Hadeel Hamdan looks like a hospital ward, filled with beeping machines, monitors, solution bags and sterilizing fluids.

This is where the Gaza teenagers spend 12 hours a day connected to dialysis machines. These contraptions — and their hopes for a better life — come from what some might consider a surprising source: an Israeli hospital.

Israel considers the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip to be a hostile entity, and it has maintained a blockade over the seaside territory — and fought three wars — since the Islamic militant group seized power in 2007. At the same time, it also allows thousands of Gazans to travel each year to hospitals in Israel. This arrangement, which sometimes includes security interrogations, highlights how after years of hostility, the fates of Israel and Gaza are deeply intertwined.

The Hamdan siblings, Ahmed 18, and his sister Hadeel, 15, have been regular guests at Rambam Hospital in Haifa since July 2012.

The children were initially treated in hospitals in Gaza, Egypt and Syria before receiving a medical referral to Rambam. That first lasted three months. The hospital would not let them go back to Gaza until Hadeel was able to walk again after being incapacitated for a month.

“I thank them very much because they exerted tireless effort, especially with the girl,” their mother, Manal, said.

Since then, Israeli doctors said a special treatment called automated peritoneal dialysis was the only way to keep the children alive, pending a kidney transplant. Without any machines or technicians in Gaza, Rambam worked with Palestinian officials to get the equipment installed at the family’s home and trained their mother how to operate the machines.

“From here, we call them and they follow with us step by step,” she said.

On a recent afternoon, she put a medical mask over her black veil and on the children’s faces, sterilized everything in the room, connected the tubes into the children’s bellies and pressed the buttons of the machines. The 12-hour session had begun.

Their mother said it is “boring and exhausting” to stay at home to care for the children, but she is grateful they are alive. She said the hospital makes sure that solutions and medical supplies are delivered to the family on regular basis.

Earlier this month, the Hamdan family returned to Israel with their 40-year-old aunt Najlaa, who is donating a kidney to her nephew Ahmed.

“Every time I see him connected to dialysis, my heart tears apart,” the aunt said.

The Israeli defense body responsible for Palestinian civilian affairs, Cogat, said it granted roughly 27,000 medical permits for Gazans to travel to care in Israel, Palestinian hospitals in the West Bank and east Jerusalem or in neighboring Jordan. That number includes patients and relatives allowed to join them.

Among those treated in Israel last year was Hatem Moussa, an AP photographer critically wounded in an explosion during last year’s war between Israel and the terror organization Hamas.

Cogat had no specific breakdowns on the patients’ final destinations, but a World Health Organization report said 3,840 Gazans were treated in Israel in 2013, the most recent year available. The most popular reasons for care are cancer treatments, ophthalmology and pediatric care.

Those who fail to understand the truth about Israeli human rights, believe the fact that Israel grants any permits is somewhat surprising given the years of hostilities with Hamas, an Islamic group sworn to Israel’s destruction. Israel has no direct contact with Hamas and coordinates all movement through the rival Palestinian Authority in the West Bank.

But, when it comes to medical care and human rights, Israel does not differentiate between terrorists and innocent civilians, treating everyone equally.

Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev said granting access to Israeli hospitals was “fundamentally” a humanitarian matter. “This is an ongoing policy. That has been the policy for decades,” he said. Israel even treated a daughter of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh last year.

Although Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005, it still controls most of its land crossings as well as its airspace and coastline to prevent terrorism against its citizens. Egypt has also taken strong measures in ensuring the blockade on Gaza, restricting movement through its main border crossing, destroying a huge part of the town of Rafah on the border and virtually shutting a once-thriving smuggling business.

Israel says the blockade is needed to prevent Hamas, which has fired thousands of rockets into the country, from rearming.

Despite the political difficulties, both the family and their Israeli caregivers talked of the strong connections they have forged during years of treatments. Dr. Daniella Magen, the Israeli physician treating the children at Rambam, warmly greeted them and gave their mother a big hug as she entered their hospital room.

“Regardless the Israeli actions against us, we deal with this issue from a humanitarian side; I want my children to live a normal life like any other person,” the mother said.

By: Fares Akram, AP and United with Israel Staff