Christian Doctors Run Hospital for Muslim Patients in Egypt

<http://mychristianblood.blogspirit.com/archive/2009/04/08/christian-doctors-run-hospital-for-muslim-patients-in-egypt.html>http://mychristianblood.blogspirit.com/archive/2009/04/08/christian-doctors-run-hospital-for-muslim-patients-in-egypt.html
 


<http://mychristianblood.blogspirit.com/media/00/01/753314689.jpg>
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Tensions between Christians and Muslims in Egypt often make 
headlines, but the work of a group of Christian doctors paints a more 
upbeat picture of religious coexistence. The doctors run a hospital 
for mostly Muslim patients in Egypt's heartland - the Egyptian Delta 
town of Menhouf.

The afternoon call to prayer sounds in the predominantly Muslim 
Egyptian Delta town of Menhouf as doctors examine patients at the 
Harpur Memorial Hospital run by the Anglican diocese of North Africa.

Unlike most hospitals in Egypt, Harpur receives no money from the 
government and its mostly Christian staff of doctors donate their 
time to care for the hospital's primarily Muslim clientele.

It is a labor of love, says Dr. Samir Bakheet, a 62-year old 
gynecologist from Cairo, who runs the hospital:

He says most of his doctors are Christian, and that patients from 
across the region come because they trust the doctors and respect 
them. Our doctors, he says, have a strong faith and strong sense of 
purpose, which is to serve the sick. We are not here to make a 
profit, he insists.

The head nurse, Madame Hana'a, turns to a gruff looking old patient 
whom she calls Uncle Mahmoud, and asks how he is doing:

What brought you here, Uncle Mahmoud, she asks. His intestines have 
been bothering him, he says, and his whole body is weak. But, he 
adds, the doctors have done a good job of fixing me up.

Dr. Bakheet says 50,000 patients are treated at the hospital every 
year and a quarter of a million go through the doors, if their 
families are included. He says 90 to 95 percent of the patients are Muslim.

Anesthesiologist Dr. Michel Awad, who gave up a lucrative job in 
Cairo to come to Menhouf, says the work is rewarding and the 
hospital's founder, an Irish doctor named Frank Harpur, set an 
example for others to follow:

"Dr. Frank Harpur is an Irish doctor who came at the beginning of the 
1890s. He used to go with a houseboat down the branches of the Nile 
to the Delta area," said Dr. Awad. "He used to get offshore and to 
see the patients, and then go back to Cairo."

Dr. Harpur was so successful, notes Michel Awad, that he is still 
remembered for eradicating a parasite which was plaguing the countryside:

"At the beginning, there were many farmers who suffered from 
parasites, notably one parasite called enclostoma, feeding on the 
blood of the farmers, so they were getting weak and unable to do much 
work," he said. "Dr. Harpur and his team brought the treatment for 
this parasite and they treated many patients, so by and by word 
spread in the country and the government adopted the same treatment."

Douglas Penman, a third-year medical student from Sheffield, England 
is working for a short period at the hospital and says what the 
doctors accomplish is impressive:

"The commitment to serve the Muslim population in Menhouf is quite 
impressive," he said. "They charge a lot less than the government 
hospitals and they work at a better standard. The sheer volume of 
people that they manage to get through, is quite impressive."

Children are a large part of the work at Harpur Hospital, and some 
are too shy to talk, but the doctors coax them, softly.

"What is your name?" asks Dr. Samir. "It is Malek Abdel Ghaffar", the 
young patient replies timidly. She says her eyes are bothering her 
and her mother says they are swollen.

Anglican Bishop Mouneer Anis, who oversees Harpur Hospital, says its 
work is especially meaningful to him, since he is also a medical doctor:

"The medical program is very near to my heart, because I myself am a 
medical doctor. I graduated in Cairo University medical school in 
1974 and I worked in a hospital for 21 years before I became a 
bishop," he said.

He says the medical program is a way for him and other doctors to 
apply the Christian teaching of compassion for others:

"Jesus, when he came to our earth, he went around doing good for all 
people, regardless of their religion, their gender, their economic 
status, and sometimes the church itself cannot do this," he said.

The Bishop compares his team's medical work to that of a Good 
Samaritan, who goes where organizations like churches cannot go.

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