Latest Breaking News On - ஆவி மார்கஸ் - Page 1 : comparemela.com
Miriam Adelson donates 150 lifesaving ambucycles to United Hatzalah
heritagefl.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from heritagefl.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Miriam Adelson donates 150 lifesaving ambucycles to United Hatzalah
jns.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jns.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Tormented EMTs Take Up 10% of Mt Meron Tragedy Online Support | The Jewish Press - JewishPress com | David Israel | 22 Iyyar 5781 – May 4, 2021
jewishpress.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jewishpress.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
1 shares
Dr. Roi Babila recounts the experience of identifying 39 bodies in the Mount Meron disaster, in an interview on May 2, 2021. (Screen capture: Ynet)
The director of the medical clinic on Mount Meron, a place more used to treating dehydration rather than multiple casualty events, spoke on Sunday of the pain of being forced to pronounce 39 victims dead after the disaster at last week’s Lag B’Omer gathering.
The crush at Mount Meron in the early hours of Friday killed 45 people, including over a dozen children and teenagers, in the country’s deadliest civilian disaster.
Dr. Roi Babila’s work at the makeshift clinic on Mount Meron usually consisted of treating patients for fatigue, dehydration, and minor bruising, according to the Haaretz daily.
Nathan Jeffay is The Times of Israel s health and science correspondent
Rescuers at Mount Meron, shortly after tragedy unfolded. Avi Marcus, Chief paramedic of United Hatzalah of Israel, is top left. (courtesy of United Hatzalah)
Meron rescuers are reeling. They are the men and women who were ready for anything but not for this.
They are some of the toughest members of this hardy nation. They take war and terror attacks in their stride. But the scene on Friday, when 45 Israelis were crushed to death and many more injured, was too much even for them.
“Some of our people started weeping and crying as they treated the injured, and had to move away,” an emotional Avi Marcus, head paramedic of the United Hatzalah emergency organization, which had hundreds of medics at the scene, told The Times of Israel in his Jerusalem office on Sunday.