Childhood cancer patients in Lebanon must battle disease while under
fire
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[November 27, 2024]
By SALLY ABOU AL JOUD
BEIRUT (AP) — Carol Zeghayer gripped her IV as she hurried down the
brightly lit hallway of Beirut’s children’s cancer center. The
9-year-old's face brightened when she spotted her playmates from the
oncology ward.
Diagnosed with cancer just months before the conflict between Hezbollah
and Israel erupted in October 2023, Carol relies on weekly trips to the
center in the Lebanese capital for treatment.
But what used to be a 90-minute drive, now takes up to three hours on a
mountainous road to skirt the heavy bombardment in south Lebanon, but
still not without danger from Israeli airstrikes. The family is just one
among many across Lebanon now grappling with the hardships of both
illness and war.
“She’s just a child. When they strike, she asks me, ‘Mama, was that
far?’” said her mother, Sindus Hamra.
The family lives in Hasbaya, a province in southeastern Lebanon where
the rumble of Israeli airstrikes has become part of daily life. Just 15
minutes away from their home, in the front-line town of Khiam, Israeli
troops and Hezbollah fighters clash amidst relentless bombardments.
On the morning of a recent trip to Beirut for her treatment, the family
heard a rocket roar and its deafening impact as they left their home.
Israeli airstrikes have also hit vehicles along the Damascus-Beirut
highway, which Carol and her mother have to cross.
The bombardment hasn’t let up even as hopes grew in recent days that a
ceasefire might soon be agreed.
More than war, Hamra fears that Carol will miss chemotherapy.
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“Her situation is very tricky — her cancer can spread to her head,”
Hamra said, her eyes filling with tears. Her daughter, diagnosed first
with cancer of the lymph nodes and later leukemia, has completed a third
of her treatment, with many months still ahead.
While Carol's family remains in their home, many in Lebanon have been
displaced by an intensified Israeli bombardment that began in late
September. Tens of thousands fled their homes in southern and eastern
Lebanon, as well as Beirut’s southern suburbs — among them were families
with children battling cancer.
The Children’s Cancer Center of Lebanon quickly identified each
patient’s location to ensure treatments remained uninterrupted,
sometimes facilitating them at hospitals closer to the families' new
locations, said Zeina El Chami, the center’s fundraising and events
executive.
During the first days of the escalation, the center admitted some
patients for emergency care and kept them there as it was unsafe to send
them home, said Dolly Noun, a pediatric hematologist and oncologist.
“They had no place to go,” she added. "We’ve had patients getting
admitted for panic attacks. It has not been easy.”
The war has not only deepened the struggles of young patients.
“Many physicians have had to relocate,” Noun said. “I know physicians,
who work here, who haven’t seen their parents in like six weeks because
the roads are very dangerous.”
Since 2019, Lebanon has been battered by cascading crises — economic
collapse, the devastating Beirut port explosion in 2020, and now a
relentless war — leaving institutions like the cancer center struggling
to secure the funds needed to save lives.
“Cancer waits for no one,” Chami said. The crises have affected the
center’s ability to hold fundraising events in recent years, leaving it
in urgent need of donations, she added.
The facility is currently treating more than 400 patients aged from few
days to 18 years old, Chami said. It treats around 60% of children with
cancer in Lebanon.
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Mohammad Mousawi, 8, a displaced boy from the southern suburb of
Beirut who suffers from leukaemia, steps out the entrance of the
Children's Cancer Center of Lebanon, in Beirut, Lebanon, Friday,
Nov. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
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For Carol, the war is sometimes a topic of conversation with her friends
at the cancer center. Her mother hears her recount hearing the booms and
how the house shook.
For others, the moments with their friends in the center's playroom
provide a brief escape from the grim reality outside.
Eight-year-old Mohammad Mousawi darts around the playroom, giggling as
he hides objects and books for his playmate to find. Too absorbed by the
game, he barely answers questions, before the nurse calls him for his
weekly chemotherapy treatment.
His family lived in Ghobeiry, a neighborhood in Beirut’s southern
suburbs. Their house was marked for destruction in an Israeli evacuation
warning weeks ago, his mother said.
“But till now, they haven’t struck it,” said his mother, Suzan Mousawi.
“They have hit (buildings) around it — two behind it and two in front of
it.”
The family has relocated three times. They first moved to the mountains,
but the bitter cold weakened Mohammad’s already fragile immune system.
Now they’ve settled in Ain el-Rummaneh, not far from their home in the
southern Beirut suburbs known as Dahiyeh, which has come under
significant bombardment. As the Israeli military widened the radius of
its bombardment, some buildings hit were less than 500 meters (yards)
from their current home.
The Mousawis have lived their entire lives in Dahiyeh, Suzan Mousawi
said, until the war uprooted them. Her parents’ home was bombed. “All
our memories are gone,” she said.
Mohammad has 15 weeks of treatment left, and his family is praying it
will be successful. But the war has stolen some of their dreams.
“When Mohammad fell ill, we bought a house,” she said. “It wasn’t big,
but it was something. I bought him an electric scooter and set up a
pool, telling myself we’d take him there once he finishes treatment.”
She fears the house, bought with every penny she had saved, could be
lost at any moment.
For some families, this kind of conflict is not new. Asinat Al Lahham, a
9-year-old patient of the cancer center, is a refugee whose family fled
Syria.
“We escaped one war to another,” Asinat’s mother, Fatima, added.
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As her father, Aouni, drove home from her chemotherapy treatment weeks
ago, an airstrike happened. He cranked up the music in the car, trying
to drown out the deafening sound of the attack.
Asinat sat in the back seat, clutching her favorite toy. “I wanted to
distract her, to make her hear less of it,” he said.
In the medical ward on a recent day, Asinat sat in a chair hooked to an
IV drip, negotiating with her doctor. “Just two or three small pinches,”
she pleaded, asking for flavoring for her instant noodles that she is
not supposed to have.
“I don’t feel safe … nowhere is safe … not Lebanon, not Syria, not
Palestine,” Asinat said. “The sonic booms are scary, but the noodles
make it better,” she added with a mischievous grin.
The family has no choice but to stay in Lebanon. Returning to Syria,
where their home is gone, would mean giving up Asinat’s treatment.
“We can’t leave here,” her mother said. “This war, her illness … it’s
like there’s no escape.”
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