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The Chicago surgeon treating wounded in Syria, Ukraine and Gaza

The Chicago surgeon treating wounded in Syria, Ukraine and Gaza

Yahoo07-04-2025

Dr. Samer Attar remembers all his patients, he said — and there are a lot of them.
The Chicago surgeon, 49, recently finished a fifth mission to Gaza and he's also treated the wounded in Syria and Ukraine, risking life and limb to help the victims of war. Attar is also a professor of surgery at Northwestern University.
"I can't repair the world. But I can stand next to you. I can live amongst you. I can share your grief. I can feel your fear. I can serve your community," Attar told 60 Minutes after a recent trip to Gaza. "I can bear witness to your suffering. And then just make some noise about it. And it's not much, but it beats burying your head in hatred and violence and ignorance."
The Wounds of War
60 Minutes viewers first met Attar in Syria — his parents' home country — in 2017. At the time, hospitals were being bombed, and more than 800 medical staffers had died in attacks. It was Attar's fourth trip to the war zone. He was there as a volunteer with the Syrian American Medical Society.
"You work with the understanding that you might find yourself dead, or crippled, or dismembered on the floor next to the people you're trying to save," Attar told 60 Minutes at the time.
Healing and Hope
Dr. Attar continued visiting the war-torn country, including after a 2023 earthquake. At the time, he told 60 Minutes about a surgery he performed to help a 12-year-old girl. Correspondent Scott Pelley asked Attar what moments of progress like that meant to him.
"It means that there are days where you fight bouts of helplessness and hopelessness, and you wonder what exactly you're accomplishing, and you feel like you're trying to empty the ocean with a small cup because it never ends, and the suffering never ends and it never seems to be going away," Attar said. "But it's those, it's those brief flashes that are enough to keep you going for another month."
Going for another month — and beyond
60 Minutes spoke with Attar most recently in the Gulf state of Qatar, where some of his patients from Gaza have evacuated amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas war.
Attar described hospitals flooded with people in need and operating on patients on floors smeared with dirt and blood.
"The bombs land so close you feel the hospital shaking," Attar said. "At times the fighting and conflict is so intense you feel like the hospital will-- is gonna collapse on top of you."
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Cities Most at Risk for Rise in Heart Attacks as Canadian Wildfires Burn
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Newsweek

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  • Newsweek

Cities Most at Risk for Rise in Heart Attacks as Canadian Wildfires Burn

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Aid distribution resumes in Gaza, humanitarian group says
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Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Aid distribution resumes in Gaza, humanitarian group says

Editor's note: This story contains descriptions of graphic violence. Aid distribution through the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation sites (GHF) resumed at two sites in Rafah, Gaza, on Thursday, the group said. One of the sites, which has been used by GHF previously, is now closed after distribution was finished for the day, the U.S.-backed group said. The second site is a new one that is located 1 kilometer away and will open at 2:15 p.m. local time, according to the GHF. Aid in Gaza was paused after several people died and were injured trying to reach the sites to obtain food, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health, eyewitness reports on the ground and international aid organizations working in Gaza. Palestinians described harrowing scenes of bullets flying and people dying around them as they tried to get aid with a famine looming in Gaza. 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Gaza's 2.1 million residents will face a "crisis" level of food insecurity -- or worse -- through the end of September, according to an Integrated Food Security Phase Classification partnership report. He also noted that people are forced to go to the aid distribution areas despite the risks. "A week ago, my cousin Ibn Hassoonah, went to the aid station. They shot him dead [but we still go] because of the severity of the hunger," he said. "If they don't die from bullets, they die from hunger."

Aid distribution resumes in Gaza, humanitarian group says

time2 hours ago

Aid distribution resumes in Gaza, humanitarian group says

Editor's note: This story contains descriptions of graphic violence. Aid distribution through the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation sites (GHF) resumed at two sites in Rafah, Gaza, on Thursday, the group said. One of the sites, which has been used by GHF previously, is now closed after distribution was finished for the day, the U.S.-backed group said. The second site is a new one that is located 1 kilometer away and will open at 2:15 p.m. local time, according to the GHF. Aid in Gaza was paused after several people died and were injured trying to reach the sites to obtain food, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health, eyewitness reports on the ground and international aid organizations working in Gaza. Palestinians described harrowing scenes of bullets flying and people dying around them as they tried to get aid with a famine looming in Gaza. The U.S.- and Israel -backed GHF suspended distribution of aid in Gaza on Wednesday after a deadly shooting left at least 27 people dead and more than 90 others injured on Tuesday while people were trying to reach one of the distribution sites in southern Gaza, according to Gaza health officials, eyewitnesses on the ground in Gaza and the International Committee of the Red Cross working on the ground in Gaza. The GHF asked the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) to "enhance its security measures beyond the perimeter," "develop clearer guidance" and "enhance IDF force training to support safety," a GHF source told ABC News on Wednesday. The newly established food distribution centers, constructed last month according to satellite imagery obtained and reviewed by ABC News, in southern Gaza have been overrun since they opened last week, with thousands of Palestinians in search of food and medicine following Israel's partial lifting of the 11-week blockade of aid, according to aid groups. The Israeli government imposed an 11-week blockade on all humanitarian aid entering Gaza on March 2, after the temporary ceasefire between Israel and Hamas ended. The Israeli government said the blockade was put in place to pressure Hamas to release the remaining hostages being held in Gaza. One Palestinian who was injured trying to get flour at one of the sites said he was "surprised to find bullets hitting us," when he went in search of food. "I went to get some flour -- only flour. Just a kilo or two of flour for our home. We were surprised to find bullets hitting us. Even lying on the ground bullets were still hitting us," Kamel Muhanna, a Palestinian who was injured while attempting to receive aid in Rafah, told ABC News. Muhanna described people dying around him while he was near the aid distribution site trying to get food. Those whose family members were with them collected their bodies, but those who did not remained on the ground, he said. "The bullet passed through the head of the young man in front of me and then hit me. There were like 100 in front of me and I still got hit," Muhanna said. "If the bullet hadn't killed the young man in front of me, it would have taken off my arm." Dozens of Palestinians were killed and hundreds more were injured in two events in the last week, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health and the International Committee of the Red Cross working on the ground in Gaza. Nasser NaserAllah, a Palestinian who was being treated inside Nasser Hospital, told ABC News the aid "is like a trap." "If there wasn't aid, fewer people would have died," he said. "They killed women, children [there was] blood on the ground everywhere -- huge tragedies." The IDF acknowledged they "carried out warning fire approximately half a kilometer from the aid distribution center, targeting a few individuals who were approaching in a way that posed a security threat," in a video statement given in English by IDF spokesperson Effie Defrin. In a statement released on Tuesday, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said they have responded to five incidents, four of which had occurred in the previous 96 hours. The majority of victims suffered gunshot wounds, and "all responsive patients said they were trying to reach an assistance distribution site," the ICRC said. The GHF said it closed the distribution sites Wednesday for "preparations and staging" to prepare for the large number of people it expects to arrive. "We did not expect 15,000 per hour," the GHF said in the statement. At the same time, the GHF said in a statement to media Tuesday they have distributed approximately 7 million meals in Gaza since they began operating last week. The GHF also said they distributed 21 truckloads of food, totaling 20,160 boxes providing approximately 1,159,200 meals to Palestinians on Tuesday morning. Established international aid groups operating inside Gaza -- including Amnesty International and the ICRC -- and the United Nations have criticized the U.S.-backed aid distribution plan, saying it is militarized and negates the neutrality of international humanitarian work. NaserAllah claimed that the situation goes beyond hunger. "People are living in famine," he said. Gaza's entire population is experiencing critical levels of hunger, according to a report released last month. Gaza's 2.1 million residents will face a "crisis" level of food insecurity -- or worse -- through the end of September, according to an Integrated Food Security Phase Classification partnership report. He also noted that people are forced to go to the aid distribution areas despite the risks. "A week ago, my cousin Ibn Hassoonah, went to the aid station. They shot him dead [but we still go] because of the severity of the hunger," he said. "If they don't die from bullets, they die from hunger."

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