CURE International Children's Hospital in Bethlehem Unites Three Faiths
Ginny McCabe
In December 2007, CURE International, a United States-based Christian medical NGO, broke ground on a $16.5 million state-of-the art hospital in Shepherd's Field in Bethlehem.
In addition to providing medical and special surgical care to children and their families, this cooperative project, which involves Christians, Muslims and Jews, is a model for peace in the region.
At the groundbreaking ceremony, Dr. Scott Harrison, president and CEO of CURE International, was joined on the platform by the Governor of Bethlehem and the Mayor of the surrounding Beit Sahour municipality for an hour-long ceremony that was attended by nearly 150 local dignitaries and residents. The event ended with a ceremonial tree-planting and prayer from religious leaders of several faiths, including Protestant, Greek Orthodox and Muslim.
"As the world focuses on bringing peace to this volatile region, CURE International is leading the way as an agent of reconciliation by building a hospital to bring desperately needed healing, hope and transformation for children and their families throughout the West Bank," said Dr. Scott Harrison, president and CEO of CURE International.
"We don't need to wait for national leaders to come to an agreement on how to work out their problems," said Dr. Harrison. "Today, we can begin working together on this cardiac and orthopedic hospital that fills a major need in the West Bank, where medical care is severely limited."
"This place is not only the Shepherd's Field, but we are also the shepherds of our Arab Christian tradition and heritage, of which we are proud," said His Excellency Salah Al-Ta'mari, Governor of Bethlehem. "This project is crucial in fulfilling our society's needs -- and those of our children -- and cooperation is essential.
"Bethlehem is not just a holy place, it is a message of peace, tolerance, freedom and acceptance of all people -- we set the example for co-existence," Gov. Al-Ta'mari said. "God bless the cooperative efforts of all of the people on this project, which will help us overcome the occupation history to ensure peace for our future."
The Honorable Hani Al-Hayek, Mayor of Beit Sahour Municipality surrounding the hospital site, said, "Our message is, 'This is the peace. This project represents the first private U.S. development in the West Bank. If we can change and enhance the lives of our people, it will make a difference, accomplish good and serve as a model to the world for how to make peace."
The Bethlehem facility, CURE's 13th worldwide, represents a dimension of the mission that Dr. Harrison did not anticipate when he founded the organization 10 years ago to help children in developing nations.
"Caring for disabled children in the way that we do is somewhat unique. We realize in the developing world, that about 40 percent of the children have disabilities that are curable," said Harrison. "In the United States, that number would be very much smaller because so many of our disabilities are associated with Cerebral Palsy, and we don't have treatment for that. But, in the Third World, there are nutritional causes or infectious causes, and a whole series of things, that with modern surgical technique we can make the children normal, or nearly normal," Harrison said.
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