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Hong KongHealth & Environment

How newborn’s first cries gave Hong Kong nurse hope amid tragedy of Israel-Gaza war

  • Nurse Krystal So only medical volunteer from Hong Kong to be sent on Medecins Sans Frontieres humanitarian mission to Gaza Strip in May

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Nurse Krystal So checks on a newborn baby at Gaza’s Nasser Hospital. Photo: Handout
Emily Hung
Hong Kong nurse Krystal So Hin-pui can still vividly recall the cries of civilians as shells and bombs rained down on the Gaza Strip, the sounds staying with her weeks after she safely returned from a humanitarian mission to the war zone.

But the 35-year-old midwife said it only took the first cries of a newborn baby to give her a small glimmer of hope amid widespread feelings of distress, frustration and helplessness in the region.

“It was May 8, we had our first normal delivery, and we all cried together … the more than 1,000 babies that were born [during my time there] were the blessing and joy of the people of Gaza,” she said.

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“But still, there were many cases of stillbirth and premature birth because the pregnant women were often under immense stress and fleeing for their lives.”

So embarked on a six-week humanitarian mission to the war-torn Gaza Strip in May, the only medical volunteer from Hong Kong dispatched by Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF).

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The nurse joined the mission hoping to empower underprivileged women living in developing countries, and was among those who helped reopen a major hospital previously stormed by Israeli forces.

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