Amazing: Two doctors, one Jew and the other Muslim, battle pandemics in Jerusalem

Avrahham Mintz and Zoher Abu Jama both emergency doctors stop praying together after reacting on two occasions of respiratory leafing problems in the Israeli town of Beyer Sheva. For both doctors, who are usually on the same shift three times a week, joint prayers are nothing new. [...]
Avrahham Mintz and Zoher Abu Jama both emergency doctors stop praying together after reacting on two occasions of respiratory leafing problems in the Israeli town of Beyer Sheva.
For both doctors, who are usually on the same shift three times a week, joint prayers are nothing new. But for many others this is a moment of inspiration among global chaos caused by pandemic.
The photo taken by their colleague has now become popular and has received thousands of social networking and international reporting. Around Israel, rapid reaction teams have received 100,000 calls per day on several occasions, 10 times the normal volume of work, according to spokesman Zaki Heller.
Emergency workers are responsible for sharing patients infected with Corona with the new SARS-CoV-2 virus in hospitals or quarantine stations, conducting coron tests, collecting blood donations in addition to normal tasks.
Israel's Emergency Health Service Director glistens with pride when he talks about his teams, made up of 2,500 regular workers and 25 thousand volunteers. Service people are facing the virus, looking straight into the eye. They work with their hands on the gloves. They are the heroes of Israel”
If Mintz and Abu Jama see themselves as heroes, they never showed up. They knew their duty and knew their faith. Both prayed for about fifteen minutes. They went back to the ambulance and went back to work.












