Hospital in Jordan offers injured Gazans hope for recovery
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on January 29, 2025
3 min readLast updated: January 27, 2026

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on January 29, 2025
3 min readLast updated: January 27, 2026

A Jordanian hospital offers reconstructive surgery to injured Gazans, providing hope and recovery after the devastating conflict.
AMMAN (Reuters) - Karam Nawjaa, 17, was so badly injured when an Israeli strike hit his home in Gaza nearly a year ago that his own cousin, pulling him from the rubble, did not recognise him.
After rushing Karam to hospital he returned to continue searching for his cousin all night in the rubble.
In that strike on Feb. 14, 2024, Karam lost his mother, a sister and two brothers. As well as receiving serious burns to his face and body, he lost the ability to use his arms and hands.
Now, the burns are largely healed and he is slowly regaining the use of his limbs after months of treatment at a hospital run by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in the Jordanian capital Amman which operates a programme of reconstructive surgery.
"I only remember that on that day, February 14, there was a knock on our door... I opened it, my brother came in, and after that... (I remember) nothing," he said.
"Before the war I was studying, and thank God, I was an outstanding student," Karam said, adding that his dream had been to become a dentist. Now he does not think about the future.
"What happened, happened... you feel that all your ambitions have been shattered, that what happened to you has destroyed you."
Karam is one of many patients from Gaza being treated at Amman's Specialized Hospital for Reconstructive Surgery, Al-Mowasah Hospital. He shares a room there with his younger sister and their father.
"All these patients are war victims... with complex injuries, complex burns... They need very long rehabilitation services, both surgical but also physical and mental," said Moeen Mahmood Shaief, head of the MSF mission in Jordan.
"The stories around those patients are heartbreaking, a lot of them have lost their families" and require huge support to be reintegrated into normal life, he added.
Israel's 15-month offensive in Gaza has killed almost 47,000 Palestinians, according to Hamas-run Health Ministry figures, and left the coastal enclave a wasteland of rubble that will take years to rebuild. Most of the population was displaced.
The campaign was launched after Hamas militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people and seizing more than 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.
Displaced Palestinians have been returning to their mostly destroyed homes this week after a ceasefire came into effect on Jan. 19.
(Reporting by Stelios Misinas; Writing by Ivana Sekularac; Editing by Gareth Jones)
Karam Nawjaa was severely injured when an Israeli strike hit his home in Gaza, resulting in the loss of his mother, a sister, and two brothers, along with serious burns and loss of limb function.
Karam is being treated at Al-Mowasah Hospital in Amman, Jordan, which specializes in reconstructive surgery for war victims.
Patients like Karam face complex injuries that require long-term rehabilitation services, including both surgical and mental health support to reintegrate into normal life.
The article states that Israel's offensive in Gaza has resulted in nearly 47,000 Palestinian deaths, leaving the area in ruins and requiring years for recovery.
Before the war, Karam was an outstanding student with aspirations of becoming a dentist, but he now feels that his ambitions have been shattered due to his injuries.
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