Salfa Yousif

Boy Saved at Mother of Mercy from Gunshot Wound

Boys like fifteen-year-old Salfa are used to growing up with guns and rifles around the home. It’s common for families and civilians to keep them on hand for self-protection, living in an environment where violent conflict can erupt without warning, and in the absence of a government that provides security for its citizens.

Salfa worked for his uncle, helping to tend the cows around his village – an important job, since cattle are highly prized and valuable commodities here. Cows mean the absence of hunger. They are so essential that “cattle wars” – where renegades suddenly swoop in and raid another’s livestock – are a real and common threat. Cattle are sometimes used for currency and exchanged for brides as dowries in arranged marriages. 

This particular morning, one of the cows in the herd was ready to give birth. She had wandered off into the fields to find a place to deliver her calf. Salfa’s uncle went out in search of the cow, while Salfa entered the cowshed to take his shift covering the cattle.

It was January. Nights in the mountains of Sudan this time of year can drop into the 50 degrees Fahrenheit, or even the 40’s. It was still chilly this morning, and Salfa was feeling the cold. He wanted to warm himself by the fire his uncle had made.

He saw the cot covered in blankets where his uncle had been resting previously, and it looked inviting. Salfa decided to drag the cot and blankets nearer to the fire, to warm up for a few minutes before starting his chores.

He had no idea his uncle had been resting with a rifle beside him – a firearm that was left behind when he went to search for the cow. When Salfa reached for the blankets and the bed frame, he was shocked when gunfire suddenly rang out. It was a moment before he could process what had just happened.

The cocked rifle inadvertently went off beneath the blankets when Salfa reached for them. To Salfa’s horror, he saw the blood and felt the searing pain as he realized he’d been shot in the leg. Hearing the gunshot so close by, his family ran to the cowshed to see what had happened.

They rushed Salfa to the nearest clinic, where the staff administered basic first aid to control Salfa’s bleeding. Then he was sent to the closest hospital. Enduring the pain of transportation was excruciating.

At the hospital he received an IV with fluids and pain meds. But the hospital informed Salfa’s family it was not equipped to perform the operation on his leg. They urged him to go to Mother of Mercy Hospital, where they knew he would find the care he needed among Dr. Tom Catena and his personally trained team.

Dr. Tom serves as the hospital director at Mother of Mercy, the only referral hospital in the Nuba Mountains for hundreds of miles – a facility he helped found 17 years ago. For most of that time, Dr. Tom also worked as the only residing surgeon. In recent years, he’s been training young medical professionals and started a school onsite to train more doctors in an area that desperately needs them. He has also raised up satellite clinics across the region to bring basic medical care closer to people without.

When Salfa arrived at Mother of Mercy, he was immediately admitted to the emergency department. Salfa had suffered blood loss and felt weak from the pain and trauma. But his leg required immediate surgery and the bullet needed to be removed. If the wound had not been treated quickly, he risked losing his leg to permanent damage or, even worse, developing a life-threatening infection. He was ushered to the operating room.

Salfa’s surgery on his leg was successful. It took a full month of remaining at the hospital and learning to walk on his leg again for Salfa to reach a complete recovery. But now he can walk well on his own. He knows how lucky he was to receive the care he needed at Mother of Mercy Hospital to save his leg and his life.

Last year, Mother of Mercy Hospital performed over 2,600 surgeries for men, women, and children in need of critical care – treatment they wouldn’t have had without this remote mountain hospital standing as a last beacon of hope. Survivors like 15-year-old Salfa thank you for making that possible.

Mother of Mercy operates entirely on donations and support from compassionate partners. Thank you for saving lives like young Salfa’s, and many others whose lives depend on the care they receive at this hospital.


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