InstagramTwitterSnapChat


 
وصف

العودة   منتديات سكاو > الأقسام الخاصة > الأقسام العامة > أكاديمية اللغة الإنجليزية English Language Academy
التسجيل مشاركات اليوم البحث
   
   


أكاديمية اللغة الإنجليزية English Language Academy قسم مختص بِـ كل ما من شأنه تطوير اللغة الإنجليزية و تنميتها

My unexpected trip to a Libyan hospital

أكاديمية اللغة الإنجليزية English Language Academy

إضافة رد
 
أدوات الموضوع إبحث في الموضوع انواع عرض الموضوع
منتديات طلاب وطالبات جامعة الملك عبد العزيز منتديات طلاب وطالبات جامعة الملك عبد العزيز
  #1  
قديم 01-10-2011, 08:46 AM
الصورة الرمزية English boy

English boy English boy غير متواجد حالياً

جامعي

 
تاريخ التسجيل: Sep 2009
التخصص: English Literature
نوع الدراسة: إنتظام
المستوى: متخرج
الجنس: ذكر
المشاركات: 491
افتراضي My unexpected trip to a Libyan hospital


I was reading BBC news this morning and I was totally ingaged to this story .. this writer has always taken me so closely into his written passges but this one has guided me to the end without even pausing .. plz go along with it or folow it through this link
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-15036100

I loved the way he writes

was woken by two Filipina women in starched nurses' uniforms at the foot of my bed. One was holding a razor.
A little later the lights blinked on again.
A Ukrainian nurse was now gripping a large syringe.
"What are you doing?" I asked.
She shrugged. "This is not your concern."
Let me rewind a little.
A day earlier, I was on the edge of the Libyan desert, outside a town called Bani Walid.
Rebel fighters were racing past in their usual, chaotic manner.
They had been trying to storm the town for days. But Col Gaddafi's forces have bigger guns and better discipline.
Journalists kept edging forwards a kilometre or two, then tearing back after coming under mortar, rocket or sniper fire.
Anti-Gaddafi forces are still facing strong opposition in Bani Walid
It had been the same pattern for a week.
Abruptly, we heard news that a BBC colleague - the brave Lebanese journalist Mohammad Ballout, had been shot just ahead of us.
A single sniper's bullet had killed one man, injured another, and finally come to a stop in Mohammed's chest.
It was serious. But not life-threatening. He has had surgery now and is doing well.
At the time - as dusk fell and we pulled back towards Tripoli - it seemed at best inappropriate to make too much of the stomach pains that had been bothering me for a couple of days and preventing me from eating.
Still, the next morning I was feeling worse and - with the looming prospect of a few nights camped in the desert - I decided to find some antibiotics at a local clinic to sort me out.
Wartime spirit
We were recommended a hospital linked to the National Oil Corporation, in a suburb of the capital.
There were armed guards outside, a noisy crowd in the reception. But down the corridors beyond, I had my first glimpse into a different Libya.
Find Out More

  • From Our Own Correspondent is on Thursdays at 1100 BST and Saturdays at 1130 BST on BBC Radio 4 and weekdays on BBC World Service
It was a place of wealth, and order, and lots of foreigners.
There were Russian surgeons. A chatty Macedonian nurse. Dozens of Filipinos, and a formidable Scottish matron.
In English, even the Libyans had a broad range of accents.
"I studied in Cardiff," explained the first doctor to have a look at me, as he gently suggested that my guts were not the problem.
All the foreigners seemed to have been in Libya for years.
"Sixteen now," said Maria, the Macedonian.
The pay was good. The well-funded hospital served oil workers rich and poor. Expat life was cloistered but enjoyable.
Of course all that changed when the fighting began.
During the battle for Tripoli last month, the casualties were crowded onto every inch of floor.
“Start Quote
I surrendered, and stared at the ceiling as the surgical masks loomed over me”
End Quote
The neighbourhood itself came under heavy fire as Col Gaddafi's loyalists withdrew from the city.
"It was terrible," said Maria. "I can show you the bullet holes upstairs."
But all the staff stayed on and by the time I arrived, a month later, a wartime spirit of camaraderie, generosity and optimism still filled the hospital.
I, on the other hand, was feeling trapped and defensive.
The doctors, absurdly I thought, seemed to think it was my appendix. They wanted to operate fast.
I clung to the belief that I must have eaten some dodgy seafood and just needed a few pills.
But the evidence was building solidly against me, and by the next morning I could see that my obstinacy was being interpreted as a lack of faith in their hospital and judgement.
And so, I surrendered, and stared at the ceiling as the surgical masks loomed over me.
I think I remember a Russian anaesthetist, trying to get me to sing along with him. Then the words and the room turned to glue and vanished.
Surgery souvenir
A man called Salahaddin woke me late that evening.
He was on crutches, and had limped in from the next room for a chat.
Salahaddin was 28 years old, a doctor, and a patient.
He had been in the desert outside Bani Walid too. He was in charge of an ambulance crew bringing out the wounded.
A week earlier, he said, his vehicle had been hit by gunfire - a bullet went through his back and out of his leg, shattering his pelvis on the way.
Salahaddin kept smiling, and my grogginess started to feel like bad manners.
During the rebellion, he said, he had treated Col Gaddafi's soldiers during the day at a clinic in central Tripoli, and then slipped out at night to help rebel casualties in the city.
"Now, it is all changed," he grinned. "It is nearly over."
He turned and inched slowly back to his room.
The next morning, the Libyan surgeon walked in with a "told you so" smile. He was brandishing my badly swollen appendix in a plastic jar.
Nurse Maria explained that Libyans like to take home any missing bits to show their relatives and to prove they had not been malingering.
I left mine behind.
رد مع اقتباس

 

منتديات طلاب وطالبات جامعة الملك عبد العزيز منتديات طلاب وطالبات جامعة الملك عبد العزيز
قديم 01-10-2011, 09:22 AM   #2

nour al3mr

الصورة الرمزية nour al3mr

 
تاريخ التسجيل: Jun 2008
كلية: كلية الآداب والعلوم الانسانية
التخصص: English Language
نوع الدراسة: متخرج - انتظام
المستوى: متخرج
البلد: جــــدة
الجنس: أنثى
المشاركات: 52,226
افتراضي رد: My unexpected trip to a Libyan hospital

Good Morning brother

I will come back after reading it
because it's so long and I have 2 quizzes =(

God protect you

 

توقيع nour al3mr  

 

::

:: سيظل أبي حُباً يَحْكيه دُعآئي دائماً ..
ربـآهـ لا تحرم أبي من جنة الفردوس ,, فَـ هو لم يحرمني شيئاً في الدُنيـآ ::

|| السبت 5/5/2012 - 14/6/1433 هـ || يوم فقدهـ ..


::
والدة أختنا المستشارة white rose | في ذمة الله

::


جعل الله مثواك الجنة اختنا صالحة Conscientious
::

~..اللـهُـــم ارْزُقنَـــا الأُنْسَ بِقُرْبِكْـ و اجرنا منْ النَـآرْ..~

 

nour al3mr غير متواجد حالياً   رد مع اقتباس
 

إضافة رد


تعليمات المشاركة
لا تستطيع إضافة مواضيع جديدة
لا تستطيع الرد على المواضيع
لا تستطيع إرفاق ملفات
لا تستطيع تعديل مشاركاتك

BB code is متاحة
كود [IMG] متاحة
كود HTML معطلة

الانتقال السريع

 


الساعة الآن 07:50 PM


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.9 Beta 3
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Ads Organizer 3.0.3 by Analytics - Distance Education

أن كل ما ينشر في المنتدى لا يمثل رأي الإدارة وانما يمثل رأي أصحابها

جميع الحقوق محفوظة لشبكة سكاو

2003-2023