Anis has been working as an intensive care nurse in MSF’s trauma centre for almost its entire 11-year history. He has reflected deeply on the impact of war, and nursing.
“The world has become so many wars, so many disasters. Grief is ravaging this small world. So to plant a smile on a sad face would be a very beautiful thing. You'll feel satisfied, and you will feel that you're human in all sense of the word, and practising your humanity.”
A young boy’s legacy
Anis was inspired to become a nurse after his own medical emergency as a young boy. “I fell to the ground, developing a bleeding wound. I was in so much pain. That's when a nurse at the emergency department received me. He treated me very nicely, eased my fear, bandaged me and gave me medication. I loved nursing from that day on.”
As an adult, it’s another young boy’s story that has left an indelible mark on Anis, and his colleagues.
“I will never forget, as long as I'm alive, a little boy about five years old. He came from a distant village with a gunshot wound to the abdomen. It took a lot of time until he arrived and he lost a lot of blood. The lack of blood led to a lack of oxygen in the brain, resulting in brain dysfunction.