NSW Health Minister Ryan Park;(right) nurses Ahmad Rashad Nadir and Sarah Abu Lebdeh,who have been stood down after video emerged of them making antisemitic comments.Credit:
The duo,one in NSW Health scrubs and the other in a hijab,not only delivered an antisemitic rant;they also broke the sacred code that says nurses will never discriminate. In public health,anyone who walks in the door of a hospital – irrespective of their race,religion or social status – should receive the best care possible.
But in a late-night rant,that code was challenged in the most stunning way. Using the platformChatruletka,the nurses (while on duty) connected to Israeli social media personalityMax Veifer. He uses Chatruletka – which allows users to video chat to randomly chosen strangers around the world – to expose antisemitism.
Veifershared a video on Instagram and TikTok showing him talking to the nurses. Veifer asked the pair what would happen if an Israeli patient came into their hospital. The female nurse,identified as Sarah Abu Lebdeh,says:“I won’t treat them,I will kill them.” She also says to Veifer:“One day,your time will come,and you will die the most horrible death.”
Her male colleague,Ahmad Rashad Nadir,adds:“You have no idea how many[Israelis] came to this hospital,and I sent them to Jahannam” – the Islamic equivalent of the underworld.
It did not take long for the pair’s hate to emerge publicly.
Just after 7am on Wednesday,as the nurses were finishing their shifts,Veifer’s video was sent to Health Minister Ryan Park and his Health Secretary Susan Pearce. By 10am the nurses had been stood down,police were en route to Bankstown Hospital,and a NSW Health investigation was under way.
Pearce was reduced to tears as she addressed the media only hours after the video emerged. She knows the reality of the situation. Even if these two are malevolent outliers in the 180,000-strong NSW Health workforce,their actions will not only shake the already hurting Jewish community but also the nurses and doctors who turn up to work every day to save lives.