I don’t usually like the stories that talk about miracles, especially at a time when others do not receive miracles. It is true that Baruch Hashem very few Israelis were killed in the recent Gaza war (a fact which the UN and the world now uses to support the claim that Israelis are war criminals). But the lives of those few who were killed, and of the many who were injured are also a huge loss to the Jewish people, and musn’t be belittled.
G-d has plans that we can’t understand, and whatever happens is for the best. The hand of G-d is visible to those who wish to see it and invisible to those who don’t.
Despite that, this story is worth sharing and publicising. A soldier sent to Gaza the day after his wedding is difficult enough to grasp. Then the fact that he was critically injured and not expected to live makes for a very tragic story indeed. Now, three weeks later, he was released from hospital for rehab.
Baruch Rofeh Cholim. And just as G-d healed this person, may He heal all the sick of Israel.
Here is the story from Ynet
Three weeks after they gave him mere hours to live, the paratrooper officer critically wounded in Operation Cast Lead saluted his doctors farewell – and left the hospital.
Platoon commander 2nd Lt. Aharon Karov, 22, was ordered to cut his leave short and report for duty in Gaza the morning after his wedding to Tzvia, 19. She was by his side on Tuesday as he said goodbye to the doctors who saved his life at Beilinson Hospital in Petah Tikva. The young officer will continue his rehabilitation at the Shiba Medical Center in Tel HaShomer.
“Physically he can do just about everything, but he is still very weak and hasn’t regained his strength yet,” his father, Rabbi Ze’ev Karov said. “He can walk and move all his limbs, although movement is limited in his left arm, which has 300 pieces of shrapnel imbedded in it.”
“This morning he put on his tefillin (phylacteries) by himself, I wanted to let him but he wouldn’t let me. He has to communicate for now with his hands and his eyes, because his oral cavity was injured.
“He has amazing, tremendous will power,” Rabbi Karov added. “Several times he asked me, through sign language, if his legs were okay. He tried to get up but couldn’t, and I explained to him that his muscles were lax. But he is so motivated, and he’s aware of his condition.
Aharon’s doctors also agree his rapid recovery is nothing short of miraculous. Trauma Unit chief at Beilinson, Professor Pierre Zinger: “When he was brought in everyone was pessimistic and thought his hours were numbered. The injuries were very bad, but in the end there was no injury to the brain.”
Another doctor who came to say goodbye was Dr. Steve Jackson, the neurosurgeon who operated on Karov immediately after his injury. “Things were extremely bad, I told the family he serious head trauma. They all cried, his wife too, and I told her: ‘God willing, I’ll yet circumcise your son,’ and then she smiled.”
Jackson, a major in the Golani Brigade, saluted Karov as they said goodbye.
Karov’s family agreed to allow cameras to capture his emotional departure from the hospital “to strengthen the Israeli people,” his father said. “We want to show them that there is no despairing. That everything can happen, on the personal level and the national one.”
Another soldier who was seriously wounded in the operation, Golani infantry soldier Cpl. Ben Shpitzer, was also transferred to the rehabilitation institute on Tuesday. He and Karov were ward neighbors while at Beilinson, and plan to share a room during their recovery process.