Vukovar Hospital War Doctor Treats Earthquake-Affected For Free

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Youtube screenshot / Wikimapia
Dr. Sadika Biluš and the war-era Vukovar Hospital
Dr. Sadika Biluš and the war-era Vukovar Hospital

‘I went through the war in Vukovar and the (concentration) camps, I know what suffering is,’ Dr. Sadika Biluš told journalist Lada Novak Starčević in an interview with Jutarnji List, ‘so I treat people from Banija for free.’

‘I am not a cook, nor a roofer, but I know how to treat people, wrote Dr. Bilus on social media immediately after the earthquake of 29 December 2020 and opened the doors of her clinic for free to all those from the earthquake-affected area. ‘So I offer free internal medicine examinations and therapy to the victims of the earthquake.’

These days Dr. Sadika Biluš owns and runs the Tomi Polyclinic for Internal Medicine and Gynecology in Velika Gorica. Her doctor’s surgery may lie some 60 kilometres to the north of the earthquake’s epicentre, but many polyclinics in the affected area are still not back up-and-running. The main hospital for the region, in Sisak, was heavily damaged and its gynecology department completely destroyed. Specialist examinations, such as the ones performed by Dr. Biluš, are currently near non-existent in the affected area. Dr. Biluš’s own premises received damage during the fierce tremor.

croatia_hrvatska_velika_gorica_0003.jpgVelika Gorica, where Dr. Biluš’s Tomi Polyclinic for Internal Medicine and Gynecology is located © Croatian National Tourist Board

It would come as no surprise to learn the earthquake had not put Dr. Biluš off her stride. She has experienced worse. During Croatia’s war for independence, she was working in Vukovar hospital. The town was the most heavily damaged place in Croatia by artillery fire. As the number of shells increased and the guns drew nearer, she was offered the opportunity to leave Vukovar hospital. She refused. She stayed behind to look after the injured and the dying. The cost of this action was her freedom. When Vukovar hospital was captured, Dr. Biluš was taken to a concentration camp. She was released at the end of 1991.

‘After Vukovar and all the torment we went through, I did not cry,’ Dr. Bilus recounted to the journalist. Following the earthquake, she was deeply moved by seeing on TV all of the help offered immediately to those in the earthquake area. ‘But now I cried terribly and out of emotion because that accident encouraged people to do so much good.’

 

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