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In pictures: A father's gamble at sea saves his ailing son

On January 22, the day of the surgery, Aldarwish and Yahia hugged before they were wheeled to separate rooms for parallel surgeries that lasted hours

Reuters
Published 30.03.26, 03:51 PM
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Syrian refugee Yahia Aldarwish, 10, plays a board game with his father Abdulaziz Aldarwish, 32, following a successful kidney transplant with his father as donor at the Onassis National Transplant Center in Athens, Greece. (All images by Reuters)
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Abdulaziz Aldarwish decided to take drastic action after his son Yahia's young kidneys failed.

The Syrian construction worker could not afford the 1,200 euros ($1,380) per month needed for dialysis treatment and in any case the public healthcare system in Lebanon, where he worked, is in a state of near-collapse after years of conflict and neglect.

So Aldarwish managed to muster 5,000 euros from savings and family loans for them to board a boat ferrying migrants 200 km (120 miles) to Cyprus, hoping to find doctors who could give his son a new kidney and a new life.

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Syrian refugee Yahia Aldarwish, 10, lies on a hospital bed ahead of a kidney transplant at the Onassis National Transplant Center in Athens, Greece.

His wife and their eight other children remained behind, in a small Syrian village near the Lebanese border.

In January, two years after leaving Lebanon, Yahia became one of the first young children to receive a transplant at the newly-established Onassis National Transplant Center in Greece - an emblem, doctors say, of what can be achieved through international medical cooperation. His father was the donor.

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Syrian refugee Yahia Aldarwish, 10, looks outside a door at the Onassis National Transplant Center following a successful kidney transplant with his father as donor, in Athens, Greece.

At the hospital after the operation, Aldarwish, 32, smiled with relief: "I had to take a risk: either things work out, I get him treated... or that's it, we both die."

Yahia, now 10, is upbeat, saying he wants to rejoin his classmates in Cyprus and dreams of one day opening a supermarket.

'It was a miracle'

On a recent day in Athens, Aldarwish recalled their hardest moments as he pushed Yahia on the swing of a local playground.

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Syrian refugee Yahia Aldarwish, 10, sits with his father Abdulaziz Aldarwish, 32, at hospital-provided accommodation ahead of a kidney transplant with his father as donor, in Athens, Greece.

When they boarded the boat in Lebanon in 2024, they took water and some dates - enough for a trip only expected to take a few hours. Before boarding, Yahia received a round of peritoneal dialysis to see him through.

But they ended up adrift in rough seas for a week, surviving on rainwater, before being spotted by a merchant vessel.

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Syrian refugee Yahia Aldarwish, 10, walks in a corridor at the General Children’s Hospital of Athens Aghia Sophia ahead of a kidney transplant with his father as donor, in Athens, Greece.

"I didn't expect my son to endure something like this," Aldarwish said. "It was a miracle."

"In the end, death was not our fate."

When they arrived in Cyprus, doctors informed them that Greece - a few hundred miles away across the Mediterranean - was set to resume kidney transplants for low-weight children in May 2025, after years of suspension.

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Syrian refugee Abdulaziz Aldarwish, 32, lies on a stretcher as medical staff encourage him before donating a kidney to his son, at the Onassis National Transplant Center, in Athens, Greece.

Greek and Cypriot authorities cooperated to allow father and son to be flown to Athens, where they were monitored by doctors from three hospitals and assisted by interpreters.

On January 22, the day of the surgery, Aldarwish and Yahia hugged before they were wheeled to separate rooms for parallel surgeries that lasted hours.

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Syrian refugee Abdulaziz Aldarwish, 32, reaches out his hand towards his son Yahia Aldarwish, 10, from his hospital bed shortly before a kidney transplant in which Abdulaziz is the donor, at the Onassis National Transplant Center, in Athens, Greece.

"This whole bridge of life was built for this child," said Smaragdi Marinaki, the head of the nephrology department at Laiko Hospital which participated in the process.

"Transplantation transcends every barrier: borders and countries, races and religions."

Smaragdi, who calls Yahia "sweet tooth" for his long-thwarted desire for chocolate, says he is recovering well.

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