It was not my finest moment,” is how 27-year-old Firas Ahmed from Iraq remembers a day over three years ago, when he was pelting stones at American soldiers during a skirmish on Baghdad’s streets.
The Americans had retaliated by gunfire — a common occurrence those days, Ahmed recounts — when a bullet hit
his hip joint. His life was never the same again, and two unsuccessful operations later, Ahmed reached India in early June this year. His prayer — a restructured hip.
Ahmed was operated upon at the Indraprastha Apollo Hospital on June 13. His hip was completely replaced, doctors told Newsline. Two weeks later, he walked out of the hospital without a limp and was ready to catch a flight back home.
Senior consultant in the Orthopaedic department, Dr Raju Vaishya said, “Despite two operations before, there were pellets in his hip. The hip was unstable as there was no bone to support it. We reconstructed the damaged cup of the joint using a bone from a cadaver donor.”
Ahmed’s voice betrays a tinge of remorse when he remembers the day nearly three and a half years ago. “I was young and silly. I regret being in the mob that day. But in a mob, one also feels safer,” he told Newsline.
The bullet destroyed his hip bone, and tore through his intestines and abdomen. He underwent two painful surgeries, one left a limb shorter than the other, but none could relieve him of the chronic pain in his hips.
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