← NewsAll
Harry and Meghan hug and comfort cancer patients and families in Jordan
Summary
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex visited the King Hussein Cancer Centre in Jordan and spent time comforting young cancer patients and their families, including a mother from Gaza and a 13-year-old Syrian patient who played piano before chemotherapy.
Content
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex visited the King Hussein Cancer Centre in Jordan and spent time with young cancer patients and their families. The visit was the final event of a two-day trip to learn about humanitarian efforts supporting Syrians and Palestinians in Jordan. Meghan comforted a mother from Gaza whose son is receiving treatment for leukaemia. Harry spoke with and hugged a 13-year-old Syrian patient who performed a short piano piece before a planned chemotherapy session.
What we know:
- The couple visited the King Hussein Cancer Centre as the last engagement of a two-day visit focused on humanitarian and health issues affecting refugees and displaced people.
- Meghan comforted Huda Ramadan Alrhawjara, a mother from Gaza whose son Mohammad has had a recurrence of leukaemia and has spent 18 months in Jordan for treatment; Meghan held her hands and rubbed her arm as she cried.
- Harry spent time with Sham, a 13-year-old girl from Syria awaiting chemotherapy; she told the couple she learned English from a relative and by watching films and Peppa Pig, and she played a short piano piece for them.
- The Sussexes met children in a play area designed to put patients at ease and spoke with staff; Meghan also chatted with a young boy who was colouring.
- Earlier in the trip, the duke visited Jordan's National Centre for Rehabilitation of Addicts and urged recovered addicts to return to their communities to help others, saying "There's no shame in having an addiction."
Summary:
The visit highlighted personal interactions between the Sussexes and families receiving cancer care in Jordan and included moments of comfort and conversation. It served as the final engagement of their two-day visit to learn about humanitarian health support in the country. Undetermined at this time.
