Turkish-Jewish family fights Israeli authorities for baby custody
S.G. and D.G. couple are photographed looking over the city site, Jerusalem, Israel, May 18, 2023. (AA Photo)


A Turkish-Jewish family in Israel has taken legal action and continues its fighting in order to reunite with their baby who was taken away nine months ago by Israeli authorities over alleged child abuse.

Father S.G,. who holds both Turkish and Israeli citizenship, and his Israeli-Brazilian wife D.G., 21, took their one-month-old baby last May to the Hadassah Ein Kerem Hospital in West Jerusalem for treatment of cerebral hemorrhage, the second-leading cause of stroke.

After preliminary examination, hospital and welfare officials filed a police complaint against the parents suspecting the baby was subjected to "excessive shaking or violence."

Hospital staff concluded in their tests that the baby did not have a genetic disease and he suffered abuse from the parents.

As a result, Israeli police detained the parents. The father spent 10 days in prison and 20 under house arrest, while the mother was also given four days of house arrest.

Family claims negligence

The family blamed hospital staff for negligence quoting numerous tests conducted in the U.S. and Israel which concluded that cerebral hemorrhage in the baby was not a result of any parental abuse, but a congenital and rare disease.

"Normally, hospitals have to investigate whether anything of the kind is due to abuse, but they decided very quickly," Y.G., the grandmother of the infant, told Anadolu Agency (AA).

"At the first stage, they diagnosed the baby with 'shaken baby syndrome' without necessary tomography scan and reported it to the police on suspicion of abuse," she added.

Shaken Baby Syndrome is a condition that occurs from violently shaking an infant by the shoulders, arms, or legs. It may cause serious health issues such as intracranial hemorrhage and brain damage in the baby.

She went on to say that every parent can be suspected, "but it is unacceptable to make this diagnosis without a tomography."

The family submitted the test results from the U.S. and Israeli laboratories to the court last November.

On Dec. 6, the judge decided to give the baby to the grandmother, ruling that the mother could stay with the baby.

According to the baby's grandmother, the judge wanted to give the baby to the parents but the Social Services objected to the court's decision.

Finally, after the case appeared in the local media two weeks ago, the court decided that the baby should stay with his mother's sister.

Grieving parents

The grieving father S.G., who was born and raised in Israel, told Anadolu Agency: "They take you and throw you in jail. Your baby is in the hospital and you don't know what happened to your baby.

No one is telling you about your baby's condition. They just say, 'You did it, you're not a good father', they blame you. This is terrible..."

The father said the Israeli authorities made him take a lie detector test.

"Let us have our child back. It turned out that our baby has a (genetic) disease. A specialist professor in the U.S., to whom we applied, and the best doctors in this field, revealed that the child had this disease," he said.

The grandmother and father stated they would "definitely" file a compensation case against the Social Services officials after they got the baby back.

The grieving mother said: "We were very afraid that our baby would die. Then they came and began blaming us, saying that we did it. It was a horrible feeling."

Bursting into tears, she said: "(Hopefully) Our baby will be with us as soon as possible. But every time our baby is not with us, every single day destroys us."

Regarding the family's allegations, the Hadassah Hospital and Welfare and Social Services Ministry told AA the matter is sub judice.

Hadar Elboim, the spokesperson for Hadassah, one of the largest university hospitals in Israel, said: "A multidisciplinary child protection team works within the hospital, which investigates cases where there is a suspicion of harming children and vulnerable individuals."

The spokesperson of the Welfare and Social Services Ministry declined to comment.

Verda Steinberg, the family's lawyer noted that the case will be heard again at the end of this month.

Steinberg pointed out that this time the hearing will be held with the participation of doctors for the first time, saying that it is in favor of the family.

The Social Services Institution has done an indescribable injustice to the family, Steinberg added.

Meanwhile, the Work, Welfare, and Health Commission in the Israeli Parliament gathered the parties involved in the case to discuss the issue.

Most of the deputies and representatives attending the meeting took the side of the family, stressing that all available findings prove the baby has a genetic disease.

Also, friends and relatives of the family gathered in front of the Knesset, the Israeli parliament, to hold a demonstration.