"I got stuck in traffic because I had been late getting out, which is why I was close enough to rush back home and help save my father’s life.”
Asher Tzvi made sure his wife and kids were safe and raced out to his ambucycle, wearing protective headgear and a bulletproof vest.
"After saving someone’s life the sensation of euphoria I got wouldn’t let me sleep."
"All-in-all, the woman was fully conscious and alert about 30 or so minutes after I had arrived. I couldn’t believe it.”
"I feel so overjoyed at having saved this man’s life on Purim. It felt to me like I had won the lottery.”
"When Shabbat ended, I called my old neighbor and told him that the defibrillator he had donated just helped save another life."
“Saving a life on Shabbat or Erev Shabbat is very different from saving a life on a weekday,” says Avraham.
"We saved a life that day, and I would do it again in a heartbeat, even knowing the risk.”
I can’t explain the feeling I had as I drove my ambucycle back home and walked into my living room to see my family still waiting for me.
Over and over again he kept losing his pulse.
