I moved to another room after the infection |
My mum died on July 19 |
“On the 28th, I started feeling a fever. I told my wife and children not to come near me please. When I discovered I was infected with the disease I had to abandon (my) room and move into (another) room… where I was sleeping. “It is a single bed with a foam mattress. These (beddings and clothing) have now been discarded by my wife. They are now preparing for burning. She has burned most of the things that were in (my room).” He described his experience on his way to the hospital as “sad”. He avoided contact with other people so that they would not be infected too. “When I was walking everyone was looking at me. I was very sad as I was going. I saw shivering. Every 10, 15 or 20 minutes, I had to go to the toilet. I used the pathway to get to the hospital, the bush route,” he said.
I trekked three miles to Kenema Hospital |
He was then placed in an isolation ward. Meanwhile, his brother and sister ─ who also cared for their dying mother ─ had been infected and were admitted into the hospital. “I felt like I was in the other world,” Kemokai recalled, “that the nurses were indeed angels that the two books, the Bible and the Qu’ran, describe that when you die, people will come and judge you. That the angels will come and judge you. “When we saw nurses we could hardly identify them. Each time I saw them I thought they were angels coming to question me.” Kemokai survived the disease ─ which kills anything between 60% and 90% of its victims.
Now I play with my son |
Not only that he survived, his brother and sister also did, leading to scientific inquiry into a possible genetic link: a person’s immune system might be able to withstand the virus more than others’. And having survived Ebola, Kemokai has now developed the antibodies, meaning he cannot be infected again. He now freely plays with his family members. “Now that I’m out of hospital I play with my entire family. I play with Miza. We are now playing together. We do things together, we eat together, we do everything together.”
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