Abigail Klein Leichman
March 3, 2019, Updated March 4, 2019

Israel Defense Forces medical missions always fly to disaster zones with tons of medical equipment. For David “Dush” Barashi, the most critical piece of equipment is his red nose.

A veteran member of Israel’s Dream Doctors Project, Barashi and fellow medical clowns take the skills they hone daily in Israeli hospitals and apply them at scenes of indescribable despair, death and destruction across the world.

Over the past 16 years, in addition to his day job at Hadassah Medical Center in Jerusalem, Barashi has tended patients and/or trained personnel in about 50 hospitals in Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda, Philippines, Singapore, Vietnam, Thailand, India, Australia, United States, England, Bulgaria and France.

Dream Doctor David “Dush” Barashi working with youth in Ethiopia

“Wherever we go, we work with people feeling scared, vulnerable and in pain,” says Barashi, 42.

Note he said “people,” not “children.” Though medical clowns do work with kids, many of the 29 Israeli hospitals in which approximately 100 Dream Doctors work also place them on adult units ranging from maternity to surgery. Their job is to provide stress relief and a more positive hospital experience for patients, families and healthcare workers.

In no other nation is this paramedical profession as advanced or as integrated in the health system, says Director Tsour Shriqui, whose father, Yaacov, won a presidential volunteerism award last year for founding Dream Doctors in 2002.

And as the nonprofit project has grown and matured inside Israel, so it has outside the borders.

Ambassadors of imagination

In 2004, Dream Doctors Barashi and Jerome Arous took their first trip abroad, accompanying a team from Hadassah’s HIV Clinic to an HIV orphanage in Ethiopia. They worked with children directly and trained a medical clowning corps in Addis Ababa.

Later that year, following the deadliest tsunami in recorded history, four Dream Doctors flew to Thailand and Indonesia in coordination with the Israeli Embassy in Bangkok.

“We created positive activities with post-trauma young adults who’d seen their families and homes disappear,” Barashi tells ISRAEL21c.

“Over five days of sessions, we created an island of resilience in the middle of hell. We gave them the opportunity to fight back against their circumstances in a safe zone and to dream of taking ‘revenge’ on the tsunami in their imaginations,” says Barashi. “Clowns are ambassadors of imagination.”

Dream Doctors’ first humanitarian mission with the IDF was to Haiti in 2010 after a powerful earthquake caused massive injuries. They injected much-needed doses of warmth and comic distraction to wounded children in treatment.

“It was like Armageddon there,” Barashi recalls. “It was only the sense of mission that allowed us not to be traumatized.”

Dream Doctors specially trained in intervention skills for disaster zones brought their healing powers to Nepal following the 2015 earthquake, to Houston after Hurricane Irma in 2017 and Pittsburgh after the mass synagogue shooting in 2018.

Dream Doctors Rotem Goldenberg, Yaron “Sancho” Goshen, Smadar Harpak, and David “Dush” Barashi working in the IDF field hospital in Nepal. Photo: courtesy

“This is Israel. It’s part of our DNA to be there first to help in a time of crisis,” Shriqui tells ISRAEL21c.

Because IDF Medical Corps physicians and Dream Doctors work side by side in their civilian lives in hospitals, they can continue cooperating seamlessly when deployed to crisis areas. Remarkably, the army permits Dream Doctors to fulfill their IDF reserve duty requirement as medical clowns. Since Nepal, every IDF humanitarian mission abroad will include at least two Dream Doctors.

Barashi places an Israeli flag patch on his clown costume so that everyone knows his nationality. If he doesn’t know the local language, he communicates just fine in gibberish and adapts quickly to the vibe of the local culture.

“After 16 years I can say that clowning is a universal language. It’s not actually a language; it’s a relationship. It’s a language of feelings that comes from deep inside.”

Training medical clowns worldwide

The Dream Doctors Project does not receive government funding – it depends entirely on donations – but it works closely with Israel’s Foreign Ministry to train medical clowns in developing countries, in partnership with local organizations.

In Rwanda, Barashi and Zoya Hayat recently gave medical clowning workshops to the Rwandan Acrobats troupe, did trainings at the University Teaching Hospital of Kigali, and performed at an orphanage.

Dream Doctor Nimrod Eisenberg leading a clowning workshop for Arab refugees in Greece. Photo: courtesy

Dream Doctors Roni Vidman and Nimrod Eisenberg entertained refugees from Arab countries in a remote camp in Greece last December, and gave clowning tools to refugees who wanted to learn how to bring a smile to children and adults in their community.

Rotem Goldenberg and Noam Inbar led a two-week medical clowning training mission in Macedonia and Albania last year, demonstrating emotional support techniques to use with patients undergoing long-term treatments.

In Romania, a Dream Doctor was included in the 50-plus team from the IDF Medical Corps that participated in the Seism 2018 (Earthquake 2018) international exercise in cooperation with the European Union.

Dream Doctor Shoshi Ofir was invited by the Humour Foundation’s Clown Doctors and the Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne, to teach Australian clowns how to work with young victims of physical and sexual violence, and taught doctors how to work with clowns.

Ofir also hosted colleagues from Docteur Clown in France at her home hospital, Baruch Padeh (Poriya) in Tiberias, to see her pioneering work in the Tene Center for the Treatment of Sexual Assault Victims.

Dream Doctor Shoshi Ofir, left, in Australia. Photo: courtesy

They can’t tell anyone they were in Israel

When Dream Doctors can’t get to a place that needs them, they work with the Foreign Ministry to bring trainees to Israel.

That’s how five Yazidis from the northern Iraq war zone managed to come for medical clown training in May 2017. Yazidis are a persecuted religious minority that has suffered kidnapping, rape, murder and torture at the hands of ISIS.

“All of them had PTSD,” recalled Barashi, who works regularly with Israeli soldiers with post-traumatic stress disorder. “In northern Iraq, they work in a hospital where half the building was destroyed by ISIS. Most of their families and friends, nobody knows where they are.”

Less than a week later, the Yazidi trainees tearfully parted from the Israelis, taking home precious skills to help themselves and others cope.

“The Yazidis cannot tell anyone they were in Israel, but they send us pictures wearing the red noses and costumes we gave them, using the toys our children gave to their children, and doing things we taught them in the workshop. We are their window to a normal reality,” says Barashi.

Professionalizing therapeutic clowning

Shriqui’s father got the idea for Dream Doctors in 2002 when visiting a friend in a Swiss hospital.

“By mistake he wandered into the pediatric ward and saw a clown interacting with children. When he saw the spark in the children’s eyes he decided to do it in Israel. He found three clowns in Jerusalem and started the program immediately.”

At first doctors were skeptical, but the project became world-renowned for its intensive training protocols, professionalism and evidence-based results.

Dream Doctor Penny Hanuka assists with a procedure at Assuta Hospital in Ashdod. Photo: courtesy

Dream Doctors, mostly coming from the world of street theater, learn to establish instant rapport with patients and find individualized approaches to making patients in vulnerable, scary situations feel a greater sense of power and calm.

Some 22 published research studies carried out by Israeli hospitals, funded by the Dream Doctors Research Fund, prove that medical clowning interactions reduce not only stress and anxiety but also the duration of medical procedures, the amount of sedatives and pain killers required, and recovery time. One study showed that women in an IVF clinic were more likely to conceive if a clown accompanied them immediately after implantation.

The medical schools of the Technion and Bar-Ilan universities, and the nursing school of Ben-Gurion University, invite Dream Doctors to teach their students about empathy and how they can rely on clowns as a resource in the hospital.

“Everything we’ve become is because of the hospitals and the techniques we develop with their healthcare teams,” Barashi says.

“In all other countries there are amazing clowns but to be a medical clown you have to have hospitals that welcome you and integrate you into the team. This is what makes us who we are. It’s not because we’re so funny.”
Dream Doctors never wear garish makeup or painted-on smiles.

“Most of the time when you go into a room in the hospital there is no reason to smile. There is a reason to bring a smile back to our faces, together,” says Barashi.

As for the red nose, it must be earned.

Barashi told of a chronically ill 19-year-old who is frequently hospitalized at Hadassah. After he aged out of the pediatric ward, the clowns successfully advocated for him to remain there in keeping with his wishes. In return – and to make sure he has a reason to get out of bed — they recruited him as a helper.

“Whenever a group comes to Hadassah to volunteer with children, he talks to them about how the clowns are a part of his life. We gave him a Dream Doctors t-shirt and huge shoes and a funny hat. And he has a nose that he wears around his neck, but we told him he is not allowed to put it on because he’s not a real medical clown.”

The Dream Doctors’ gender breakdown is about 50-50. While most are Jewish – religious and secular – there’s currently one Muslim Arab Dream Doctor working in Jerusalem and one Christian-Arab Dream Doctor working in Nazareth.

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Dream Doctor Anat Zonnenfeld works with a patient at Kaplan Hospital in Rehovot. Photo: courtesy

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