Children Cancer Stories by Rukh Yusuf - Blog # 252
I am Rukh Yusuf, Clinical Pharmacist, also specialized in Total Parenteral Nutrition and Bone Marrow Transplant. I have worked in the Pediatric Oncology unit of a public hospital. The mission of this blog is to bring to you the real-life stories of child patients suffering from cancer. Cancer is still a difficult disease to handle and treat. However, when it strikes the children, some so young that they cannot even speak, their agony is beyond expression and words. Let us pray especially for children suffering from cancer for early and complete remission. May Allah shower His Merciful Blessings upon them. Aameen.
Zahra is eight years old and has always preferred quiet games. She likes arranging her pencils in straight lines, braiding her doll’s hair, and sitting beside her mother while homework is being done at the dining table. Until a few months ago, her days followed a predictable schedule: school, home, dinner, and bedtime stories. Now her days are measured differently by hospital visits, blood counts, and the slow ticking of clocks in waiting rooms.
Her diagnosis came without warning. A few weeks of fatigue, a fever that didn’t settle, and bruises that appeared without explanation. At first, her parents thought it was just a lingering infection or perhaps the strain of school. The word leukemia entered their lives during a hospital appointment that was meant to reassure them. Instead, it rearranged everything.
They live far from extended family. The nearest relatives are hours away, and most of their friends remain in their hometown. For treatment, Zahra and her parents had to move temporarily to a city with a pediatric oncology center. They now live in a small rented apartment close to the hospital, a place that feels neither like home nor a place of rest. Suitcases remain half-packed in the corner, as if they are always preparing for the next sudden admission.
Travel has become routine. Early morning drives for appointments. Late-night returns after unexpected fevers. Sometimes, they travel back home briefly to collect clothes or check on things left behind, only to return again for treatment cycles. The road between the two cities has become familiar but never comforting.
Zahra does not fully understand what leukemia means. She knows it has something to do with her blood and that she needs medicines that make her feel tired and sometimes more sick. She notices the change in her parents’ faces more than anything else. They speak softly now, often in hushed tones outside hospital rooms or over phone calls they think she cannot hear. Visitors speak gently when they come. Nurses smile more than usual. Even strangers seem to look at her with a kind of careful attention that she never asked for.
In the hospital ward, Zahra sees many children. Some are younger, some older. Many have lost their hair. Some sit quietly with tablets or coloring books. Others lie in beds attached to IV lines, their parents beside them. She does not ask many questions, but she watches. The chemo bay, with its rows of chairs and infusion pumps, has become a place she recognizes too well. She has begun to understand that many of the children there are fighting something similar, even if she doesn’t know the details.
Sometimes she wonders why there are so many of them.
Her younger brother stays with relatives most of the time now. When he visits, he seems unsure how to behave. He misses his sister but feels out of place in hospital corridors and small apartments. Video calls have replaced shared meals and bedtime arguments. The family feels divided across locations, connected by schedules and updates rather than daily life.
For Zahra’s parents, uncertainty is constant. Each test result brings a mix of relief and new worry. They try to remain composed during consultations, taking notes, asking questions, and nodding as doctors explain treatment phases and side effects. Later, in private, they revisit every word, trying to understand what lies ahead. Sleep comes in short intervals. The fear of losing their child sits quietly in the background, never fully spoken but always present.
Zahra senses some of this without understanding it completely. She knows something serious is happening because everyone around her behaves as if it is. She misses school and her friends but does not always say so. Instead, she asks simple questions: when she can go home, when she can sleep in her own bed again, when the medicines will stop.
On some evenings, after returning from the hospital, she sits by the window of their temporary apartment and watches the street below. Cars pass, people walk, life continues. Inside, her parents prepare meals, sort medications, and plan the next day’s hospital visit. The routine is heavy but necessary.
Life has become uncertain, but it has not stopped. It moves forward in careful steps, through hospital corridors, along highways between cities, and inside the quiet spaces of a family learning to live with a diagnosis they never expected.
Prayers for Zahraand all the sick children and their families who have to face this pain of cancer. May Allah make it easy for them. Aameen
Note: “The child’s name has been changed to protect privacy, and the accompanying image is AI-generated.”



