On Friday morning, social media in Jordan witnessed a wide spread of a video clip in which the staff of the Hilton Dead Sea Hotel celebrates the birthday of a child living in quarantine with his family and hundreds of Jordanian families, from the square opposite the hotel's balcony, in a pleasant gesture after 5 days of stone Which the Jordanian authorities had the opportunity to come from outside the Kingdom last week to confront the Corona virus.

The Jordanian mother, Wijdan Al-Shamayleh, 50, picked up the video from the balcony of her hotel room, where she is also subject to a 14-day quarantine, despite her lack of knowledge of the child and his family, who reside in a room on another floor, according to what CNN reported.
Al Shamayleh, whose daughter Rama Wazzan posted the video on Friday morning on social media, told CNN in Arabic that she heard some noise from the hotel workers in the morning and went out to the balcony to find groups of workers who had started celebrating the birthday of a child named Khalil, on the occasion of his third birthday .

Al Shamayleh explained: “It was a very beautiful and moving gesture to celebrate this child’s birthday, which we do not know and no one knows the other in the hotel, we are all committed to stone instructions and do not leave our rooms .. About a month. ”

And about the video that I photographed, she said, “His photo and I did not know that it will spread so quickly, and his photo spontaneously and I sent it to my daughters. Then the contacts started heaping on them.

Al-Shamayleh indicated that the procedures went very well from the moment she arrived at the airport, and moved her with others to the quarantine area in the Dead Sea hotels, and added: “Deal with us with respect and care and daily communicate with the residents of the hotel in order to ensure our safety and health status, and informed us management The hotel is that yoga lessons will be provided by our workers in the yard, and we will follow it from the balcony of the rooms. These are frankly moving gestures that help us adapt to the conditions of stone and we are far from our families. ”