A Sudanese youth rescued an Egyptian woman and her daughter from under the wheels of a train that was heading from Cairo to Aswan.

How did that happen?

And why did the pioneers of Egyptian platforms praise this young man and demanded that some of them honor him?

The journey by train between Cairo and Aswan takes between 12 and 16 hours, with stops in several governorates. On board the train was the young Sudanese Ahmed Al-Muddathir, who was heading from Cairo to Aswan.

At the Assiut station during the break, Ahmed got off and a woman named Zamzam got off the train with her daughter, to buy some food from the station.

After the break ended and the train moved, the Sudanese young man saw Hajja Zamzam and her daughter stuck, trying to catch the train, and at risk of death.

He jumped off the train to save the lady and her daughter from under the wheels of the train, but he sacrificed his arm for that.

After asking Ahmed, who lost his arm - in addition to the woman's loss of her arm and her foot without harming the girl - he said, "I am happy with the work I did, and God mocked me to save the girl and her mother, and I wish I was able to save the girl's mother without harming her."

And the episode (22/1/2023) of the “Shabakat” program monitored the Egyptian interaction with the incident. Karim Nafie described the Sudanese youth as brave and chivalrous, so he wrote, “A brave and gallant person who sacrificed his arm and it could have been his life. I wish halal children would remove him in their eyes.”

While Muhammad Ayoub Youssef considered the Sudanese and Egyptian peoples one people, and said, "We are originally one people. Our Lord compensates you with goodness, and Salem Ghanem returns you, and heals and heals her."

Hatem Al-Zaini called on the Egyptian state to honor him and employ him in the "Egyptian Railways Authority", where he tweeted, "I wish the state would move and honor him after his recovery, and he would be visited by the minister in the hospital, and he would be appointed to a distinguished job in the Egyptian Railways Authority as a reward for his magnanimity." And his sacrifice and noble feeling.”

Ruqaya expressed her grief over what happened to him and prayed for him that God would compensate him with a hand in heaven, and wrote, "If he were in another country, they would allocate a monthly sum for him to live on for the rest of his life in honor and gratitude for what he did of the noble act he did, but far from it. God compensates him with a hand in heaven better than that." his hand.”