Pessah, of Burlingame, Calif., was
walking home from a Halloween party in San Francisco Oct. 28 with two friends
and his girlfriend when a stranger came up and touched his girlfriend
inappropriately. Pessah, 21, stepped in to protect her when the man pulled out
a gun and shot him in the head.
“It was pretty bizarre and
unnecessary,” Pessah’s older brother, Nick Pessah, told ABCNews.com. “He [the
stranger] attempted to shoot the group of four of them. He missed everybody but
the last bullet hit my brother in the head.”
When doctors first examined Pessah’s
injuries, they told his family he wasn’t going to make it. At one point,
doctors said he only had a 25 percent chance of living.
“They weren’t going to operate
because he was too severely injured,” Nick Pessah said. “Then they said they
would attempt it but normally they wouldn’t. They only did because he is young
and has a chance at surviving. They weren’t sure if he was going to make it or
not.”
Pessah was in a medically induced
coma for almost a month. But just a few days before Thanksgiving, his breathing
tube was taken out and he said his first words. In a faint whisper, he said,
‘Hi Mom.’ “My mom was the only one who saw him speak and it brought her to
tears,” Nick Pessah said.
On Thanksgiving day, Pessah took his
first steps with his parents and three brothers in his hospital room at the
University of California San Francisco to cheer him on. “I was the first one to
watch him walk,” Nick Pessah said. “I was speechless. I didn’t really know what
to say, it was very unexpected.”
Although he doesn’t remember the
shooting, which his brother believes is a good thing, Pessah does remember
everything else including his computer passwords and address. “It’s a miracle.
I couldn’t be more ecstatic about his recovery,” Nick Pessah said. “It couldn’t
have happened at a better time. I have more than enough to be thankful for.”
Pessah is a part-time student and
entrepreneur. He likes going to the gym and hopes he’ll be able to again when
he fully recovers. One thing he has been able to do in his remarkable recovery
is tell his family that he loves them, which they thought they might never hear
again.
“Right now I couldn’t be more happy,”
Nick Pessah said. “It’s been an emotional rollercoaster. I’ve been crying, I’ve
been happy. He’s beaten all of his odds so I couldn’t have asked for a better
Thanksgiving.
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