Nurse Yahweh Video -
Not because she was holy. Because she was terrifying.
“Nurse Yahweh is on shift. Rest in peace is off the menu.”
No one films it. No one names it. But the nurses know. When they see her, they cross themselves, or touch wood, or simply whisper the old joke:
She stops scrubbing. Looks directly into the lens. Her eyes are so tired they seem to belong to a much older woman, but there is something behind them—a pressure, like the moment before a storm breaks. Nurse Yahweh Video
When the screen flickered on, the first thing you saw was the date stamp:
“I believe in sutures. I believe in sterile technique. I believe a fever will break if you sit with it long enough.”
Later in the video, the sky is violet with dusk. Nurse Yahweh is alone behind a supply tent, washing her hands in a bucket of gray water. Marc approaches. The camera shakes. Not because she was holy
The footage was grainy, shot on a shoulder-mounted Betacam. The setting was a field hospital in Goma, Zaire, during the dying gasp of a refugee crisis. Tents sagged under a brown sky. In the foreground, a nurse moved.
“But the man who seized—he should be dead.”
She leans close. Her voice is low, almost a growl. Rest in peace is off the menu
And the impossible thing happens.
The video ends abruptly. A technical glitch—static, then black. The file metadata shows it was last accessed in 1995. Marc Duval died of malaria six months after filming. His tapes were seized by a Church official who said they contained “material unsuitable for public morale.”




