Friday, December 10, 2010
I am home, but the mission goes on
We saw miracles of love, compassion and transformation right in front of us. I can't wait to see little Sarban and Anisha a few months from now when their faces have healed and they have begun their new lives.
For now we are thankful for the opportunity to have helped in some small way. Happy Holidays.
Monday, December 6, 2010
Anisha after surgery!
We came over to the hospital this morning with anticipation. What would Anisha look like today. She went into surgery yesterday afternoon and her mother and father were so anxious.
Anisha's Story
It was late in the day on our final day of screening. As darkness was descending and the temperature was dipping, a bus rolled in from the Sonitpur District to our screening site in Guwahati. Onboard were tired parents and children who had been on the bus for 10 hours. A flat tire on the journey had doubled the travel time and they looked anxious – worried that perhaps they had arrived too late to be chosen for surgery.
Our medical volunteers were waiting at their stations to begin the process of evaluating each and every one of these children for surgery. For most of these children, it was the first time they had ever been examined by a doctor.
These families clearly were among the poorest of the poor in Assam, a state in Northeast India. In their hands, they clutched a few belongings for the journey – not knowing how long they would be staying in this place that was so far from home.
Near the end of the line of tired patients, we spotted 5-year-old Anisha Tasa and her 27-year-old mother, Sosila. They were dressed in sweaters to keep them warm in temperatures that dip low into the 50s at night. But underneath their warm and dirty sweaters were beautiful dresses. Mom wore a lovely red and gold sari and some gold bangles. Anisha was dressed in a tangerine-colored tunic and pants with lace-up black shoes. Her curly black hair was tightly knotted in two small ponytails.
It appeared that they had worn the very best clothes on the most important journey of Anisha’s life. Yet, we discovered that these were not their clothes. Mom only had 2 tattered dresses back home in her village. Anisha’s old ragged clothes wouldn’t do for her first visit to the doctor.
This family had bought these clothes on credit. They spent 25% of a month’s wages for clothing they felt was suitable for this journey to Guwahati – the site of the Operation Smile mission. I’m sure they felt that if they looked their best, perhaps they would stand a better chance of being chosen for surgery.
They live about 200 kilometers from Guwahati – in a village where life is hard for families whose only means of survival is working in rice paddies and on tea plantations to make enough income to feed their families.
Yet, rice farming is not enough to feed Sosila’s three children. So, to help support her family, she does road construction work – a job that only the most desperate woman would perform. Her husband didn’t accompany her on this trip. He was back home working in the rice paddies to help make sure the other two children at home could have food to eat.
Anisha’s enormous brown eyes stared in amazement at the flurry of activity as she moved from station to station – being screened and examined by our team of doctors. This was the very first time a doctor had ever examined her. And, surprisingly, she was not scared at all. In fact, she seemed to enjoy the attention of the doctors and nurses.
Sosila never had any money to go to a doctor about her lip. In a good month when both she and her husband are working, they make $50. Surgery was always out of the question.
Sosila clearly loves her daughter. She told us that when Anisha was born, she cried and cried as she looked at her daughters deformed lip. She had never seen a child with a cleft lip before and she was scared.
The neighbors told her that it was her fault. They said that the reason her daughter was born this way was because she “cut vegetables” (harvested) while she was pregnant. (We learned that this is a common superstitious belief in this area.)
She was grief-stricken by the sight of her daughter, tormented by the neighbors, and fearful that her baby wouldn’t even survive.
“When I tried to nurse her, the milk would come out of her nose and I thought she would die. I wanted to go for help, but we didn’t have any money.”
It’s been difficult for Sosila to watch her daughter being ridiculed and tormented on the streets of her town for the last five years. When she walks the streets, the kids make fun of her.
“Sometimes, the neighbors hit my daughter because they are frightened of her.
“The children never allow her to play with them. They say, ‘Your lip is cut, you aren’t any good. Stay away from us.’
“We are so poor and I don’t have any money to help her. It makes me feel so sad. I didn’t do anything wrong.
Amazingly, Anisha goes to school, even though the other children are cruel to her.
“They treat her so badly at school. They tell her to get away from them and she comes home and cries. But then she will still go back the next day.”
Anisha is a smart girl with so much potential – and her mother realizes that. Anisha writes the alphabet for us in Assamese – and then she recites the alphabet in English, with the coaching help of our translator. Sosila never learned to read and write, and she longs for her daughter to be educated and have opportunities that were never possible for her.
But right now, she has one big concern.
“How will she ever get married? That is my biggest worry of all. I never saw a child like this in my life before.
“If only I had money, I would have gotten help for her. But I had no money. But I always had hope that someday, she could be helped.”
Finally, after five years of waiting, her hopes were fulfilled when she heard the news she had always dreamed of.
One week ago, a neighbor told her that Operation Smile was coming to Guwahati– a city she had never visited before . She rushed out and bought their new clothes on credit. She borrowed shoes from a neighbor for Anisha to wear – she doesn’t own any shoes of her own.
“I was so excited when I heard the news – I kept telling Arisha that she could finally get surgery.”
When they boarded the district bus to come to our mission site, they were surrounded by other children with cleft lips. It was the first time they’d ever laid eyes on other children born with facial deformities. The sight was a comfort to Sosila.
“I was delighted,” Sosila told us. “Now I know that I am not the only mother who has a child with this problem.”
Sosila was hungry, tired and a little nervous about the events to come. Anisha seemed calm and quite delighted by the attention she was getting.
Sitting on a chair in her new dress, clicking her black shoes together, she drew her letters and numbers with a crayon we had given her. She loves to draw and seems to have a quiet understanding of the amazing events that are about to unfold in her life.
Her adoring mom wraps her arms around her daughter and tells us how she feels after so many years of suffering.
“I never gave up. I always had hope that someday she could have this surgery – but I knew that I would never have the finances to afford it. I was so excited to hear that everything was free – we could get free transportation, free lodging, and we would not have to pay for surgery.
“Now, I hope that after her surgery, she will grow up and become a great person.”
Saturday, December 4, 2010
First day of surgery in Guwahati, India
Today was the first day of surgery on the Operation Smile Guwahati, India Mission. Children and their families had spent the night in the hospital. For many, this was the first time ever in a hospital.
At 7am the first patients were ready to be taken into the operation rooms. Eight operating tables were in full use today. Each child said goodbye to their parents and left in the arms of a loving stranger. The parents were anxious as they waited, but in less than an hour the children came out of the operating theater transformed forever - new smiles on their faces.
Bill and Kathy Magee, the founders of Operations Smile were on site greeting patients and medical staff and inspiring us all. They are living examples of what volunteers can do to change the lives of people, both physically and perhaps more importantly, in spirit.
As the day turned into night, the medical team was still working finishing up the day's surgeries, bedding down those who would spend the night at the hospital for surgery tomorrow and tenderly caring for those who had received life-changing surgery today. And the amazing thing is that these volunteers do it with such grace, day after day.
Tomorrow we will follow 5 year old Sarban through the process. Right before we left the hospital he gave us a big hug and then climbed into bed under a mosquito net. Sleep well little guy. Tomorrow will be a very special day.
Friday, December 3, 2010
Operation Smile India Day 3
I was up at the crack of dawn again today as the call to worship sounded outside my hotel window. We selected two children to follow through the surgery process - a cute little girl, Anisha, who arrived with her mother last night, and a lively little boy, Sarban, who we met on at screening the day before with his dad. Both are 5 years old and small for their age.
Today we loaded the children and their families into cars and drove to a village on the outskirts of Guwahati. We saw a typical day in their lives. Doing household chores, working in the rice fields, going to school. Things that every child does. But there is a difference. These children and their families are shunned, avoided, teased and sometimes beaten. Somehow they survive the daily ordeals of being very different. Somehow they keep their hope alive. Someday maybe their faces will be healed and they will become accepted by their families, their friends and their communities.
For these children that someday will be Sunday when they go into surgery broken and come out in as little as 45 minutes whole and complete. What a day Sunday will be.
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Tremendous need in India
We had heard of the huge crowd that had been screened the day before we arrived. There are so many untreated cleft lips in India. On the last mission over 1800 had come hoping for the surgery that would transform their lives. Most were turned away because there was not enough time or surgeons to handle the number who needed it. That is why Operation Smile decided to do a mega mission. 500 surgeries is the target for this mission which will include two teams back-to-back.
So many of this team are familiar to me. Surgeons and medical personnel that I have worked with in Bolpur, Rwanda, Haiti, Venezuela, Honduras and Vietnam. They are true heroes who give of their time and talents to help people they don't even know. They have traveled half way around the world to help this time.
We met a little girl named Namita Bora. She is 6 years old and doesn't go to school because the other children tease her too much. Her family is very poor. In fact, she borrowed the clothes she is wearing from relatives and neighbors to make the 17 hour journey to the hospital today.
Winging to India
Back in India once again. The last time was 2005. If you have been here you know. The sights and sounds and smells are like no other place in the world. And we were immersed in all that is India in the 45 minute drive from the airport to downtown Guwahati. Narrowly missing pedestrians, animals and other vehicles that were scurrying down the narrow road.
But after a long trip and the harrowing ride to town we are energized to witness the good work of Operation Smile once again.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Will is heading to India for Operation Smile
More than 80 volunteers from around the world will join their counterparts in India with a goal to provide surgeries for 500 children at the Mahendra Mohan Choudhary Hospital.
In a few short weeks, our expanded mission to Guwahati, India, will be underway. To meet the unprecedented need in this area, Operation Smile will be sending two medical teams who will work back-to-back from November 30 through December 20.
More than 80 volunteers from around the world will join their counterparts in India with a goal to provide surgeries for 500 children at the Mahendra Mohan Choudhary Hospital. Operation Smile has been working in Guwahati since 2009 and to date has provided free cleft lip or cleft palate surgeries for nearly 2,000 patients.
During this mission, a campaign called “Smile for NUK” will be underway and includes products designed for feeding that have been donated to the medical mission. We know that hundreds of children are waiting and we are anxious to join the teams on site and provide the surgeries they really need.
- Allison Bradshaw and Kia Guarino, Program Coordinators, Operation Smile
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Monday, August 23, 2010
Friday, July 23, 2010
Thursday, July 22, 2010
What a day in Nicaragua
Eduardo was handed off to the nurses at the door to the operating room leaving his mother full of anxiety...and hope. Forty-five minutes later Roma delivered Eduardo into his mother's arms, a boy with a brand new smile and a whole new chance in life. With hugs and kisses Roma, Reilly and Noemi celebrated Eduardo's new birth.
Then Jeff Probst, the host of Survivor which is shooting in Nicaragua, hit the mission site and got to experience the miracle of Operation Smile surgery first hand. He saw our little 6 year-old boy Johan go into surgery. Jeff was very interested in everything. He got the fine points of anethesia from one of the best in the business and looked over the shoulder of a world-class surgeon as stich by stich Johan was transformed. Then in post-op Jeff learned from Johan's mother, Erica, just what life was like for Johan growing up with a cleft lip and being called "cleft boy" by other kids. She told him that even though Johan was constantly ridiculed and teased, he never gave up. Now he won't have to. Jeff turned to the camera and in no uncertain terms encouraged viewers to get off the couch and do something wonderful. Do something for someone less fortunate. Do something that matters.
What a day in Nicaragua. The team will be here for two more days, but Jim and I fly out tomorrow, heading home richer by far and full of memories that will last a lifetime.
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Operation Smile Nicaragua
Granada, Nicaragua
A forty minute car ride brought us to Granada. A dinner at an outdoor restaurant and then back to the hotel for a few hours of sleep before our taping begins. The heavens opened up shortly after getting into my hotel room and the roof leaked right above the table where I had stored all my gear. I moved it quickly and went to sleep to the sound of rain pounding away.
Now it is 5 am and after a cold shower in the bathroom down the hall I am organizing equipment for the day. We'll meet Roma and Reilly at the hospital and see the families who will have come from far and wide hoping to get surgery for their children.
All in all, it's good to be here for Operation Smile in Nicaragua.
Monday, July 19, 2010
To Nicaragua with Roma Downey
Tomorrow morning JE Jack and I head off to Nicaragua for Operation Smile. We will be going with Roma Downey and her daughter, Reilly, to document a local medical mission there where up to 50 lucky children will get their cleft lips and cleft palates repaired for free.
Roma and Reilly will be the eyes, ears and hearts of our viewers as the mission unfolds.
Jim and I count ourselves as lucky to travel with them and view the good work of Operation Smile once again. We are going on this assignment for ad agency Russ Reid Company.
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
Our lives are not determined by what happens to us, but how we react to what happens; not by what life brings us, but by the attitude we bring to life. A positive attitude causes a chain reaction of positive thoughts, events and outcomes. It is a catalyst, a spark that creates extraordinary results.
--Anonymous
Sunday, July 4, 2010
Friday, July 2, 2010
Marceline and Jacqueline
Marceline lives with her father, mother, brothers and sisters in a small one room mud house, crumbling in the hot sun.
The whole community came out to greet us with songs, smiles and hearty handshakes.
Marceline sat on a bench in front of her house and told me, "Before I got my lip fixed, my life was miserable. After I got surgery I was very happy. Especially when my name was called when they were selecting the ones who would get surgery.
Now I am very happy. I now am able to drink using a straw. Other kids have been telling me that now I look beautiful, and this makes me feel so good in my heart.
May God bless whoever contributed to get my lips fixed. All of you and doctors who fixed my lips I thank you so much.
We gave our goodbyes and went down the red dusty road and cow track to find Jacqueline, another of the girls we had followed through surgery. By phone in another town her uncle gave us directions. And miracle of miracles, we arrived at Jacqueline's house. We were greeted warmly by Jacqueline and her tall statuesque mother.
Jacqueline is in P3 grade at school. She, too is tall and beautiful. And the surgery has given her an almost perfect smile. With much singing and waving we left Jacqueline to make our journey back to Kigali before nightfall. And so our trip through Rwanda is coming to an end. We have visited with four of our TV kids and two bonus kids as well.
Through their stories, warm embraces and smiles we have learned first hand what a tremendous difference Operation Smile makes in the lives of children and their families.
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Adeline in Rwanda
We visited Adeline today. She lives with her grandfather and her mother high on a hill overlooking a fertile valley. She told me that she doesn't want to remember the "old" Adeline, the one with the hole in the middle of her face. Years of taunting and teasing has left emotional scars. She had gone to school, but quit because of the way the other kids treated her. Today she has a new smile and a new life. She is no longer called names. People don't laugh at her anymore and at school she tells me, they must think she is a new student, because she is treated well, just like other "normal" kids. So for her the past is just that...past and gone. Today is a new and happy time.
Adeline said, "Before the surgery I was not happy with my life. Other kids were laughing at me. They teased me. The kept calling me "Cleft Girl" and "the girl with ughly lips."
Now I am happy because now I am going to school and other kids are not teasing me. Now I have a new life. Cleft Girl is now history. I don't even want to think about it. I want to thank all the people who contributed to get my lips fixed. Thank you so so so much!"
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Harry Potter
Jean, a boy we dubbed Harry Potter because of the sweatshirt he wore to the Operation Smile screening process, was just coming up the hill to his house as we pulled up. He looks great with his new smile. The healing will get better with time, but even after only 3 months he looks good. After his grandmother scrubbed him clean from water in a plastic tub, he was ready to pose for photos. Then we had him show us one of the chores he does to help his family. He collects greens to feed the young pig they keep next to their dairy cow.
Eugenie
Eugenie, a girl once abandoned, abused and thrown away...is now a happy girl with a home and friends. She proudly wears her Operation Smile T-Shirt and can't stop beaming. Her house is perched on the side of a steep hill carved into terraces for growing bananas and other crops. At over 5,000 feet I quite lost my breath as I walked over the hills on a meandering path to her home. Her neighbors were there rejoicing in her new face and now promising future. It was so nice to see her and to know that she now has friends to play with and share the joys of life. So different from the past life she led on the streets.
Eugenie told me, "My life before my cleft lip surgery was bad, I don't even want to think about it any more. But now I have friends. To those who put their efforts together to fix my lips, I want to thank you. May God give you a special blessing. May God protect you in all your journey and in your every day activities.
Monday, June 28, 2010
At Habimana's House
This boy ran to hug us as we arrived. So full of love. His house had been transformed since yesterday. A new "africa cloth" hung in the doorway. A wooden couch and stools were in front. And Habimana was washed and in clean clothes. All of this is because the community has seen what Operation Smile has done in the life of this little boy. The neighbors loaned the cloth , the furniture and the clothes. There was a jubulant air about the place.
Mom and Habimana spoke to us about the changes that have taken place in their lives. Once outcast, now accepted. They now have hopes and dreams where none were possible before.
Habimana and his new best friends strolled down the narrow footpath, confident and happy. They were off to play a game of soccer. The ball a simple one - made of rags.
Habimana told me, "Before you came to Rwanda people used to call me "Cleft boy" and they would tease me. That made me sad. I did not go to school because the other kids made fun of me. I just stayed at home alone. But then you chose me for surgery. You fixed my lip. And now my life has changed. Now I have friends. I am looking forward to going to school. I am happy and now people call me by my name - Habimana - not Cleft Boy anymore. Thank you for all you did for me."
Sunday, June 27, 2010
In Rwanda for Operation Smile
We were lucky, it came. Bag in hand it was time to track down Habimana, a little boy who had received surgery a few months ago. We found the neigborhood of mud brick homes and dirt paths on the side of a hill. And after a few missed turns we arrived at Habimana's house. The door was unlocked so we knew his mother couldn't be far away. Sure enough in a few moments we were surrounded by villagers and through the crowd came Habimana with his new smile.
We talked with him and his mother, took some photos and video and hung out in the late afternoon sun. They are still stuggling each day for food and shelter, but so happy with the results of the surgery. No more taunting and teasing. Habimana is looking forward to attending school in the fall.
We will return tomorrow for more taping and photos. He and his mother walked us up the hill to our taxi. They will be waiting in the morning.
It fills your heart to see a boy like Habimana actually changed by a relatively simple surgery that he could never have afforded in his life.