Wendy
Harrington and her 5-year-old daughter Cailee welcomed Julia
Denis and her 8-year-old daughter Dencia at Kennedy Airport in
January. Dencia has since had successful heart surgery
sponsored in part by the Peekskill Rotary Club.
Julia Denis
holds her 8-year-old daughter Dencia on her lap, rubs her back, and
smiles.
Mother and daughter are lounging on a cushy couch in the comfortable
and welcoming Harrington home in Yorktown Heights a few days
following Dencia’s open heart surgery.
“She just fell asleep, but when she’s up she keeps me busy,” Julia
Denis says of her precocious daughter. “It’s good to know she will
be able to do the things other children do now.”
Dencia, a round-faced, smiling young lady who hails from St. Lucia,
eventually opens her eyes and begins conversing with Wendy and Tom
Harrington, members of the Peekskill Rotary Club who have opened
their home to the Denis girls while Dencia had her surgery and
recuperation. The interaction seems as natural as it would if the
Harringtons were Dencia’s uncle and aunt or family members.
“We’re pretty close already,” Wendy Harrington said. “We were ready
for this, somehow. We were at a Rotary meeting last December and
they asked in someone would volunteer to host Julia and Dencia while
they were here for the surgery. It just seemed like the opportunity
was there for us.”
A new
extended family
The Harringtons, of chilly, wintery Yorktown Heights, met the
Denises, of tropical, sunny St. Lucia, one of the Windward Islands
of the Lesser Antilles, at Kennedy Airport on January 15. A weary
and expectant Julia said she was immediately comfortable when she
met her hosts.
“I didn’t know what they looked like and they didn’t know what we
looked like,” Julia Denis said. “I thought, what will I look for?
Will I find them?
The Harrington’s 5-year-old, Cailee, a student at the French Hill
Elementary School, made a sign welcoming the Denis girls and the
artwork had its desired effect.
“I saw the sign and knew it was for us,” Julia said. “I’ve been so
comfortable here. (Harringtons) have been wonderful.”
Comfortable, but cold.
“Julia hasn’t been outdoors much and she wore a hat and coat indoors
the first day or so,” Wendy Harrington said. “We’re hoping to get
her outdoors soon, but right now she’s making sure Dencia doesn’t do
anything to bother the surgery.”
Julia, who has seven children back home in St. Lucia, said she
misses her family but knows the recovery after Dencia surgery
requires her to be “watching her” most of the time.
“She gets into things,” Julia said. “We just want to be sure she is
okay.”
A
life-changing surgery
Dencia’s surgery, which was sponsored by the Rotary Club’s "Gift of
Life" program, included repair to a “hole” in Dencia's heart and the
repair of a heart valve. The birth defect had caused Dencia
breathing and other related problems all her life.
“She would run for 30 seconds and then be unable to breathe,” Julia
Denis said. “Now, we expect her to be able to do things she could
not do. She can even go to school full time.”
Dencia and her mother were welcomed by the Peekskill club at the
Thursday Rotary Club lunch meeting before the surgery on January 24.
The Westchester Medical Center team of Dr. Suvro Sett, surgeon, and
Dr. Paul Woolf, cardiologist, carried out the successful surgery to
close the hole and repair a valve at the Maria Ferari Children’s
Hospital in White Plains.
Commenting on the “Gift of Life” program, the President of the
Peekskill Rotary Club, Sibyl Canaan, said, “By helping sponsor and
host children in need such as Dencia, we are giving our future
citizens a new lease on life and our future ambassadors of goodwill
the gift of good health.
“These families are given hope and their child’s future is almost
miraculously restored – it’s a wonderful tribute to humanity and
love, and truly fits the Rotary goal of building bridges of
friendship and peace around the world. And we are very grateful to
Wendy and Tom for sharing their home and their love to help restore
the health of this little girl.”
Thirty
years of giving
The “Gift of Life” program began in 1974 when the Manhasset Rotary
Club, in Long Island, New York responded to a request from the
Kampala Rotary Club in Uganda to help a five-year undergo a
lifesaving open-heart surgery. Since that date, over 1,500 children
from more than 30 countries throughout the world, including the
United States, have been given another lease on life through the
miracle of open heart surgery all donated by the generosity of
Rotary members and hundreds of volunteers, plus the doctors, nurses
and staffs of participating hospitals.
In an effort to reduce time and travel costs for serious heart
patients, new “Gift of Life” programs have been initiated in
hospitals in Egypt, India, Africa and the Philippines.
In 1994, the Eastchester Rotary Club with the help of Dr. Michael
Gewitz, chief of the Pediatrics at New York Medical College, met
with and convinced the officials of the Westchester County Medical
Center to become a participating hospital, and since then, the new
Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital performs these operations at
Westchester Medical Center in Valhalla, and also the Montefiore
Children's Hospital in the Bronx. Each of these hospitals has
generously volunteered to perform 12 such operations each year, for
which the Rotary clubs of District 7230 provide $6,000 for the
open-heart surgery.
This is a mere fraction of the true cost, and this lifesaving
surgery is made possible only because of the generous contribution
by the medical teams involved who volunteer cardiologists, surgeons,
nurses and other dedicated members of the hospitals’ staffs. Each
year, “Gift of Life” holds a dinner dance each year to raise funds
and recognize the tremendous volunteer effort that goes into this
program.
Home sweet home
Dencia, who also has Down Syndrome, attends the Dunnottar School,
which has been the lead sponsor in getting the surgery done. The
school’s therapist Elaine Clement initiated the search to help
Dencia.
“We are so thankful to everyone in St. Lucia, especially the
school,” Julia Denis said. “If it weren’t for the school, Dencia
would not have had this opportunity. And so many thanks to the
Rotary Club and the Harringtons and everyone for being so giving.”
For Dencia, who has a special affinity for computers and having her
photo taken, memories of her life-saving visit to America are
already being forged.
“Here are some photos of Dencia playing in the snow,” Tom Harrington
said as Dencia looked at the growing album of the Denis’s stay with
the Harringtons. “Look Dencia, there’s your name in the snow.”
“My name – snow,” Dencia said as she pointed to the photos and
smiled. “I feel good.”
Cailee, who has bonded with her new “sister”, said she was happy to
have a new friend and a chance to help someone in need.
“It is very fun to have them here because I love to play with Dencia.
I am glad that she had the operation so she can play better. I am
glad that Rotary picked us.”
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