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Baby Daryan To Receive What Might Be His Last Chance at Life Tomorrow

August 30, 2009 by Jeremy · 7 Comments 

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It’s been over month now that Baby Daryan has been intubated in ICU in Istanbul, Turkey. All of the tests say that his heart is doing great… completely repaired. But the pressure that has built up in his lungs will not come down. Or, more accurately, it has not consistently stayed down.

But tomorrow the doctors hope to try again to extubate Daryan in hopes that his pressures will stay down this time; that he will breath on his own; and that he will live a long life with his completely healthy heart.

We don’t have anything else to say or speculate. The only thing left to do at this point is to hope and pray and believe.

Follow 4-month-old Daryan on Twitter: @daryansalah. Subscribe to Daryan’s updates via RSS here. Follow Daryan’s thread of longer stories (with pictures) on the PLC blog here.

Jeremy Courtney lives and loves in Iraq as a co-founder and Executive Director of the Preemptive Love Coalition. He's also the father of two spectacular children, and married to the lovely Jessica Courtney. When not absorbed in PLC work he can be found writing songs and singing about hope and future. Follow Jeremy on Twitter: @Jeremy_Courtney.

Ramyar’s Family Decides to Forgo Surgery, Return to Iraq Tonight

August 30, 2009 by awara · 1 Comment 

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Yesterday was the very difficult day that we all hoped we would have to face with Ramyar and his family. We hoped when the medical signs showed Ramyar to be “operable” it would mean that there was a pretty clear cut way forward and that all parties would feel equally confident about embarking on that path of surgical therapy.

Instead, even though the medical signs said he was technically operable, everything else said that the surgery would be a serious fight for his life. In this case, “operable” did not mean “desirable.”

So we were left at a fork in the road with Ramyar and his family: should we press forward with what might be a surgical salvation, or should we play it safe, enjoy the next few years with Ramyar, and walk out with the full knowledge that forgoing this surgery will consign him to a deterioration in his quality of life over the next few years until he ultimately dies at age six or seven.

The most complicating factor had to do with the lack of unity among Ramyar’s family as to what should be done. Those of us closest to the decision in PLC were leaning toward not doing the surgery… as was the mother… but the father in Iraq was insisting that we all press forward.

In the end, at 8 p.m. Friday night Ramyar’s father and mother agree amongst themselves (without any input from PLC) that they wanted to forgo the surgery and enjoy these next years with Ramyar with some sort of certainty as to what they can expect.

From every perspective it was a sad day… except the perspective that sees Ramyar reunited with his father and grandparents in Iraq able to live out the next few years surrounded by people who love him.

This is the first close call like this we’ve ever had to make. Until today, every child has fit comfortably into the “operable” or “inoperable” category and parents have been confident in moving forward based on the information they had available to them.

NOTE: As an aside on financial transparency, the family’s $2,500 that they contributed to the overall cost of what would have been his surgery has covered all of the costs of their airfare, housing, food, and diagnostic testing for Ramyar. PLC has not expended any of our internationally fundraised dollars on this screening/selection process and all of the funds we had budgeted for Ramyar will be redirected to a child in the near future.

Follow 4-year-old Ramyar on Twitter: @ramyarjafar. Subscribe to Ramyar’s updates via RSS here. Follow Ramyar’s thread of longer stories (with pictures) on the PLC blog here.

Awara Hassan Mama is a Regional Development Officer for the Preemptive Love Coalition in charge of creating local solutions to local problems in Iraq among his compatriots and for the sake of our constituents. Awara often travels abroad with PLC children to surgery and serves as a translator and a key cooperator between communities in conflict.

Meer Breathing, Eating, & Drinking on His Own in ICU

August 29, 2009 by awara · 1 Comment 

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We were thrilled yesterday to find Meer laughing and joking with the nurses in ICU just hours after doctors intervened to address his urgent situation. Unlike other children we’ve seen recently, when doctors said “Cough!” (to get the lungs working on their own again) Meer responded gladly: “I’ll cough all you want! I’m ready to get back to Iraq and play soccer!”

The impact of this surgery on Meer’s life and family is going to be significant. We cannot thank you enough for all you do to make these surgeries happen!

Follow 15-year-old Meer on Twitter: @meermustaffa and through the Twitter campaign associated with meeting his urgent need #SaveMeer. Subscribe to Meer’s updates via RSS here. Follow Meer’s thread of longer stories (with pictures) on the PLC blog here.

Awara Hassan Mama is a Regional Development Officer for the Preemptive Love Coalition in charge of creating local solutions to local problems in Iraq among his compatriots and for the sake of our constituents. Awara often travels abroad with PLC children to surgery and serves as a translator and a key cooperator between communities in conflict.

Meer Comes Through Surgery With Perfect Scores – Resting in ICU

August 28, 2009 by awara · 499 Comments 

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Meer had a great surgery today and Prof. Dr. Sertaç Çiçek and his staff at the Anadolu Medical Center in Istanbul, Turkey did a great thing in taking on his urgent case on such short notice. If all goes according to plan, Meer could be extubated and back in his private room as early as tomorrow or Sunday.

Stay tuned!

Follow 15-year-old Meer on Twitter: @meermustaffa and through the Twitter campaign associated with meeting his urgent need #SaveMeer. Subscribe to Meer’s updates via RSS here. Follow Meer’s thread of longer stories (with pictures) on the PLC blog here.

Awara Hassan Mama is a Regional Development Officer for the Preemptive Love Coalition in charge of creating local solutions to local problems in Iraq among his compatriots and for the sake of our constituents. Awara often travels abroad with PLC children to surgery and serves as a translator and a key cooperator between communities in conflict.

A Fork in the Road for Ramyar: His Surgery Will Be Very Risky If We Proceed

August 28, 2009 by Jeremy · Leave a Comment 

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“Triage is the mantle of God.”

That’s what one guy reminded us when we struggled out loud with the difficulty of balancing our responsibility is to a single child – usually the one in front of us – against our responsibility to every other child out there waiting in line for life-saving heart surgery outside the country.

Today that mantle which should belong to God alone seems like it is thrust upon us once again.

It was questionable as to whether or not Ramyar would be “operable.” I guess we were hoping for a fairly black and white “go” or “no.” Instead, the medical experts have said that Ramyar is operable, but they’ve also said that it will be extremely dangerous – full of risks, extra expenses, and no guarantees – except, of course, that the post-operative course will be very long and slow.

We were hoping for a simple “go” or “no.”

We are talking with Ramyar’s family about the risks and what should be done. But the risks… and the expenses… it’s so hard to know what to do. It’s scary to think that the very surgery that was meant to bring life could more quickly bring about death. On the other hand, sitting by idly when a solution could be just on the other side of this risky ridge.

If you pray, please ask God to take His mantle back. To give some sort of insight as to what will be best for this child before us and the thousands like him waiting in line.

Follow 4-year-old Ramyar on Twitter: @ramyarjafar. Subscribe to Ramyar’s updates via RSS here. Follow Ramyar’s thread of longer stories (with pictures) on the PLC blog here.

Jeremy Courtney lives and loves in Iraq as a co-founder and Executive Director of the Preemptive Love Coalition. He's also the father of two spectacular children, and married to the lovely Jessica Courtney. When not absorbed in PLC work he can be found writing songs and singing about hope and future. Follow Jeremy on Twitter: @Jeremy_Courtney.

Meer is Undergoing Surgery Right Now

August 28, 2009 by awara · Leave a Comment 

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Meer’s case was pretty urgent so we’re encouraged to see him pushed forward to surgery so quickly by the staff at the Anadolu Medical Center in Istanbul, Turkey.

We should know more about how Meer’s doing in just a few hours… long, stressful hours for his family and all of us…

Follow 15-year-old Meer on Twitter: @meermustaffa and through the Twitter campaign associated with meeting his urgent need #SaveMeer. Subscribe to Meer’s updates via RSS here. Follow Meer’s thread of longer stories (with pictures) on the PLC blog here.

Awara Hassan Mama is a Regional Development Officer for the Preemptive Love Coalition in charge of creating local solutions to local problems in Iraq among his compatriots and for the sake of our constituents. Awara often travels abroad with PLC children to surgery and serves as a translator and a key cooperator between communities in conflict.

Meet Meer

August 25, 2009 by Joshua · 392 Comments 

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Meer’s situation is particularly urgent, referred to us both by Dr. Aso Faek in Iraq and the First Lady’s Kurdistan Save the Children. The great doctors at Anadolu Medical Center (Anadolu Sağlık Merkezi) do believe that the impact of this surgery on Meer and his quality of life will be sustantial thanks to your generous donations and Buy Shoes. Save Lives. purchases. The doctors currently plan to take Meer to surgery without any serious diagnostic testing.

Unlike many of the 44 other children we’ve sent to surgery, Meer is old enough to fully understand what is happening to him and what is at stake if things do not go according to plan. As such, Meer is understandably apprehensive about his time in Turkey, his surgery, and being away from his family. Undoubtedly Meer has heard some grand stories about the ethnic tensions between Turks and Kurds in Turkey. This can negatively affect perceptions and make the anxiety of the first few hours in the country very palpable. But it’s a joy to see those fears melt away at the hands of loving, caring nurses and medical staff.

Your donations and your efforts are always about more than the single life involved. These medical moments are writing new narratives of peace and cooperation between communities at odds. Tonight, it’s Meer’s turn.

Follow 15-year-old Meer on Twitter: @meermustaffa and through the Twitter campaign associated with meeting his urgent need #SaveMeer. Subscribe to Meer’s updates via RSS here. Follow Meer’s thread of longer stories (with pictures) on the PLC blog here.

NOTE: In accordance with PLC’s desire to lend a hand-up by avoiding strict hand-outs (when possible), Meer’s family has paid $2,500 towards PLC’s highly-discounted diagnostic testing and surgery prices.

Joshua Gigliotti is a PLC Summer Intern ('09) turned short-term staff who spends a majority of his time with PLC taking exceptional photos of children in Iraq in an effort to humanize Iraqis and portray them as people full of dreams and hope. When his camera is not in-hand, Josh is often found in local tea houses with friends and also enjoys traversing the great outdoors. Follow Joshua on Twitter: @JoshGigs.

Meet Ramyar

August 25, 2009 by Joshua · Leave a Comment 

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Many thanks to Ashley, Angel, and Josh – former PLC Summer Interns turned short term staff – for doing all the initial work involved in preparing Ramyar for surgery so that he could end up on an airplane to Istanbul today (Thanks, Atlasjet!), at the beginning of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, in hopes of receiving life-saving heart surgery from our partnership at Anadolu Medical Center (Anadolu Sağlık Merkezi).

Ramyar is borderline inoperable. He will require a diagnostic catheterization study to determine if he will be accept to surgery or if it is just far too risky. His four years of life to date have already made his situation worse than when he was born. Sometimes age has a way of healing these things… sometimes it has a way of exacerbating them to the point of inoperability.

So we all wait with great hopes and expectations that this precious three year old boy will be operable. Their family would value your prayers to that end.

Follow 4-year-old Ramyar on Twitter: @ramyarjafar. Subscribe to Ramyar’s updates via RSS here. Follow Ramyar’s thread of longer stories (with pictures) on the PLC blog here.

NOTE: In accordance with PLC’s desire to lend a hand-up by avoiding strict hand-outs (when possible), Ramyar’s family has paid $2,500 towards PLC’s highly-discounted diagnostic testing and surgery prices.

Joshua Gigliotti is a PLC Summer Intern ('09) turned short-term staff who spends a majority of his time with PLC taking exceptional photos of children in Iraq in an effort to humanize Iraqis and portray them as people full of dreams and hope. When his camera is not in-hand, Josh is often found in local tea houses with friends and also enjoys traversing the great outdoors. Follow Joshua on Twitter: @JoshGigs.

An Interactive Graphic Overview of What We’ve Been Up to for the Last Few Years

August 23, 2009 by Jeremy · 496 Comments 

Drag and drop and click and scroll and comment and push and play your way through some of our [online] activity from the last year.

Special Features of Note:

Be sure to Click on Map>Play Events for a Worldwide Conversation of Sorts Between Our Offices Around the World

View fullscreen below for more room to play around!

Jeremy Courtney lives and loves in Iraq as a co-founder and Executive Director of the Preemptive Love Coalition. He's also the father of two spectacular children, and married to the lovely Jessica Courtney. When not absorbed in PLC work he can be found writing songs and singing about hope and future. Follow Jeremy on Twitter: @Jeremy_Courtney.

So Long Forgotten’s Things We Can See & Things We Cannot

August 23, 2009 by Cody · 2 Comments 

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Thanks to Derek Webb’s NoiseTrade.com you can now download the fabulous new album by PLC supporters So Long Forgotten. Not only is their passion palpable on this new release (and every other one before it), but these guys are quite serious about their support of the Preemptive Love Coalition, having given their own personal dollars to support Iraqi children and sharing their stage around the country with the message of preemptive love.

The widget to the left is NOT just an image. It is interactive – so get involved. You can download their music right here on this page FOR FREE by merely telling five friends (or by paying the amount of your choice).



By the way, their tour bus is an old shuttle bus named “Gus” and it runs off of used vegetable oil from restaurants! We think that’s pretty great!

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Cody Fisher is the co-founder and Development Director of the Preemptive Love Coalition. He moved to Iraq in 2007 where he met his wife and since then they've been waging peace and mending hearts across Iraq. His passions are photography, peacemaking, and food that doesn't come out of a can. You can follow him on Twitter: @candmfisher.

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