Headed Home While Remedy Continues To Gain Momentum
December 22, 2010 by Cody · Leave a Comment

At the end of the first Remedy Mission in Southern Iraq we served 22 families, corrected 45 heart defects and gave a collective 7,000 hours of training to more than 50 local doctors and nurses!
Kids conquered heart disease together, families built new networks of friendships, doctors gained mentors, nurses gathered inspiration, and a foundation was laid for what might someday become a fully functional, locally-run pediatric cardiac surgery center.
Thanks to YOU, the momentum has continued from our first Remedy Mission in Sulaymaniyah last August to the latest mission in Nasiriyah. As we get ready for 2011, both Sulaymaniyah and Nasariyah are preparing for 8 more Remedy Missions this next year!
The growing coalition of partners that continue to bring Remedy include all of us at PLC, our freinds at the International Children’s Heart Foundation, Living Light International, Kurdistan Save the Children, both the Iraqi and Kurdish governments along with local governments and ministries of health, and you!
Without your support, there would be no remedies like what we’re witnessing.
With your support, this will only be the beginning!
With each story that’s told through these missions, a growing community is being drawn to the people of Iraq. As a community, we’re not only beginning to grow in our understanding and love but we’re tangibly waging peace in both our local communities and in communities throughout the Middle East.
It’s a pleasure to be standing alongside you. Let’s press on!
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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: |
Anwar & Fatima Continue To Get Stronger!
December 21, 2010 by Cody · Leave a Comment
It’s incredible to watch the journeys of these children and their families.

Most of the families come in individually carrying their children. The children usually stay in their beds with their mothers until they go in for their surgery.
Then the mother’s begin to grow closer as they wait for their children to come through the surgery and out of the ICU. When each child comes out, they celebrate and soon they’ll start walking their children or each other’s children down the hallway tightly gripping their hands.
Then one by one, each child gets stronger and soon the mothers stay in the room chatting while their children are running around on their own!
It’s a beautiful thing to be writing this post and be interrupted by the children we’ve grown to love so much.

Anwar and Fatima seem to grow stronger each day here in the hospital.
Today, Anwar and I colored. He drew pictures of palm trees and birds. I think we’re all counting down the days until we can leave the hospital!
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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: |
The Day Shams Received A Remedy and The Day She Died
December 19, 2010 by Cody · Leave a Comment

This week, little five year old Shams Hadi died during her 12 hour operation. Shams was born with a combination of three congenital heart defects. By themselves, those three defects aren’t unusual among children here but none of the doctors or cardiologists had ever seen the combination of all three in one child.
In a developed country, Shams should have received surgery at three months. Her five year wait had simply done too much damage to her heart and lungs and by the time she saw the doctors that could cure her, it was too late.
The doctors were astonished she had lived this long.
But this week there was one last chance to fight for her life.
Before Remedy began, I thought about what I would write in this post. I came into these two weeks knowing that lives would be saved but also facing the sober reality that it might already be too late for some of the children we’ve met.
Even though these surgeries are just in time for some and too late for others, every one of these children is having their story rewritten.
Their stories all began with them being born in a country that didn’t have the doctors or hospitals that could save them from their disease. While there were remedies, they are all overseas and out of reach for all of them. Before now, these stories were ending with them still dying without any options.
Now, stories are being rewritten so that children in the north and in the south are beginning to see the remedy for the first time.
For many, it came just in time. For a few, their story ends with them not alone but instead surrounded by an entire team of doctors and nurses who gave it everything they had to save their life.
Shams’ story ended that way. It ended with her family being surrounded by a community who had grown to love them deeply.
Bringing remedy to Iraq doesn’t mean we make heart disease a thing of the past. It means that every child born with heart disease has access to the care that they need to fight it.
And that’s why, during days like today, we don’t lose hope. That’s why we honor Shams and her family by not giving up the hope that soon no Iraqi children will have to wait as long as she did to be treated.
Thanks for standing alongside us, in the joy and in the pain.
Thank you for continuing to rewrite the stories of children and families all across Iraq.
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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: |
Ritha Passes His Last Test Before Discharge & Baby Hassan Leaves ICU
December 17, 2010 by Cody · Leave a Comment
Ritha had one assignment before he could go home. Blow up a latex glove, something that he could never have done before his surgery.

He kept blowing until the nurses had to stop him because it was about to POP!
With flying colors, Ritha passed his test and was sent home with his father!
More latex gloves are being passed out and one by one, kids are getting to go home!

The ICU nurses hated letting Hassan go but there was no more reason to keep him from moving to the ward with his mother. Today, Hassan was freed of monitors and tubes and carried out to be with his family!
Beds are losing their patients and families are winning back their children as this Remedy Mission nears its end!
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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: |
Beautiful Zahran Passes Through ICU!
December 16, 2010 by Cody · Leave a Comment

Zahran decided she didn’t want to waste any time in the ICU after surgery!
A life-saving shunt was placed near her heart to increase the blood flow to her lungs. Before the surgery, she would struggle to breathe and the only thing her mother could do was to lift her legs up to ease the tension on her heart.
Today, her mother was able to carry her around the ICU before she was taken to the hospital ward to be with Fatima, Ritha, and Anwar!’
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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: |
Old Friends With New Hearts
December 15, 2010 by Cody · Leave a Comment
Remember Ahmed, Noor, Hussein, and Riza from our first Remedy?
They remember you!
They were the group of four who traveled 1,000 kilometers north to receive their life-saving surgeries last August. Today, they only had to go down the road to show us how well they were all doing!

I didn’t even recognize any of them! Can you? Together, all four have gained a total of 33 pounds since their operation! All their parents said the same thing, “They won’t stop moving or eating!”
All signs that their body is getting stronger each day with their whole hearts.
Ahmed’s parents are doing great after their car accident. His father is back at work and his mom has the new full-time job of keeping up with Ahmed!

Riza’s mother said, “She’s a completely new child since the surgery. Before, she couldn’t stand or crawl but now she’s running everywhere!”

Hussein’s mother said, “He has a fresh face now! Before, he was tired and his heart would beat fast. Now he’s full of energy and his heart doesn’t hold him back.”

They thanked GOD for you today and they remembered how you made Remedy possible. They told me, “We’ll never forget what you did for us!”
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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: |
Gifting Justice To One Family At A Time: Zahran Goes to Surgery
December 14, 2010 by Cody · Leave a Comment
“I can’t even imagine what it would be like to live in a country with good healthcare.”

Those were the words of a mother of two. Both were born with holes in their hearts. Her youngest, pictured above, is Zahran.
Zahran was diagnosed with heart disease when she was seven months old. A bleak diagnosis is all the doctor could offer them. That and the hope of treatment overseas.
Zahran’s mother kept repeating, “We could not find a remedy here in Iraq.”
What would be harder to hear as a parent? The fact that your child has an incurable disease or that there is a cure but it’s just out of your reach?
When there is a remedy and when it’s within reach of some and out of reach for others, just based on where they’re born, then it becomes an issue of justice, doesn’t it?
Like all issues of injustice, it requires people to come running and take action.
It requires people to do justice.
Today marks the 6th day of operations and Zahran’s set to be the 16th child to be given what could be a life-saving surgery!
Because of YOU, Zahran’s mother can start to imagine what it’s going to be like to live in a country where the healthcare is strong enough to save her children.
What better gift could you give this Christmas than justice?

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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: |
Hassan’s Surgery Was A Success!
December 13, 2010 by Cody · Leave a Comment

Hassan’s surgery was a success!
When the doctors first looked at Hassan’s heart, he had multiple defects. When they were done with the operation, they had corrected each one of those defects and could only describe his heart as whole and complete!
Now Hassan is resting in the ICU, next to Ahmed, where the nurses continue to monitor how the rest of his body responds to his new and fully functioning heart.
Hassan’s wait for his surgery is finally over. Now all we’re waiting for is his return to his family.

Stay tuned…
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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: |
Stepping Back And Looking Forward
December 13, 2010 by Cody · Leave a Comment

It’s not everyday you go to a place where they say it all began.
A place where they say the Garden of Eden might have been, where Abraham lived, where civilization sprung up along with architecture and the invention of the wheel.
We spent the day outside of the hospital, canoeing through the marshes on the Tigris River and meeting with local sheikh’s, eating lamb, drinking tea, and standing on the roof of the site that Abraham called home.
It was a complicated picture though, with military on every corner, and an AK-47 jammed in between the driver’s seat and mine.
Imagine trying to close your eyes and picture the Garden of Eden when police sirens and car horns continually bring every thought into submission.
It was a good change, to be out of the hospital and instead of talking about the future and trying to cast a vision for healthcare, to instead listen and hear about the history of the land we’ve stepped into.
I found out that the man who directs our security once lived in the marshes we were canoeing through. His family fled there, like so many, to hide from Saddam Hussein and the Iraqi military. To save their lives they left their homes and cars for reed huts and canoes.
I also found out that some of the doctors and politicians we spent the day with were once revolutionaries who rallied local tribes and cities to resist the regime.
From the time Abraham left it seems like the people here have been in one epic struggle for tomorrow.

But since the fall of Saddam they’ve been able to devote their resources towards development rather than just survival. Now these sheikhs and revolutionaries are the leading voices in developing health care, strengthening the school systems, and building stronger ties within their local communities.
The Middle East is a complex culture built on honor and with each day that we’re here, we see how they continue to honor those who have gone before them and also those who are following close behind. They’ve sacrificed so much to have today and they continue to sacrifice for tomorrow.
As hard as it was to try to imagine the past today, we got glimpses here and there. Sometimes it’s just as difficult to try to imagine the future but with each surgery and with each story we hear, we get small glimpses that let us know this is all going to be worth it.
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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: |
One Family’s Longing For Remedy – Hassan’s Shot at Surgery
December 11, 2010 by Cody · Comments Off

Meet Hassan.
Each time I sit down with the families, I share with them why we’re doing what we’re doing and why their stories matter. I tell them that the more people who hear their stories, the more who will begin to care, and the more who begin to care, the more who will begin to act. And GOD-willing, soon every child in Iraq will have access to the healthcare they justly deserve.
Hassan’s story matters to us.
Hassan is just 7 months old. When he was just 13 days old he came down with a high fever which led him to the doctor who diagnosed his heart defect. He has an enlarged heart among other defects. They traveled five hours to Baghdad to have another doctor look at him but the doctor could only recommend him to doctors in other countries. The doctor told them, “Not even in the tribes, do they have this extreme of a heart defect.”
They knew they couldn’t afford to go to another country so they never gave up visiting doctors inside Iraq, certain that there must be one who could save their son.
At last, an Iraqi doctor told them he knew how to fix Hassan. That week they traveled back to Baghdad to have the doctor operate on him but the doctor turned them away, telling them to come back the following week. They returned but were turned away again.
This happened nine straight weeks in a row.
Finally the doctor left the country, dashing all hopes they had for Hassan.
Hassan’s mother never gave up waiting for his return.
She continued to look after Hassan full time, quitting her job as a teacher. Hassan’s father served in the Iraqi military under Saddam Hussein but when he refused to take a man’s life, he was forced to find a way out. When the opportunity presented itself, he fled.
Soon after, he was caught and thrown in prison.
He was released after a year, only after being tortured until the point where he became mentally disabled.
His wife told us that he can’t even play with his children anymore.
This doesn’t take away the love his children have for him and Hassan can’t wait to be back home with his Dad.
Until then, Hassan knows there’s something in his heart that needs to be fixed and that day’s only hours away.
Stay tuned…
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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: |













