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Preemptive Love Coalition Home   Lifesaving heart surgeries for Iraqi children in pursuit of peace between communities at odds.


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American Donor & Volunteer Shares From Front Lines of our Work in Iraq & Turkey

August 6, 2010 by · Comments Off 

Nivar and her dad!

Have you ever observed something that made you feel just a little more alive than you did the second before? The senses sharpen, everything else around you stops, and it seems as if the state of your very existence could hinge upon your understanding of that precise moment. Life all of a sudden becomes more valuable and hope of something unintelligible, unexplainable and far off fills your being from deep within.

That is how I felt when I dodged a father running to see his daughter’s doctor following the completion of her open heart surgery. His wait to see his daughter was not quite over, yet as I dodged out of his way it was obvious that any news was the most important thing in the world to a helpless father who could do nothing to rescue his daughter from an unseen foe.

There were honestly a few moments that rivaled this one during my short three days spent at Anadolu Medical Center with the Preemptive Love Coalition. When the constant issue at hand is that of life and death, the meaning of both is unavoidable. Although I’ve followed and supported PLC for three years now, the personal interaction with the children heading to surgery and their parents was a gift I was not quite prepared for. As I sat outside at the hospital coffee shop with Nivar’s father, still waiting to see his daughter for the first time since surgery, I could feel the anxiety and helplessness surrounding him and was reminded of the gift of loved ones. Every healed heart at Anadolu Medical Center is a child saved, a future restored and also a family preserved.

One of the greatest blessings in working with, giving to and supporting an organization like PLC is the knowledge that what you are doing is truly meaningful. And let me tell you partners, supporters, donors and friends of PLC, your investments and partnerships are truly worthwhile! Your efforts and funds go directly into saving childrens lives, preserving families and renewing futures. From all over the world, you are affecting lives of real people for the better. I’ve seen it. And these people are thankful.

One particular issue that was brought to light during my week with my friends at PLC was that ethnic struggles do not have to result in war, racism or death. Addressing ethnic and religious tensions can also result in life, in reconciliation, in hope for the future. For every political struggle that takes place in order to get a Iraqi child to a successful surgery in Turkey, there is also a celebration of life, a reconciliation of enemies, and a hope of a child’s future reborn.

Finally, it seems the shared response from all parties involved is one of doxology, “thanks be to God.” That is truly amazing, and it is something I will always choose to be behind.

Yahyah This little boy, Yahya, still needs a few thousand dollars to cover the costs of surgery and travel from Iraq to Istanbul so he can experience the same life-change you’ve given Nivar. To take Yahya out of line and get him to Istanbul for surgery, please enter the amount of your choice below and click “Donate Now!”.







Follow Nivar on Twitter: @NivarMohammed. Subscribe to Nivar’s updates via RSS HERE. Follow Nivar’s thread of longer stories (with pictures & video) on the PLC blog HERE.


Our Partners:
Living Light InternationalInternational Children's Heart Foundation

Tim Mason is a friend and supporter of PLC who works with college students in Waco, Texas. Some of his greatest joys include learning, giving people second chances, playing any sport imaginable, and drinking chocolate milkshakes.

Vary’s Last Day in the Hospital – Leaving for Iraq Tomorrow!

November 16, 2009 by · 6 Comments 

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This is the happiest we’ve seen her since her arrival in Istanbul. Laughing with us, playing with us, dancing to the music playing on her room TV, she was as happy and healthy as could be hoped for.

The feeling of watching this little girl play is… well, what we work for. She is healed. She has been given new life. Her mom is at rest, no longer fearing her daughter’s heart; no longer being forced to live a cautious life because of it.

Vary has been healed, and now boards a plane with something that wasnt there when she left. Hope for the future.

Follow 2-year-old Vary on Twitter: @varybahman. Subscribe to Vary’s updates via RSS HERE. Follow Vary’s thread of longer stories (with pictures & video) on the PLC blog HERE.

Joshua is a PLC Summer Intern 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.

Uneventful Days in a Hospital After Heart Surgery are the Best Kind

November 11, 2009 by · 317 Comments 

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Today was a down day… not much to report on Honya and Vary except that everything is going according to course. Because of the down day, some of us worked from the hospital while our American staffed worked from the guesthouse in Istanbul on some long-term projects for PLC.

But thanks to modern technology and the incredible access to WiFi at the Anadolu Medical Center, the staff from the guesthouse were able to “conference call” with the mothers and the two girls to check in on their well-being throughout the day!

Follow 9-month-old Honya on Twitter: @honyamahdi. Subscribe to Honya’s updates via RSS HERE. Follow Honya’s thread of longer stories (with pictures & video) on the PLC blog HERE.

Follow 2-year-old Vary on Twitter: @varybahman. Subscribe to Vary’s updates via RSS HERE. Follow Vary’s thread of longer stories (with pictures & video) 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: @JCourt.

Vary’s Surgery Was a Complete Success! Already Extubated & Resting In ICU

November 10, 2009 by · 1 Comment 

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Vary’s surgery was a complicated procedure (even in heart surgery terms) but everything went according to plan. It was the best kind of uneventful.

Today Vary is resting in ICU, extubated and off the breathing machine, and breathing just fine with good oxygen saturations from the room air. These are the hardest days… the most critical. So we are still watchful, but for the first time in Vary’s life, there is now a real reason to be hopeful because of you and the work you do each day to make these sort of life-impacting surgeries happen.

Follow 2-year-old Vary on Twitter: @varybahman. Subscribe to Vary’s updates via RSS HERE. Follow Vary’s thread of longer stories (with pictures & video) 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: @JCourt.

Vary Heads In To Surgery

November 9, 2009 by · 1 Comment 

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Vary’s mother is excited about all the possibilities the future could hold for Vary and their family if this surgery is successful.

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Not quite sure if she’s happy to be getting away from the camera or scared of all the sudden attention she is getting back people in weird hats…

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One last hug… a final close cuddle before sending her child away to what could be a life-saving surgery… Still, Vary’s mom is unable to shake the reality that it could also precipitate her death.

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Vary is separated from mom and taken into the operating room…

For little Vary, the road to surgery has been a difficult one. She’s lived long enough with her heart condition to know doctors when she seems them; and she has has come to fear them. Upon seeing them in her doorway, she immediately recoils and clings to her mother…a mother who must hand her only daughter into the hands of foreign doctors – whose words she cannot even remotely understand – to save her life.

Follow 2-year-old Vary on Twitter: @varybahman. Subscribe to Vary’s updates via RSS HERE. Follow Vary’s thread of longer stories (with pictures & video) on the PLC blog HERE.

Joshua is a PLC Summer Intern 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.

Vary’s Surgery Will Be More Complicated Than We Initially Thought

November 9, 2009 by · 262 Comments 

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The doctors at Anadolu Medical Center in Istanbul, Turkey explain how they were able to identify an additional problem that was missed by doctors in Iraq due to out-dated equipped and less experience in the field. Vary’s surgery will be far more complicated and more risky than we initially thought. The course for Vary’s surgical correction includes lowering her body temperature to 16 degrees Celsius, draining all the blood from her body, and resecting a portion of the artery dangerously close to a critical nerve that could leave Vary with neurological damage.

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Just as subpar equipment and medical facilities in Iraq are stand-in substitutes for the diagnostic and therapeutic equipment that these dear people really need, so, too, do make-shift educational systems, requirements, and expectations stand-in as substitutes for standards, critical thinking, and comprehension-based testing. Because of this, Vary’s mother has to sign the documents acknowledging the risks of death and other complications with an inked thumbprint because at 23 years old, she lacks the ability to read or write.

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Vary’s mother doesn’t really have much of a choice. Of course she’s scared of neurological damage, other complications, and the risk of death during surgery… then again, she’s already heard that her daughter is sentenced to death without this surgery. So we gathered, prayed, and Vary goes to surgery in just a few short hours.

Follow 2-year-old Vary on Twitter: @varybahman. Subscribe to Vary’s updates via RSS HERE. Follow Vary’s thread of longer stories (with pictures & video) on the PLC blog HERE.

Joshua is a PLC Summer Intern 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.

Vary Has Had A Difficult Time But Surgery is Tomorrow

November 8, 2009 by · 7 Comments 

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Vary has spent more time crying than any other little girl we’ve ever seen. She really uncomfortable and misses her daddy quite a bit… But she’s one step closer to getting back to Iraq to see him now that her surgery has been scheduled for tomorrow morning.

Follow 2-year-old Vary on Twitter: @varybahman. Subscribe to Vary’s updates via RSS HERE. Follow Vary’s thread of longer stories (with pictures & video) 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: @JCourt.

The Plane, the Airport, the Bus: A Photographic Peek at Our Journey with Three Iraqi Kids

November 4, 2009 by · 1 Comment 

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Vary is two years old and very scared of this new place. She is old enough to recognize doctors as doctors….and given her heart condition, has come to fear them.

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This little nine year old, Mohammad, has been great. Very calm, very respectful….I even had him laughing last night as he was getting his EKG.

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Honya is a very sick nine month old girl. We are so nervous for her…..she’s the riskiest girl we’re sending.

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ADDITIONAL LOCAL FUNDING BY:

family funding*
FAMILY FUNDING

Qaiwan Group
QAIWAN GROUP

Kurdistan Save the Children
KURDISTAN SAVE THE CHILDREN

Joshua is a PLC Summer Intern 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.

Meet Vary (Twitter: @varybahman)

November 3, 2009 by · 4 Comments 

Vary is a spunky little two year old who loves stuffed animals. You wouldn’t know it by looking at her that her heart is failing, but she is actually an urgent case. We are hopeful that her surgery will set her back on track for a happy, healthy life running and playing with her friends. Her mom says she can go anywhere as long as “blankie” can go too!

On November 3rd Vary and blankie (and mom) take off for Istanbul for surgery at the Anadolu Medical Center.

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PRINT & PASS ALONG VARY’S HOPE CARD HERE.

Follow 2-year-old Vary on Twitter: @varybahman. Subscribe to Vary’s updates via RSS HERE. Follow Vary’s thread of longer stories (with pictures & video) on the PLC blog HERE.

—————–

ADDITIONAL LOCAL FUNDING BY:

family funding*
FAMILY FUNDING

*In accordance with PLC’s desire to lend a hand-up by avoiding strict hand-outs (when possible), Vary’s family has paid $10,000 towards PLC’s highly-discounted surgery prices.

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: @JCourt.

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