How Remedy Missions Are Inspiring Locals To Bring The Remedy To Others
February 28, 2011 by Cody · 1 Comment

chain reaction: (n.) a series of events in which each event is the result of the one preceding and the cause of the one following
This is little Yasna.
She was born with a heart defect that keeps her lungs from receiving all the blood and oxygen that she needs to live strong.
At two months old, they had no idea about her heart problem but when she had to go in for an abdominal surgery the doctors noticed something wasn’t right with her heart.
The local doctors told her mother that she would need to save up to take Yasna to India for surgery. Already two months old, the doctors told her that she only had four more months to get her surgery until her condition would worsen and make her inoperable.
6 months passed and she had only a fraction of the amount saved up.
6 more months passed and soon she was 2 years old and the parents had come to live with the fact that their daughter was too old to be saved.
Last August, Yasna’s mother’s cell phone ran and she heard about a team of doctors coming in to bring a remedy for children exactly like hers - children others thought were inoperable.
She brought Yasna in for surgery but because of the amount of “inoperable” children waiting in line for their operations, the doctors ran out of time and Yasna had to go home without a surgery.
Because of YOU, that was only the first Remedy Mission of many and last week they were called to the hospital again…this time they were second in line for surgery!
I asked Yasna’s mother what it was like to finally hand her daughter over to surgeons that knew how to fix her heart. She said, “So beautiful.”
She continued, “One day, God-willing, not only will our doctors know how to take care of all the children here but our country will be the country who sends doctors and nurses to other countries to help their children.”
And so the chain reaction continues!
You’re bringing remedy which is stirring up hearts in Iraq to turn around and bring the remedy to others.
How will you keep the momentum going as Yasna goes into surgery today?
Join us on Facebook and follow her story!
If you’re on Twitter this week be sure to use the #RemedyMission hashtag to describe all the good news coming out of Iraq this week via @preemptivelove.
With help from our friends:

His Heart Condition is Threatening His Life – Have You Met Alawi?
February 18, 2011 by Jeremy · 632 Comments

You need to.
This just may be the cutest and most adorable boy in Iraq.
Alawi Hussein is just under three and a half years old and he was born with a congenital heart defect.
At 9 months old, instead of taking bets on what his first word was going to be, his parents were coping with the devastating news that Alawi had a heart problem. It was a heart problem, like most heart problems in Iraq, that could only be fixed outside of Iraq.
The list of countries that could help him was long.
Iran.
Turkey.
Jordan.
India.
America.
Basically – many other countries except the one he was born in.
While the list of opportunities was long, the list of actual possibilities for Alawi was short.

Hearing about all the doctors overseas that can heal your son is simply cruel if you don’t have the money – or even a passport – to pursue the option.
His family had to learn to enjoy the time they had with Alawi and just hope for a remedy the doctors might have somehow missed.
That surprise came this month when they were called by their local cardiologist here in southern Iraq and told that Alawi no longer needs to go overseas to be saved, because of a team of doctors and nurses that was being brought in to save his life at the hospital just fifteen minutes from their home
It was thirty-two months later than they were hoping but remedy finally came to southern Iraq.
We still hope that Alawi’s family will visit foreign countries someday, but not as last chance medical tourists!

You are the Remedy.
You bring in medical teams every time you give. Our medical teams teach Iraqi doctors and nurses. Our medical teams save lives. So Iraqi doctors and nurses learn how to save lives. Our medical team goes home. The Iraqi’s keep saving lives.
It’s one beautiful domino affect!
We hope we can save Alawi’s life this week… and not just because he’s one of the cutest boys in Iraq! Follow Alawi’s story this week on the blog and on our Facebook page (<-- link) to see what comes next...
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