Great news! - Filomena Update Feb 23rd 2010
Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010(Short on time? Drop to the bottom-line exciting details at the bottom of this page)
On Tuesday Feb 16th I sent out the urgent request for help for Filomena. I had been to see her again at the hospital the day before and was alarmed at the change in her in just the 4 days since I had last seen her.
Some off you have gotten partial updates since then and others have not so please forgive me for the parts of this update which may be repeats.
People responded to the email with overwhelming love and support! The amount needed to cover the flight was committed to in about an hour from the time I sent out the request. I was able to call MAF back and schedule a flight for Thursday. This meant that the pilot would need to fly here to Beira the next day. We planned to have Filomena flown to Harare and then there would be one bus ride to Karanda Hospital where I had been in contact with Dr Daniel Stephens. Tuesday evening I got an email back from the doctor saying that after looking at the photos I sent him from Monday and seeing the rapid growth of the tumor he was pretty certain that this was Burkitt’s Lymphoma. He told me that they do not treat that at Karanda Hospital but told me of Parirenyatwa Hospital in Harare and that they had a cancer treatment center there. He gave me the contact info for Andrea Whatman and a program called KidzCan that is sponsored by a local church. http://www.kidzcanzimbabwe.org/ I contacted her the day before we were due to fly Filomena out and she was most gracious and helpful. So we had a change of plans for Filomena’s destination but the flight arranged was already going to the right place! We
So, Wednesday the 17th we were at the airport to pick up the pilot. He was going to be staying at our center and then the flight was due to go out at 6:30 am. While we were there we got word that Pastor Salmo’s passport was not issued and that immigration was closed for the day. Yes … this could be a huge problem but we continued to prepare and pray and then headed back to the center. It was pretty inspiring to see a beautiful rainbow in the sky just after we got here. All evening were pursuing contacts who may be able to assist. After all was said and done there was a plan but really no promise of help or assurance that it could be done in the necessary time frame … but God!
At 5:15 am Thursday Feb 18th we leave to drop the pilot at the airport to prepare his plane. (At this point we were shooting for a 8am departure.) We left the airport for the hospital to pick up Filomena and her dad. They were ready and in the car pretty quick. I was holding Filomena and could not believe again how much worse she was in less than 3 days time. The swelling in her face had increased, her eyes were noticeably more swollen but more frightening to me is that infection had set in. She was hot with fever all over but the swollen area of her face was very hot to the touch. There was a putrid smell coming from her mouth and there was puss visible. An area on her chin was red and looked as if it was about to burst open.
I later when researching Burkitt’s saw a photo of a child whose face had ulcerated. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burkitt%27s_lymphoma
We arrived back at the airport and then had hours of waiting and praying. There were offers and assurances from immigration that they would expedite help but it still left us running later than the pilot needed to leave. He had to refuel and return to Nampula the same day. He was so very patient and really wanted to get this child to help also. Finally everything was approved and they were able to take off. I had a good couple of hours with Filomena while waiting for everything to come together. It was precious to see her eyes trying to looking around as she lay there. I kept telling her “today you are going to get help, there are many people praying for you around the world, you are going to get well and be able to play again, to see your mother and brothers/sisters again” I sang to her and dripped juice into her mouth from the end of a straw. Just before it was time to go I brought her in to use the restroom. After I washed my hands I picked her up to carry her back out and she motioned and mumbled something. I asked her what it was and she said “agua” (water) so I cupped my hand and let her sip some water out of it. I was so excited because she had never spoken with me before.
Andrea from KidzCan sent someone to get them from the airport and take them straight to the hospital. We got a text later that day saying that Filomena was talking again. Wow – what a surprise! Apparently she had not spoken in quite a while. I did not know this. The first time I met her I figured she was just she and the later times she was really not doing well. So my excitement over the word “agua” was warranted more than I knew.
The most recent and amazing updates –
Thursday (the day she flew out) Filomena begins to speak again!
Saturday (2nd day there) Filomena can close her mouth again and the swelling above her eyes has gone down!
Sunday (3rd day there) Filomena picked up and began to chew a piece of gum that Lovemore purchased and left on the table by her bed!
(That totally shocked me!) Pastor Salmo is so grateful for the help and progress he sees in his daughter in such short time.
I received this in an email from Andrea “We have had extremely good results with Burkitts Lymphona and we often see drastic results within 2 weeks. (i.e her face should pretty much go back to it’s normal shape. This is just with chemo drugs however i am not medical and don’t really know about all the follow up treatment. But be encouraged. I have a photo on our presentation that shows the drastic result after treatment which i will show to Salmo so he will be encouraged.”
Monday – (4th day there) A biopsy was done. This was painful for her but she continues to make improvements.
Tuesday – (5th day there) Text from Andrea, “Filomena is improving very fast but facing problems of diarrhea and stomach pain because of medicine.
There are some missionaries who have to leave the country to renew their Visa’s and will go to Zimbabwe to visit. I will be so eager to send out pictures of her progression back to health rather than the rapid digression from health!
This morning at devotions with our boys I was speaking about the Tower of Babel. The people of the earth said, “Come, let us build ourselves a city, and a tower whose top is in the heavens; let us make a name for ourselves …” The Lord said, “The people are one … nothing that they propose to do will be withheld from them” Gen 11:4, 6-7 This is where their languages were confused so they would not understand one another.
I feel like thus far this has been an occasion where “people have been one” and because the thing which was proposed was not to make a name for “ourselves” but to reflect God’s heart to this dying girl, that “nothing was withheld”. It has been a huge blessing to me to see so many come together on behalf of Filomena. Seemingly great impossibilities became possible! A child left with no options has hope for a future again! Even the diagnosis of this curable Burkitt’s Lymphoma is a blessing after having to come to terms that she was going to need surgery which would have left her seriously disfigured.
Thank you for your part in this miracle story. I know it has made a great impact on our local Mozambican church and I also know it has moved the heart of God!
May God bless you!
Much love, Laura
I was able to go visit her again yesterday and she has taken a dramatic turn for the worse. In the time that has passed her tumor has grown larger and is even evident from inside her mouth. Her energy level has drastically dropped and her breathing is labored. The twinkle I could see in her eyes the first day I met her has gone.
This past Wednesday I had the wonderful opportunity to visit 6 different homes in the villages surrounding us. Four of the homes were of widows and two were older married couples whom our center is or will be assisting. I want to write more devoted to this but one of the special encounters that day was this couple who have been married for 43 years. That is at or above the average entire life expectancy for Mozambicans.
What made this joy even more amazing was this.
I am writing with a sense of urgency to make known a situation that I am hopeful will stir those with hearts of compassion to action.