zahar

Little family
We load cases of flour amd cooking oil onto an old gurney. I'm on the monthly trip with the American Women's Club to help stock the Ronald McDonald House Foundation kitchen. I'm hoping the flat of sugar and tea somehow offer a tiny bit of comfort to families staying with their children while they undergo treatment at Moscow's largest cancer clinic.

A nurses carries a 1950's-looking syringe in the air as she walks into a room. After we stock the kitchen, the AWC group distributes little gifts to the kids, juice boxes and candies and puzzles and bubbles–a playful distraction from the pain and boredom that cancer treatment looks like. A student studying in the hall, a baseball cap over his shaved head, after some prodding, shyly reads his English homework to me, "I. like. to. swim." Another teenage patient sits in the hall reading Pushkin.

The little guy in the photo above, Zahar, had a six inch incision up the back of his head where, a month ago, they removed a brain tumor. The tumor had affected his ability to learn to walk. Like most parents with kids in this clinic, the mom left her job so she could stay in the hospital with the baby. The papa says Zahar is already taking steps now. 

Some of the newer chemotherapy medicines these kids need aren't provided by the state and must be paid for by families themselves. Apparently, cancer cures aren't free.

In the kitchen, a mom is cooking potatoes in oil. The families, biding their time in the clinic, have enough toys and magazines. I'm sure you are already contributing wherever you are, however you can. In the CLO office, I'm putting some money in the plastic container that goes directly to buy medicine and equipment for children at this clinic in Moscow. Let's keep it up. This month, a teeny boy in tights had brain surgery and then learned to walk.

If you are so inclined, as one amazing commenter was, you can donate by paypal at the Nastenka website, a foundation that supports the children's oncology clinic.

Comments

3 responses to “zahar”

  1. Tina Avatar
    Tina

    Nothing is sadder than to see a very ill child. The children there are not fortunate like the children here in New England to have the wonderful Dana Faber Hospital in Boston to go to. How tragic that not all medicine is covered over there.

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  2. katherine Avatar

    many of the children come from the other republics, since they aren’t Russian none of the medical cost is covered. They dont even have a proper box to mix the chemo chemicals.

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  3. Anne K. Avatar
    Anne K.

    Thank you so much for helping with such a worthy cause. I did that when we were in Moscow with my husbands job & I wonder & worry about all the little children & their very caring parents. I loved seeing the childrens faces when we passed out the little goodies we brought for them. I know the parents were very happy with all the kitchen supplies we would bring to the kitchen. Thanks for doing what you can to help.

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