Here is the text:
The Bloodmobile returned recently to our church and I took
my usual turn in a long list of donors. When the technician apologized for the bruise,
I told her that I would wear it as a badge of honor. After all, I would not be here
if it were not for other donors, long ago in South America.
As the story was told so many times later, he ran to the
entrance of the hospital, in a daze of pain and despair, praying and asking
fervently that God and the Blessed Virgin would come to help. And there they
were, the two angels sent from heaven at that very moment: two large, healthy
men from the steel plant, two of the men he oversaw every day at work, who had
just arrived to donate blood.
Grabbing them by the arm, the desperate and
grateful young father flew them to the surgery room, where the two of them gladly
and most willingly complied, so moved they were to be playing the role of life-saving
angels.
That baby was one of my older sisters, and I would not be
here to tell the story if my mother, that fateful day, bled to death, leaving
her infant daughter in the arms of a devastated husband. None of us, her
subsequent seven children, would have seen the light of day.
My parents went on
to have a long family life filled with faith, love and adventure. Our family became
for many a center of friendship and culture. None of our Christmas and Easter celebrations,
First Communions, weddings… none of the many happy activities at my childhood
home would have happened, if it were not for the gift of the two men in the
hospital, long ago. Today my siblings and I are parents and grandparents,
writers, teachers, engineers, musicians and computer programmers. The youngest,
born almost twenty years after this story took place, is a religious
Benedictine sister.
2 comments:
Maravilhoso! Obrigada por compartilhar conosco essa experiência.
Uma semana iluminada para você,
This is so beautiful, Ana! What an amazing story!!! :)
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