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District 9600 |
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Rotary Oceania Medical Aid for Children (ROMAC)
Mission Statement: "Reaching Out to Mend All Children"
The purpose of ROMAC is to bring children from under developed countries to Australia for the medical operations which
will in some cases save their lives, and in some cases restore their bodies and provide them with a dignified life.
For more information, contact the PNG Coordinator
David
Conn
Medical Enquiries :
Prof
John Vince, POMGH
Rotary
restores Olascar’s sight
Olascar was accompanied by his aunt, Emma Numbos and both were cared for during their time in Australia by Rotary carers, Reg and Joan Carmichael. All costs for airfares and medical costs were borne by ROMAC.
It was a busy year end for Rotary with
Mr. Conn also being involved just before Xmas in evacuating Rotary volunteer
past District Governor Ray Lambert out of Aitape to Cairns after he encountered
serious problems with a dislocated artificial hip.
(Post Courier Weekend Edition)
Priceless
gift for Chris
CHRIS Pirimui of Mainika village, Buin
in North Solomon's will probably never forget doctors Andrew Heggie and Tony
Holmes of the Royal Children’s Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. They repaired
the 12-year old jungle boy’s badly twisted face and restored his dignity,
something many of us take for granted but which is priceless.
Chris, like most shy Papua New Guinean children will have great difficulty thanking the doctors and the staff of the hospital in Melbourne. He will have been tongue-tied and simply surveyed all those beaming faces in a spotless surrounding with glazed eyes. But there is no doubt he will tell the stories of his extraordinary adventure with unceasing gusto for many years to his old age. This is because the opportunity to travel to a land like Australia can be the highest point in his life. Even if Chris does not ever leave his village or see Buka airport again, his trip to Australia will keep him satisfied for the rest of his life.
There are many more people he will never get to thank because their paths only crossed once. There was Glen Ludemann of the Peace Monitoring Group who discovered Chris, Barrie Cooper of Rotary Overseas Medical Aid for Children(ROMAC), and Port Moresby based Rotarian and businessman David Conn. Let the people’s paper thank all these messengers of peace on behalf of Chris, whose home-coming took place around Christmas when most of us had deserted the paper on holidays. But a good story is never too old to tell, especially when it is about light shining in a dark place.
Chris Pirimui had a severe tessier which
meant he had a cleft running up from his mouth and upper jaw which was disfigured
through to his right eye. It was a condition he would have been born with,
and although he never had a visionin his right eye, his left eye worked
perfectly. After discovering him in the jungles of Buin, Glen who is president
of Rotary Club Kangaroo Flat Bendigo rang ROMAC founder Barrie Cooper on
his satellite phone. Barry then contacted David Conn for the local arrangements.
David asked Glen to get the boy to Buka by helicopter and ROMAC PNG took
over and arranged for the transfer to Melbourne. Chris was accompanied by
his uncle Joseph Puipui, an elementary teacher in Buin. They were in Melbourne
for five months. The surgery to Chris’ face lasted five hours first time
and several minor one safter that. Mr Conn said it was a very difficult
surgery and a very involving one to perform because it involved cutting
Chris’ jaw in several places. Before the surgery Chris was not in any life
threatening situation but the operation gave him some proper facial function
and restored his pride. Mr Conn said Chris looked vastly improved after
the surgery. Although his right eye remained closed, the cleft had been
repaired and he looked a normal good looking lad. His teeth was also straightened.
The total cost to ROMAC was in excess of K20,000. There have been other ROMAC cases. Olascar Numbos from Vanimo had the cancer in his right eye treated at Brisbane which also involved the Church and the Knights of St John. Mr Conn said there were several cases pending transfer but others included young Mark Maipakai from Gulf who was treated for scoliosis (bending of the spine), Bradley Bola from Central, Ipa Kenafori from Mendi with a brain herniating between his eyes, and Pape Minape from Pajiaka in Southern Highlands with severe burns to his head. The most famous case is the Bosin Siamese twins who were successfully separated.
The world is full of magic. A sign in an
office underlined this some what poetically: If you don’t believe in magic,
you won’t recognise it. Put it this way. When you see a nice flower, you
instinctively pull it to your nose to sample its perfume. The flowers that
ROMAC members pull toward them are not always the freshest when you look
at them, but like everlasting flowers, the joy lasts for ever. Now that’s
a special kind of magic, isn’t it? You and I get to hear such stories and
marvel at the goodness of human hearts, but the angels get more, they get
a special room in the heart of Chris.
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