BENCHWARMER
Ramon
Dacawi
(Second of two parts)
Joshua survived heart surgery in summer of
1997, when he was 10. The hyperactive boy recovered fast and spent the rest of
his month-long confinement doing the morning rounds, like a doctor brightening
up other patients at the Philippine Heart Center.
“Walan ang magulo dito,”
a nurse said, quite grudgingly, her eyes welling,when the kid made the rounds
to say goodbye. An elderly patient disarmed by Joshua made Datsu promise to
bring the boy to her house in Quezon City for lunch each time he’d return for a
check-up..
“Mabuti pa si Joshua,
ipinagluto ni lola ng masarap na pagkain,” one of the woman’s grand-children
observed during one of those visits.
Dr. Serafin de Leon, a
Filipino heart surgeon based in the United States , performed the surgery when
he came home for an outreach mission. Dr. Emerenciana Collado, a pedia
cardiologist, supervised Nino’s work-up, making sure he was ready for the
delicate operation.
Saving Nino Joshua
Infante-Molintas was a collective effort of relatives, Catholic nuns,
folksingers, missionaries, doctors, lawyers, pony boys and such. Some were
touched by his parents’ made-for-the-movies love story, others by the widow’s
might and courage.
In the long run, it
was a mother’s love that inspired people to reach out to the family for the
boy’s survival.
A corporate lawyer of
Philbanking and his young son, also named Joshua, pooled an amount which,
together with a letter from the boy, the local branch delivered to the
Wright Park using its armored vehicle.
“Kuna mi ketdi no
inikkan da ni Joshua ti maysa nga trak nga kuarta (We thought they gave
Joshua a truck full of money),” a pony boy quipped.
Aside from the
Samaritans came the curious. Datsu was surprised one day to have a stranger
knocking on her door. He had driven up all the way from Metro-Manila,
apparently determined to find for himself if a woman of Datsu’s strength
was not fiction.
“Tinanong n’ya kung ako talaga si Datsu,”
she recalled. “I asked him in, and, before long, he was seeking advice on how
he could relate with his rebellious daughter.”
The late Philippine
Star columnist Art Borjal proved the key to Nino Joshua’s admission to the
Heart Center. He wrote about Datsu’s love story and Joshua’s plight and worked
on support, including finally getting a bed in a facility where thousands of
charity patients line up daily, each time hoping it would be their turn to be
admitted.
In one of those post-
surgery check-ups, Nino visited Borjal in his office. The boy handed him a tape
of Billy Dean’s plaintive folksong “If It Hadn’t Been You”. It summed up Nino’s
feelings and those of his mother. Borjal liked the tune and had the
lyrics printed in his column that told Samaritans the boy’s ordeal was over and
that he had found anchor in their generosity.
“I went to a music
shop to order some copies to share with friends and those who lifted this
collective spirit for Nino,” he told this writer. “The sales girl apparently
misunderstood and led me to several copies of Michael Jackon’s ‘Billy Jean’.
She couldn’t find any tape by Billy Dean.”
Nino himself would
later reach out to other patients, especially during concerts-for-a-cause
mounted by musicians the likes of Conrad Marzan, Bubut Olarte and other
pioneers of the local folk and country scene who had sang for his deliverance.
Always, Conrad would belt out that Billy Dean composition.
Nino’s elder brothers
and their fellow pony boys got back at Dr. Collado when she and her family came
up for a vacation – with a “hanggangsawa” ride around the bridle path. Later,
Datsu would receive another devastating news: Dr. Collado had succumbed
to cancer.
Datsu herself
developed back pain. She attributed it to having to stoop down to tend to
anthuriums andsymbidiums or having to carry planting material and pots.
During those months she was bed-ridden, physical therapy students worked to
help her back to her feet. She now stands and walks with a cane. She
underwent heart surgery and is on medication to stabilize her heart and blood
pressure.
Time and again, her
elder sister Emilia, a nurse , would visit and stay with the family for days.
In her last work assigned in the Middle East. Emilia turned ill and was
bed-ridden. She never told Datsu, who learned of her sister’s condition from
another hospital worker who came home. .
Datsu and the other
Infante siblings worked on their sister’s repatriation. Emilia
recuperated in Bacolod and in a small lot in Tubao, La Union that an aunt
bought for Datsu’s children.
Datsu had turned the
elongated lot into a garden. She tried raising vegetables and pigs. There, she
learned to paint, hoping to be able to sell some of her work, if not to adorn
the home she gad slowly built.
The older boys have
grown. Mike Jr. now works in a computer shop. Mark has married and, with
his wife, helps tend the family patch in Tubao. Jules Byron has given his
mother two grandchildren and has followed his dad's footsteps as a pony boy.
In 2006, Nino missed
the deadline to have his scoliosis fixed through surgery in a children’s
hospital in the United States. He had overshot the age limit, having
turned 18 before his charity case could be approved.
Datsu, who turned 56
last December, is still figuring out how her youngest son’s scoliosis could be
fixed so it won’t affect his lungs.
Meanwhile, Nino,
stooping from the bone ailment, will be 27 next May. Reason enough to
celebrate an unbreakable family bonding steeled by years of seemingly unending
trials and ordeals.
Reason enough to toast
to a widow’s might, a mother’s love, and an orphaned
family’s courage and triumph over seemingly insurmountable odds
(e-mail: mondaxbench@yahoo.com for feedbacks)
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