BENCHWARMER
Ramon S.
Dacawi
BAGUIO CITY -- The
on-going signature campaign towards making dialysis, the life-saving medical
procedure that has to be sustained for a life-time, was triggered by the recent
decision of an ailing housewife to stop her treatment and save her family from
further financial and distress.
Launched by
journalists under the Baguio Correspondents and Broadcasters Club, the
signature campaign kicked off last January 17 was pushed by that decision of
Jane Lamlamag Garcia, 34, to stop her twice-a-week hemodialysis for kidney
failure so her family could focus on the treatment of her two minor children.
“Imbagana nga nabannog
kano unayen ket kayat na nga agiginana isua nga kapilitan nga inyawid mi
isuna idiay Mankayan idi Disyembre (She said she was already too tired and
wanted to rest so we brought her home to Mankayan),” her husband Romeo, a miner
in Lepanto Mines, said.
Jane, a native of
Bauko, Mt. Province, left two young daughters also afflicted with
serious illnesses– Princess Arcia, 6, who is battling leukemia or cancer of the
blood, and Cathy Sy, 4, who was diagnosed for epilepsy.
After burying his wife
in Bauko, Romeo was himself confined for a week at the Notre Dame de Lourdes
Hospital here in Baguio. That’s when he was told that his own kidneys were also
on the early stages of malfunction, he said after his release the other week,
when he visited Princess, who was confined at the Baguio General Hospital and
Medical Center.
Cash-strapped, Romeo
was only too glad when told support of P10,000 was sent by former world karate
champion Julian Chees from the martial artist’s headquarters in Germany.
Chees, a former member
of the German national karate team, sent the amount when he learned of Garcia’s
predicament in the wake of his wife’s death.
It was the latest
support to indigent patients here sent by Chees, a native of Maligcong, Bontoc,
Mt. Province who trained under the late Shihan Kunio Sasaki and Edgar
Kapawen of the Japan Karate Association based at the YMCA of Baguio.
“I’ve had a difficult
boyhood because of poverty, and that experience propelled me to establish a
small foundation here in Germany to be able to reach to those in need back
home,” Chees said.
His association was
also recently in mourning over the death of Katharina Schwarz Ehemann, mother
of Renate Doth, secretary of the Shoshin Kinderhilfe-Julian Chees Foundation
which oversees the humanitarian outreach here.
***
Agustina Bantiloc,
twice-bronze medalist in archery in the ASEAN Paralympic Games, found
herself disqualified after her final attempt in the last edition of the sports
event December for using an unprescribed wheelchair, a violation she only
came to know after her performance in Singapore.
“I used the same
wheelchair when I took the bronze in the 70 meters in the 2011 and 2013 games,
so I was surprised to know it did not meet the specifications after my attempts
in Ssingapore,” the 48-0year old paralympian, a native of Tanudan, Kalinga,
said.
She was with Dr.
Lenora Fe Brawner, a long-time leader of the national archery association and
coach at the University of the Philippines who trained many of Baguio’s
athletes who eventually made their marks in the event.
“Agustina wants
to compete again, and would be grateful should a Samaritan out there could
reach out to her and provide a wheelchair with the official specifications,”
Brawner said.
Here are the
specifications of the wheelchair this promising paralympian needs: seat width –
14 inches; seat height – 21 inches; back height -0 27 inches; footrest –
adjustable; footrest height (from seat to footrest) - 14 inches.
Originally a
power lifter, Agustina was a silver medalist in the 2nd ASEAN Paralympic Games
with a record of 50 kilos in the bench press before Brawner saw her
potential and trained her in archery.
People who can
help locate a prescribed wheelchair for this special athlete may contact Dr.
Brawner (09209249004 or this writer (09167778103).
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