Posts Tagged Testimonials

Skipper Luca Zoccoli, at the Rome for Two with Cure2Children

by Eugenio La Mesa

Luca Zoccoli Roma per due

Luca Zoccoli Roma per due

Skipper Luca Zoccoli arrived at the port of Riva Traiano - Civitavecchia, Rome, awaiting the regatta Rome for Two from the 18th to 25th April.

The racing name is Cure2Children and he is competing together with Giovanni Sanfelice in the Loa classes where you race in real time.

Thank you Luca for your generosity.

,

No Comments

Lino Banfi Testimonial Birthday Solidarity Cure2Children

by Eugenio La Mesa
Lino Banfi Birthday Solidarity Cure2Children

Lino Banfi is our testimonial for birthday solidarity, and he has devoted his Facebook Fan Page (which has more than 255,000 fans) for this purpose. Here’s his comment in this regard:
“I’ve really taken to heart this initiative as Lino Banfi,  as UNICEF ambassador and as a grandfather.  So I invite everyone to have a solidarity birthday with Cure2Children.”

Meeting with Lino
The story behind this: Pietro Sodani and I are childhood friends of Lino’s son Walter, and in September 2009 (having just returned from a trip to Bangladesh where we made an agreement with the Nobel laureate Professor Yunus), one Saturday we went to his house and talked to him about what we were doing with Cure2Children, he listened to us with interest and said “How can I help you?” we replied by saying that he could act as spokesperson for solidarity birthdays, and after a few days he gave us the picture with the Cure2Children balloon which is on the site, in our Fan Page and brochures.

Facebook Fan Page
After a month, I noticed by accident that there was a Fan Page on Facebook for Lino Banfi with more than 250,000 fans, I called Walter, who confirmed to me that this was not managed by them.  Then through Facebook I inquired about what could be done and the procedure to terminate on the grounds identity theft. Within days, we solved it, and now the Fan Page is maintained by Lino and Walter, assisted by me for the strategy of social media marketing.

Thanks Lino and Walter for your big heart, and for working to help Cure2Children and the children we cure.

, ,

No Comments

Skipper Luca Zoccoli and the North West Clan will sail with the Cure2Children name

by Eugenio La Mesa

Luca Zoccoli

The North West Clan team and the skipper Luca Zoccoli, onboard his Moonfleet the Transat 6.50 Class, will sail in 2010 accompanied by the colours of the Cure2Children foundation, starting with the first leg on the Italian circuit  the “Archipelago 6.50″ to be held at Talamone on 26-28 March 2010.
The boat will have the name of the foundation, which will also be on the sails.
Luca has organized an “aperitivo” on March 25, 2010 for anyone wishing to join the cause of Cure2Children, where some of the Foundation’s team will be present.

Luca is back from the season with the Open 35 “in direction obstinate and contrary” that has seen the sailing of  the Atlantic Ocean during the Ostar, the Mediterranean in the Round Sardinia Race and the Rolex Middle Sea Race.
Once before he put together the sea and solidarity and devoted it to “Espace EnCongo” bringing aid to orphanages with French volunteers.

A big thank you to Luca from all the staff at Cure2Children but above all from the children we’re able to cure in the world.

2 Comments

My thoughts about the trip to India to help Cure2Children

I’m back home after my quick trip with Lawrence B. Faulkner to Jaipur in Rajasthan,India.
I’ve spent there just a day and a half, because I couldn’t stay more than that.

Cure2Children has signed an agreement with the local hospital Prem Niketan (that gets money from donors and philanthropies) to setup a Bone Marrow Transplant Unit to cure Thalassemia.
It is something we already successfully did in Pakistan.

We had some useful meetings with doctors, lawyers, bankers and donors to discuss all the details; we have been special guests at the Thalasshemia Children association, were we have also seen local dances performed by young kids and spoke to parents.

We have been interviewed by a national TV channel and by national press.

Like it already happened in Pakistan, I don’t find the appropriate words to express my feelings and my emotions; I’ve met so many nice people, who are very happy to see that Cure2Children helps them(for free) in saving lives.

Spending some of my time for a a such noble and no-profit cause makes me very happy, and I’ll do my best to help them with my Internet Marketing expertise; we also have some ideas to help them for fund raising.

I think that this trip has changed my life.

(photos)

, ,

No Comments

The trip to Pakistan to help Cure2Children

by Eugenio La Mesa

I just came back from my 2 day trip to Pakistan and some of my friends asked me to write about it. I’ve been to Islamabad to see the amazing wonderful things that the Italian foundation Cure2Children http://www.cure2children.org/ (founded just 2 years ago by parents who lost their kids and by the visionary physician Lawrence Faulkner) is doing there.
To make a long story short, Cure2Children gets in Italy money from donors, and spends it in developing countries (so far Pakistan and Kosovo) to cure kids with cancer that is curable, but they don’t’ have locally the money and/or the medical know how to cure it.

In Islamabad they are curing kids with Thalassemia trough bone marrow transplant (trapianto di midollo osseo); in the public hospital PIMS (http://www.pims.gov.pk/) Cure2Children has just:

  • bought all the equipment for the transplant (in just 1 month a 2 bed facility has been completed, thanks to the excellent job and coordination of Sadaf Khalid, a mother whose daughter was cured in Italy),
  • hired, payed and trained 8 nurses
  • hired and payed 1 data manager and 1 person that will update the content of the site, blog, etc.
  • bought some computers
  • given the software to manage everything remotely
  • trained the Pakistan physicians

Most of the medical staff of Cure2Children that comes from Italy (physicians and nurses) does it during its holiday, as volunteer. We met many people and I’ve been very impressed by the gratitude of everybody (families, kids, nurses, drivers, physicians, etc.). I had the feeling that they could think that this is not real: people coming from a far and rich western country, giving money and help to cure mortal diseases and training the medical staff; furthermore, nowadays Pakistan is not the safest place in the world, so this another reason why they are surprised that we are there. We also met with an important doctor of the ministry of health who said that they will do all they can to fund and support this project in order to be sustainable in the long run.

I had the evidence that:

  • if a project is important and noble,
  • the people behind it credible and with a high reputation,
  • there are a few volunteers, well motivated

you can do amazing things and “move the mountains”, even with little financial resources (and without politicians interfering in the process..)

I’ve been involved in this project because one of the physicians, Pietro Sodani, is a very good friend of mine since we were kids and he told me about it some months ago, and I told him that I wanted to help.
Cure2Children asked me to go there to see what they are doing. I’ll be in charge, as a volunteer, of online marketing and fund raising; they obviously need money to keep doing in Pakistan and other countries the amazing things I’ve seen and I’ll do my best to help reach this goal. I firmly believe that the rich western countries must do something for the poor developing countries, and this a concrete example of real things that can be done with little money. Furthermore, the often difficult dialogue between Muslim countries and Christian ones is easier if people cooperate for common goals, saving lives of human beings, regardless of their religion.

I just spent less then 2 days there, and 3 travelling, but I consider a privilege and an honor to be involved in this project, to work and cooperate with many nice and wonderfully people for a very noble cause.

,

No Comments

Project Pakistan

by Daniele Ciofi

I have been dreaming about a health cooperation project for years. As opposed to surgery or emergency medicine, pediatric oncology, the field in which I have most of my professional experience, rarely offers the opportunity to fulfil this dream.

This year I have been lucky. Cure2Children (C2C) asked for my help. The Foundation was born in Florence by will of the emato-oncologist Lawrence Faulkner and of some parents of deceased children. Their project is to share our knowledge about bone marrow transplantation with developing countries that need it, where the quality of care is already good enough but there is a need for funding or professional support. The main project of C2C is currently in Pakistan.

At first I was reluctant, but then the will to succeed pushed me forward. On the 7th of May 2009, Lawrence Faulkner, Eugenio La Mesa (a fund raising professional) and myself left for Pakistan. We arrived after travelling for 40 hours and I was very happy to see Mr Khalid again, we treated his thalassemic daughter in Florence. The country has a wide gap between poor and rich people but seems to be very active and eager to emerge and improve. The Pakistan Institute of Medical Science (PIMS) is a huge complex with a paediatric hospital with 500 beds. Cure2Children has created there in one month a bone marrow transplantation centre. I met the team of physicians, technicians, nurses and data manager and we discussed central venous catheters (CVC), my Pakistani colleagues were very knowledgeable. My task was also to motivate those people to fight back the thalassemia in a country where more than 50.000 people have the disease and 7% of the population (150 millions) are healthy carriers of the abnormal gene. The following days were dedicated to meeting with administrators, patients and health professionals. We visited Shifa, a nice private hospital in Islamabad for those who can afford to be treated there. I gave some advice on transplanted child management to my colleagues and they seemed very enthusiast and interested. The Executive Director of PIMS discussed the possibility of a cooperation project for the training of Pakistani nurses and I felt so proud to represent my country in that occasion.

When I visited the oncology ward I felt dizzy and breathless. No word can explain what I felt like. Six beds, no sink, and six little children with the comfort of the few things that parent could buy them, since they were spending everything they have to treat them. A couple was looking at the x-ray of their child, that had no hope to survive. A child with retinoblastoma was crying in pain, but morphine vials were too expensive and not available. Dr. Naila, the pediatric oncologist at PIMS, told us she is planning to expand the ward to 20 beds, and we understood her frustration of not being able to provide the care they deserve for lack of basic resources. I came back to my office in a totally different mood. It’s time to leave, and my colleagues and myself felt really sad, hardly hiding tears. It’s hard coming back to my “normality” after this, but I come back with the hope the projects like ours can save the life of these children.

Thanks to Cure2children that made this possible and to my family that supported me in this journey, and to my friends that welcomed me at my return in Italy.

, ,

No Comments