Saving Josiah - Children of the Promise Highlight


Saving Josiah: Effort by Maine Volunteers Changes Lives

By Peggy Roberts (published: March 15, 2007)

Read the whole story - Saving Josiah

Josiah could have been left to die.

How many would even have noticed in Haiti, a country where one in every five children dies before the age of 5?

But for this baby, several individuals made a difference in one fragile life and, in return, their actions have made a difference in their own lives and in the lives of many others.
Josiah was born with congenital hydrocephalus (swelling on the brain)and was left abandoned at Justinian Hospital, but the surgery needed to correct it, is not performed in Haiti.
But Cathy Caron, a pediatric nurse at Maine Medical Center, met Josiah while volunteering in Haiti... Caron was so deeply moved by the baby she contacted Jan Bonnema, founder of Children of the Promise (COTP), an orphaned children’s care group in Cap-Haitien.

“I called Children of the Promise mainly for medications for his comfort and for someone to love him,” Caron said. “We thought he was going to die.”

Josiah would not survive without surgery...

Dr. Walter Allan started making phone calls to find out how, and if, they could coordinate no-cost surgery for little Josiah.

When he got the go-ahead from hospital administration, Allen called Dr. James Wilson of Yarmouth, the only pediatric neurosurgeon in Maine, to see if he would perform the surgery... Wilson agreed to operate and arrangements were made to fly Josiah to Portland.

Although the baby’s prognosis is uncertain and most likely he will always have special needs, Wilson said he doesn’t try to predict because, as a doctor, he’s “always being disproved.”

“Josiah will show us what he can and can’t do,” he said.


[Editorial Comment: We'll also see what God will show us he can and can't do.]

“It hurts a Haitian mother to lose her child just as much as an American woman,” she said. “But there’s so much starvation and death in Haiti – they physically can’t take care of these babies. You learn to cope when you’re so often around people who are dying; you learn to focus on life.”

Children of the Promise has taken care of 175 to 200 children since 2000 and now cares for 66 infants through 4-year-olds. The organization’s first goal is to return these children to their families. But often, that isn’t possible and eventually, many of these children are adopted.



Between the two groups, and with the help of so many others, Josiah has been given a chance.


“I think every child has the ability to change the world regardless of whether they have a handicap or not and regardless of how long they live,” Bonnema said.

“He’s changed my world,” Caron said, smiling at the baby nestled in her arms.

Changing the World... One Baby at a Time

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