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Posts Tagged cleft palate

Josh & Julie Korn: Surgical Camp

art therapy session

This last week has been crazy (in a good way). We had a medical team come to the hospital to run the cleft lip and palate camp, and it was a great success. Over 30 kids came from Maradi and Tessaoua, two towns east of Niamey, deep in Hausaland. Some of them came with their parents or grandparents, but quite of few of them were brought by a group of nurses that work for another NGO that we partner with, and it was really impressive to see 6 or 7 year old kids, thousands of kilometers away from their families, undergoing surgeries surrounded by strangers, and still having a great attitude. Read the rest of this entry »

Josh & Julie Korn: Group Art Therapy Session

Group art therapy session yesterday! It was fabulous. I just love being able to spend time with these kids who have come to CURE for a surgical camp on cleft lip and palate. You wouldn’t believe the focused and calm nature about them. Some of them were so involved in their coloring that they barely switched colors. Others treated their paper so carefully and wanted advice on each and every mark they made, for fear of ruining their work. Some of the kids started off very unsure of how to hold their crayon and were pleasantly surprised with themselves when they stepped back from their work to realize that they had created all the color on their page! It was so exciting for me to get in and have fun with these kids whose faces would beam the moment you’d tell them they were doing a good job. I feel so blessed to be able to glean perspective/joy/life from these kids. They teach me more than I could have ever learned in school. Read the rest of this entry »

First Smiles in Niger

Some of the most memorable and exciting moments in life involve firsts.  People always remember their first day of school, first job, first car, etc.  Each of these firsts is often accompanied by a sense of accomplishment and excitement. As our hospital in Niger approaches the one year anniversary of its grand opening, the CURE Niger team continues to experience many firsts.

Here in the GO (CURE Global Outreach) office, we have been excited to watch and celebrate many of these firsts with our staff in Niger.  If GO had to pick the most exciting of our firsts, it would be the first cleft lip and palate team to visit the hospital. Read the rest of this entry »