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Articles from the Wheelchair Foundation headquarters in Danville, CA and major news source outlets.

George Komsky remembers how determined he was during his first couple of years in college to practice singing opera.

Unable to do so at his university dorm, Komsky drove to a campus parking garage at 1 a.m., put on an opera CD, sat on a chair by his car door and — not to be deterred by occasional passers-by who were yelling at him to keep quiet — Komsky sang his heart out.

“That was really the only way I could practice, freshman and sophomore year,” he said. “I was singing in a garage imagining I was performing in front of an audience.”

George Komsky

Now, Komsky, 24, finally gets that chance. After garnering the attention of Hollywood premiere vocal teacher Seth Riggs, with whom he’s entrusted his training, the Danville resident and 2007 UCLA graduate returns to the East Bay to perform in his first solo concert March 19 at the Lesher Center for the Arts in Walnut Creek. The concert, which will benefit the Wheelchair Foundation, has already sold out; Komsky is currently working on getting another concert date and venue soon.

Komsky said he was initially afraid he would perform to a small audience, and had no idea every seat would be sold.

“It gives me hope that people have an interest in opera and that it’s not dead,” said Komsky, who will perform classics from the “Barber of Seville,” and “The Elixir of Love,” along with “Tosca” and other timeless classics. “I feel blessed to sing gorgeous music written by geniuses.”

Komsky, who attended Buena Vista Elementary School and Walnut Creek Intermediate in Walnut Creek, knew music would be his life when, as a little boy, he would sing along to a tape of Luciano Pavarotti played in the car.

“My mom heard me sing in the shower,” said Komsky. “I was a kid imitating this great tenor.”

Already immersed in piano lessons, at age 11 his grandfather took Komsky to study with the local cantor at Temple Isaiah in Lafayette, where he began his vocal training. From there, Komsky’s passion for opera grew as he traveled with Monte Vista High School’s chamber choir to Italy to perform Verdi’s “Requiem” at St. Paul’s Basilica in Rome.

While attending Monte Vista High, Komsky — who remembers reading “The Economist” magazine for four years — developed a passion for speech and debate, often competing with top student debaters from prestigious schools across the country. He even went on to major in political science while at UCLA.

But then, in his heart, there was always opera. He performed and practiced any place he could, including the campus parking garage.

“I was thirsty for the opportunity to do something creative,” he said.

Bruce Koliha, choral director at Monte Vista High, said Komsky sang in that school’s Winter Concert last December as a featured guest, and had been in the school’s Chamber Singers.

“George has grown from a strong, slightly-under-pitch member of a high school choir to a true professional. We were all blown away by the power and beauty of his voice,” Koliha said.

Komsky celebrated his 19th birthday in Dublin while rehearsing for the North American tour of “Riverdance” in 2004. He also competed in “America’s Got Talent,” where he made it to the semifinal round.

He remembers racing to North Hollywood in 2007 to audition for “Twelve Irish Tenors” immediately after taking his final exam in economics, only to arrive to his audition 10 minutes late. When he was given a chance to audition, he sang “dead-tired,” after 36 hours without sleep.

“I hadn’t heard from them for six weeks,” Komsky said. “Then I was hired.”

By the time famed vocal coach Riggs heard him sing, Komsky was ready to come under the tutelage of the man who coached singing greats such as Natalie Cole, Barbra Streisand and Josh Groban.

“Seth gave me hope. He said I have something that I can develop if I can continue to sing opera to the best of my ability,” Komsky said.

Even as he prepares to audition for the San Francisco and Los Angeles operas, Komsky has made time to sing at various charity events, including the Wheelchair Foundation’s “Wine for Wheels,” a recent charity fundraiser at Blackhawk Auto Museum. Proceeds from his March 19 concert will benefit the Wheelchair Foundation.

“The Wheelchair Foundation gives mobility to people who have no mobility. They bought wheelchairs for people in Haiti,” he said. “The idea is simple — give mobility to people who can’t afford it.”

While Komsky’s concert is a result of months of dedication and hard work, it is also a tribute to his beloved uncle who passed away recently. Before his passing, Komsky said his uncle had already bought his concert ticket. But, Komsky said, his uncle will be there in spirit.

“I want the concert to be a celebration of love, of opera, of life, of love lost and love found,” he said. “We’re getting together to celebrate music. Helping people is the greatest thing we can do.”

GEORGE KOMSKY LIVE IN CONCERT
For information, visit www.lesherartscenter.org or www.georgekomsky.com

SOURCE: Inside Bay Area

Daniel Catullo

We just received this email about “Plane to Haiti”, a humanitarian mission put together by the Wheelchair Foundation. The mission was a powerful success, and it looks like they plan to continue making trips to care for the struggling survivors of the Haitian earthquake. We recommend watching the video, it is very moving.

Greetings Everyone.

On Behalf of the Wheelchair Foundation and the 25 volunteers who went to Haiti with us, I wanted to personally thank each and every one of you for helping us make the “Plane To Haiti”  trip a reality. Below you will find a link to a 12 minute long video we created showing highlights from our trip. It will really make you realize how lucky we all are to live the way we do.  It will also give you an interesting perspective on how horrible things really are in Haiti and what we went through down there.

I know that some of you are sick of hearing about Haiti, but the need for Wheelchairs and physical therapy is needed now more than ever. Please continue to help us send more supplies to Haiti and spread the word. It is a shame that people are already starting to forget about what happened down there. The situation is more dire than ever and we all need to work together to continue to help these poor people.  We are planning many more trips down there in the coming weeks and months, but we can’t do it without your help. Please continue to donate and help.

Please take 12 minutes out of your day and watch this. It will make you appreciate everything you have trust me

Best regards,
Daniel Catullo

Watch Video Here

SOURCE: Axis of Justice

Plane to Haiti Mission 1 – Full Documentary from Dan Catullo on Vimeo.

January 27, 2010- DC3 Global, Partnered with the Wheelchair Foundation- Launched it’s first Haiti Relief mission to bring 25 volunteers & medical professionals plus 10,000 lbs of medical supplies to earthquake ravaged Haiti.

This is the story of what every day people can do when they work together to help save lives and rebuild a country.

Please donate to: www.planetohaiti.org

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — “Don’t cut off my leg!” Fabienne Jean screamed repeatedly as she was carried through the gates of the General Hospital here after the earthquake. “I’m a dancer. My leg is my livelihood. Please, don’t take my leg.”

“It is a sad story,” Ms. Jean, 31, a slim, graceful woman who danced for the Haitian National Theater, said recently, massaging her bandaged stump. “But what can I do? I can’t kill myself because of this, so I have to learn to live with it.”

More than a month after the earthquake, thousands of new amputees are facing the stark reality of living with disabilities in a shattered country whose terrain and culture have never been hospitable to the disabled.

Some remain in hospital tents swarming with flies; others have moved to makeshift post-surgical centers; and those who healed quickly, like Ms. Jean, have been discharged to the streets, where they now live. All need continuing care in a nation with no rehabilitation hospital, few physical therapists, no central prosthesis factory since the quake and a skeletal supply of crutches, canes and wheelchairs gradually being reinforced by donations.

“The situation for newly disabled persons is very delicate,” said Michel Péan, Haiti’s secretary of state for the integration of the disabled. “They urgently need not only medical care but food and a place to live. Also, we cannot forget those disabled before the disaster who, because of their handicap, are having trouble getting access to humanitarian aid.”

Rough estimates of the number of new amputees are based on information from overburdened hospitals that did not keep good records of surgeries. The Haitian government believes that 6,000 to 8,000 people have lost limbs or digits. Handicap International estimates that 2,000 to 4,000 Haitians underwent amputations, and many thousands more suffered complicated fractures, some of which could turn into amputations if not managed well.

Dr. Péan, who is blind and serves in a relatively new post as government advocate for people with disabilities, said that Haiti’s disabled — some 8 percent of the population even before the quake — had long been treated as second-class citizens. But the government has recently taken legal steps to recognize their rights and opened offices to serve them in the countryside, he said.

Ideally, Dr. Péan said, post-earthquake reconstruction could provide an opportunity to make Port-au-Prince, Haiti’s capital, more accessible to people with disabilities and the impetus to create a national institute for rehabilitation.

For the moment, though, the urgent focus is on the uncertain present: making sure the thousands who underwent life-saving amputations have a future.

Handicap International, based in France, has been coordinating the postdisaster rehabilitation effort with CBM, a Germany-based Christian disability group, and with the Haitian government. Its volunteers — about five dozen therapists, nurses, technicians and community workers — have been providing postsurgical care and physical therapy at 12 hospitals here, and the organization is setting up a prosthetics workshop, too.

“We know that persons with injuries and disabilities are going through a difficult time right now, but they should not feel they’re alone,” said Aleema Shivji, an emergency response specialist with the group. “There are services available, and they’re increasing by the day.”

Recently, Caryn Brady, a physical therapist from Canada, made rounds through the sweltering postoperative tents outside the General Hospital. The patients there are being seen by such a revolving cast of international medical professionals, with charts so poorly kept that scribbled messages on bandaged stumps communicate the essentials: “See again on Feb. 23. Thanks. (Smiley face.)”

Bedside, Ms. Brady led Emmanuel Souverain, a university student whose right arm was amputated, through a series of exercises meant to prevent contractures and keep his muscles healthy for a prosthesis — although there is no plan yet to manufacture upper-body prosthetics.

Proceeding on to Mana Alexandre, 22, a double amputee in a white slip, Ms. Brady smiled when Ms. Alexandre showed off, bicycling her two leg stumps fiercely, a proud smile on her face. After more exercises, Ms. Alexandre moved, with the therapist’s guidance, into a wheelchair, but worried about how to get back into bed.

“Well,” her petite, dimple-faced mother, Evenie Belizaire, said, “I’ve been lifting you your whole life, with God’s help.”

Plane-to-Haiti Haiti relief mission Preview from DC3 Music Group on Vimeo.

On January 13, 2010, DC3 Global and The Wheelchair Foundation (partnered with MedShare) launched an ambitious mission to send a private plane full of medical supplies and doctors to Haiti. Over the following weeks, dozens of everyday people pulled together to accomplish and extraodinary mission that saved lives and brought hope for hundreds of Haitians in the aftermath of one of the worst natural disasters of the century.

PLEASE DONATE TO: www.planetohaiti.org

Directed by: Jonathan Fambrough
Produced by: Daniel E Catullo