fbpx

Posts

DANVILLE, CA (KGO) — A wheelchair can mean the difference between being bed-ridden or leading a productive life. But in many parts of the world, cost keeps them out of the hands of people who need them. One East Bay charity is hoping to make a difference two wheels at a time.

On the island of San Pedro in Belize, artist Kurt Jason Cruz was attacked in 2006. It left him completely paralyzed.

“I got stabbed in my lower back and neck and was paralyzed for four months and I couldn’t even move from neck down,” he said.

He has regained some mobility, and can now get around thanks to the Danville-based Wheelchair Foundation. The non-profit has given away hundreds of thousands of wheelchairs over the past decade to people in need all over the world. The idea began with developer Ken Behring. Now his sons have taken up the cause.

“The most important thing is to be able to give personally,” said Jeff Behring.

The Behrings organize trips around the world so donors can hand over the wheelchairs in person.

“I think year after year the people that have gone on our wheelchair missions in the past always want to repeat themselves, so we’re getting a larger and larger number of people who want to go with us and personally participate and put people in wheelchairs and give them the gift of mobility,” said Jeff Behring.

“When you see the smiles and tears — I get very emotional,” said David Behring. “When somebody starts crying out of joy, I usually end up breaking down with the family.”

The Wheelchair Foundation buys specially designed wheelchairs in China for about $150.

“They don’t have the money and the resources,” said David Behring. “Many of these people make less than a thousand dollars a year, and in these countries a wheelchair can cost anywhere from $400 to $700.”

Volunteers say seeing the joy in the eyes of those who get a wheelchair is like no experience they have ever had.

“All of a sudden when you put them in a wheelchair you can feel that, you can feel the change, you feel the desire to live and wanting to be and embracing life and do things and it’s just an amazing thing to experience, but it’s an amazing thing to feel,” said volunteer Glenn Perry.

The Wheelchair Foundation is now trying to raise money for 2,000 wheelchairs to send to the devastated regions of Haiti. Every $75 donation is matched and improves the life of one person.

For more information on how you can help, visit www.wheelchairfoundation.org.

SOURCE: ABC 7 KGO-San Francisco

Kurt was fussing over the last details on one of his paintings when the deafening tropical downpour stopped suddenly, as if to awaken him from a dream. Born and raised near the Guatemalan border in Belize, the 28-year-old artist created bright acrylic paintings of the tropical sea nearby. He sensed movement behind him. As he turned, a sharp pain stung his neck and back. He lost consciousness. When he awoke in the infirmary, he was paralyzed. An attacker’s knife had just barely nicked his spine, but he would never again feel the right side of his body. His life as an artist was over, the physician told him, nor would he walk again.

kurtBut Kurt had other plans. He would thrash around with his hand over and over again until he could grab the window sill next to his bed. After a few weeks, he could raise his slender frame up high enough to see the ocean. Ten months of struggle put him back on his feet, although he would need crutches and patience to take even a few steps.

Kurt is one of 800,000 people worldwide to get a little more mobility from a decade-old nonprofit started by Blackhawk developer Ken Behring and his sons, David and Jeff, near San Francisco, California. Volunteers from their Wheelchair Foundation have shipped and assembled chairs in dozens of countries. Donors contribute US$150 for a wheelchair that would cost over $1,000 here in the little village of San Pedro, Belize, south of Mexico.

My wife, Bonita, and my ten-year-old daughter, Vanessa, joined 48 California donors on this trip. We pulled wheelchairs from boxes, pumped tires, attached footrests and lifted people out of broken wheelchairs into new ones. Some had never even experienced a wheelchair. In Old Belize, gangs ruled the neighborhoods and thousands still live on dirt floors in rotting wood shacks without adequate electricity or sanitation. We saw a crocodile crawl through garbage in an open drain while children played soccer in the street a few steps away.

When we met Kurt yesterday, it had been two years since he’d been injured. He was proud to be an artist again. In a ceremony in the village’s tiny ‘Central Park’, on a bright, white, sandy beach, we presented him with a new chair–one of 280 recipients on this trip to Central America. Before the event, Kurt spread out a collection of aqua-colored 8×10 paintings done painstakingly with his twisted hand. He told the crowd: “I taught myself to paint with my left hand. I can’t feel the brush, but my eyes tell my fingers what to do.”

Kurt said that his art was an obsession, but it still was not enough to get him out of bed everyday. What moved him was the need to make a living and help people who are “less fortunate”– a concept that’s hard to imagine as you see him barely manage to stand in crutches. When he’s not painting, he collects clothes for pennies that he sells for a few dollars. This week’s profits helped buy medical care for a friend crippled in a drive-by shooting. Kurt is rushing to keep his pal’s immobile limbs alive with physical therapy. He’s also raising funds for surgery necessary to remove a bullet still lodged in his friend’s back before it becomes infected and deadly.

That’s what drives Kurt to go to great effort to get up each morning. “This very moment there is someone out there who needs you,” he said. “God gave me a second chance. He gave me a reason for living. Life is about feeling passion and feeling needed. I could stay in bed, but where would my friends be?”

YQ5C7JDM9G52

by Mark Thompson

SOURCE: Leader Power Tools

During this holiday season many of us who are more fortunate give to charities to help out those who are in need. Over 150 million children, teens and adults worldwide are in need of a wheelchair but cannot afford one. Our own Chief Winemaking Overlord, Marco DiGiulio, was in Belize this past weekend to help Gordon Holmes of Wine for Wheels deliver wheelchairs to the people who desperately need them. Because of the generosity of wine lovers like you, someone now has mobility and freedom. Thank you.

If you’d like to sponsor an event to benefit the Wheelchair Foundation Mission check out www.wineforwheels.org.

SOURCE: Carpe Vino

Those of us who can move about on our own power will never know the hardships that the wheel-chair bound have to endure every day. Apart from their state of immobility, access to public facilities is rarely offered for these persons – and so they are left as outsiders. But there’s one level even more difficult than that – imagine needing a wheelchair and simply not being able to afford one. Well now, there’s a solution for at least that problem. I found out more today.

 

Jacqueline Godwin Reporting,120709d
Words cannot express the feeling of appreciation felt by the recipients of the wheel chairs. Whether they have been disabled from birth, an accident or illness many of these persons have been unable to interact with society because they have been unable to move on their own and so they remain mostly indoors, shut in and away from society.

Gill Santos, Daughter of Wheelchair Recipient
“Right now she cannot walk, she can’t stand up that long because then her foot. Now this will help her a lot because she can now go in the yard and just go around because she always keep in her room and can’t move much. This will help her go to church more and serve God now and rest. She will not feel pain anymore, like now, just to walk and so this will be a great help.”

Hermeneginda Cruz’s wheel chair is a gift from the International Wheel Chair Foundation in collaboration with Rotary International and the Rotary Club of Belize. According to the President of the Wheelchair Foundation David Behring the donations that accidentally started with his dad following an experience he had while on trip to Eastern Europe.

120710dDavid Behring, President – Wheel Chair Foundation
“And he was asked to take some medical supplies off to Bosnia and Eastern Europe and on that shipment they had wheelchairs and what he was really moved by was the fact that it was tangible and instantaneous; when they took the wheelchairs out, they took an elderly person who had been relegated to the back of the room and put that person in the wheel chair and that person moved his own self. My father said it just changed his whole opinion of wheelchairs and he said now this person has independence and the ability by themselves from point A to point B. That started ten years ago and we’ve done about 800,000. I think it is more than the rest of the world did combined in that short period.”

Jennifer Rivero, Recipient – Wheelchair
“Well first of all I want to thank my Heavenly Father and his son because without him we wouldn’t nothing. And I ask these blessings and everyone and I am very grateful for this wheelchair. It will help a lot of people in the country and so I ask blessings on those people who thought it up, who distributed it to the many who need it.”

Vinai Thummalapally, US Ambassador to Belize
“It goes to show that extraordinary things can be accomplished by ordinary people. I am stealing this line from my boss, whose life has been just this, extraordinary things can be accomplished by ordinary people and I truly believe in my heart that we are all ordinary doing extraordinary things in our own lives and once again without I would like to just thank everybody who have made this gift possible and the tremendous positive effect that this is going to have on so many lives.”

Ivan Cowo, Director of CARE Belize
“From the establishment of CARE Belize we have referred, we have referrals to the Wheelchair Foundation for the more than 100 persons who have come to CARE asking for assistance in getting a wheelchair. We have distributed, our organization in the south, Stann Creek and Toledo Districts, about 40 wheelchairs that we got from the Rotary.”

A total of two hundred and ten wheel chairs were received.

Maria Price, President – Rotary Club of Belize
“You know I feel very overwhelmed really that a group of Rotarians, because some of the them, and Wheelchair Foundation people who have a lot of things to do have taken the time out to fundraise quite a lot of money and to give to the community here and I know they do to other countries as well but for them to identify Belize this year is quite heart warming and very appreciative.

As Rotary clubs we always try to identify a community and we like to do through Rotary International, build relationships with other Rotary Clubs and they try to find out what the needs are, can they assist and we have so many Rotary Clubs all over the world. They all identify certain needs. We had the wheelchair need, we found a partner who also happens to be members of Rotary.”

Sharon Pollack, Executive Director – Helpage Belize
“And I am grateful for them because especially in the field which we are doing, the bed baths and that, we are always needing new wheelchairs and at the home too. They don’t last forever, they really don’t last forever so we always and we also try to keep some but we have a whole year.”

SOURCE: 7 Belize News

120411dDiabetes is the number one killer in Belize but what you may not know is that there is a growing number of Belizeans who have been left disabled because of the chronic illness. Many are handicapped and simply are unable to live a normal life without the aid of a wheel chair. And while there is still much infrastructure work that needs to be done to give access to the disabled, one organization is making sure that those who need a wheel chair can get one. A benefit concert is scheduled for Monday night to aid Rotary’s Wheel Chair distribution project. Country singer Kelly Mcguire will be entertaining for four hours inside the jungle pavilion at Old Belize. Organizer Francis Woods told us more.

Francis Woods, Organizer
“It is a benefit to help offset the cost of distributing over 210 wheelchairs that a group of Californians, mostly Rotarians have brought to Belize through the Wheelchair Foundation.

Unfortunately diabetes is the main cause of the need for wheelchairs in Belize, it is a severe problem. Myself through Rotary, this trip will, after we have delivered all of the 210, will make over 1,000 wheelchairs that we have delivered to Belizean countrywide that really really needed wheelchairs.

Kelly Mcguire has made Belize his home and he sang a couple songs about Belize and I invite the public to go online and Youtube him and check out his songs, really good music and he’ll certainly have the crowd enjoying that night.”

The two hundred and ten wheel chairs will be distributed during an official ceremony at ten on Monday morning. The Kelly Mcguire benefit begins at seven inside the jungle pavilion at old Belize on the Western Highway. Tickets are forty dollars each. There will also be food and drinks all night. If you are interested in attending you can call Francis Woods at 610–1681 for your tickets.

SOURCE: 7 News Belize