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2002 |
Donor
quilt unveiled in Sisters
Tears flowed freely as the fourth
Threads of Life Quilt was unveiled at The Stitchin' Post Friday night, April
12.
The 57 hand-crafted squares
represented precious lives, some who donated organs, others who were recipients
of the life-giving gifts.
Sisters was the third stop
of six on the quilt's tour of Oregon. Recipients and donor's families
traveled all the way from Washington and Idaho to view the quilt they
helped create.
"Our goal is to help educate
communities about the Oregon Donor Program," said Mary Jane Hunt, Executive
Director of the program. "This is the fourth panel, or quilt, we've completed.
The first was unveiled in 1997 in Salem, and we already have seven squares
for our fifth quilt."
Alice McHugh of Sisters made
a square for the fourth panel and works as a volunteer for the Oregon
Donor Program.
Her son, John McAdoo died
in 1993 and his family decided to donate his tissue to the program.
"We wanted something good
to come out of John's life," she said. "When we leave this earth, our
bodies turn to dust. But if we can do something that totally changes someone
else's life, then we should do it."
John donated two corneas,
a heart valve, skin, and bone marrow. McHugh knows of at least five recipients
who benefited from her son's gift.
"One of his corneas went to
an eight-year-old girl in eastern Oregon," she said. "She's written us
two of the sweetest letters."
McHugh believes making the
quilt square helped her work through the grieving process.
"It brought back some memories
-- and some tears -- but it felt kind of final when I was finished," she
said.
Donor family and recipient
identities are kept anonymous, but recipients are encouraged by the Organ
Donor program to write letters to the donor families in care of the program.
Sometimes the two parties
express a desire to meet, and the Organ Donor program helps facilitate
the encounter.
Ruth Airth's quilt square
is simple and to the point:
"Thank U for the kidney" is
embroidered across the fabric.
Airth received a kidney transplant
in 1999, after waiting a relatively short time for the operation.
All she knew about her donor
was that the kidney came from a woman in Pennsylvania.
"One of the hardest letters
I ever had to write was to that family," Airth said. "My joy was this
family's sadness."
All quilt squares submitted
are used in the quilts.
The only specifications are
that the squares be an eight-inch square, allowing for a half-inch border.
Students and healthcare workers
are also encouraged to create and submit quilts.
Finished squares should be
sent to:
Oregon Donor Program, P.O.
Box 532 Portland, OR 97207-0532.
For more information about
the Threads of Life Quilt, contact Mary Jane Hunt at the Oregon Donor
Program, 1-800-452-1369.
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