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50 Reasons to Run, Day 29: Patrick
Patrick Walicho
Born: 1993
Guest at Living Room since February 18, 2013
I first met Patrick, a 19 year-old albino, while consulting at a nearby government hospital. After months of suffering with an untreated facial tumor, Patrick, an orphan raised by his grandmother, was brought to the hospital by the local area chief and diagnosed with advanced skin cancer. His disfigured face was simply another feature for people to stare at and to fear. Throughout his entire life, Patrick has been different: a social outcast trying to find acceptance. As I listened to Patrick share pieces of his story, I was struck most by the deep sadness within his eyes.
Albinos in East Africa have especially hard lives. Often, they are not even considered to be human. The myths that surround their unpigmented condition are extensive, and epidemic rates of skin cancer cause the life expectancy of albinos to drop to 30 years, with only 2% living beyond 40 years. While in other countries, people living with albinism have the same life expectancy as the general population. At best, albinos face widespread misunderstanding and prejudice. At worst, as numerous accounts report, they are murdered and their body parts are sold at exorbitant rates to be used in the spells of witchcraft. Albino killings have been reported in twelve African countries, from South Africa to Kenya, but most extensively in Tanzania.
For these and so many reasons, Patrick was in need of a refuge. In February of this year, after finishing his first round of chemotherapy, Patrick came to be a guest at the Living Room. His body and spirit are wounded and his prognosis is poor, but I have no doubt that God sees Patrick – not as a mistake but as one deeply loved and known. As the Living Room team, we have the privilege to speak this truth with our words as well as the actions of our lives. We have the opportunity to embrace Patrick, extending the unconditional and healing love of God that is for him.
Patrick is worth running for
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