The Record Newspaper 21 March 1991

Page 1

PERTH, WA: March 21, 1991

Registered by Australia Post Publication No. WAR 0202

Number 2731

POST ADDRESS: PO Box 50, Northbridge, 6000 W.A. LOCATION: 26 John St, Northbridge (east off Fitzgerald St).

TELEPHONE: (09) 328 1388

Politics and religion tangle V ATICAN CITY, (CNS): The pope's e xpressed desire to go to Jerusalem to pray for peace shows how religion and politics quickly become entangled in the Middle East. It also shows the weakness of Vatican influence in a part of the world where Pope John Paul II feels Catholic obligations are strong. The pope made his seemingly innocuous wish to go to Jerusalem in closing a March summit at the Vatican on the Church's postwar role in the Middle East, saying he hoped that "one day, circumstances will allow me to go" to Jerusalem. But the "circumstances" which would allow the pope to visit are complex and beyond the ability of the Vatican to resolve unilaterally. Archbishop JeanLouis Tauran — the pope's foreign minister — and Latin-rite Patriarch Michael Sabbah of Jerusalem — the ranking Catholic official in Jerusalem — said the pope could not make the trip until there is an international agreement guaranteeing Jerusalem's special status as a sacred city open to Christians, Muslims and Jews. Officials in Israel, which unilaterally declared Jerusalem its capital, said the pope's visit should be linked to the establishment of diplomatic relations, something the Vatican says could come only after a series of Arab-Israeli political problems are solved.

FAX (09) 328 7307

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He died twice ...AND 'THANK GOD' LIVED AGAIN

By Roy Lazaroo He has lived . . . died . . . and lived again. Thirty-nine-year-old Leroy Kang described this rare encounter in just five words: "I thank God for it". Leroy would be one of the very few people in the world who can rightfully claim to have died and lived again. Leroy's date with death goes back to October 29 last year. After a hard day's working routine — he works 14 hours a day, seven days a week — he returned home with a "burning feeling" around his chest. As owner of a mini supermart in Balcatta

he had carried earlier in the day 30 to 40 crates of soft drinks and made a drop of some 3000 magazines in the city of Perth. He told a friend about the severity of the pain he was suffering and without much ado they headed for a doctor nearby who in turn advised that they make a beeline for Royal Perth Hospital. He raced towards his "death" that was going to happen more than once. He sat at the back of the van while his friend Peter Cooper blazed the trial from Craigie to RPH. It was a long trip but quickened by long spurts of up to 140kmp/h. What a relief it was

for Leroy as the van pulled up at the enterance to RPH's admission room. He came out of the van, walked two steps and collapsed. He had no pulse beat and his friend started giving him mouth-tomouth resuscitation just before the hospital crew rushed him to the emergency ward. A team of doctors and nurses started to work on him. They did so for 10 minutes. They sent bolts of heart-jerking power on his chest but his ticker failed to respond. Half an hour had passed and he still could not be revived. A Catholic priest was called to give him

his last rites. The seconds ticked away as the medical team worked feverishly on Leroy. Forty-five minutes went by and the doctors still could not get a heartbeat. "I was virtually dead for this duration," he said. The medical staff decided to give him one 15-minute "last chance". They had told his wife that if they could not revive him in this last ditch effort there was nothing more they could do. At the 55th minute, however, they managed to get his heart beating again. Leroy's revival was however shortlived. His heart stopped

again for 15 minutes during the critical 24 hours following his resuscitation. The hospital called in the priest again to administer the last rites. In the process of trying to revive him again this time the medical team "broke a few ribs". "But that was nothing really for I was happy to be alive," he said. The doctors and staff of RPH said it was a miracle that he pulled through with out any after effects following the ordeal. They had warned his wife that there was a possiblility that he would suffer brain damage or some form

of paralysis. But that was not to be. "Thank God," he concluded. The strapping Leroy who stands at 172cm with socks on and weighs a trim 70kg is now waiting to undergo a bypass operation on medical advice. He speaks philosopically as he waits calmly for this operation. "Whatever will be will be. Ihave faith in God." A successful operation will ensure him a further lease of life and with prayers and faith in God he believes things will work out right. "Just say a little prayer for me too," he told me in this exclusive interview.

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