Thanet CommunityAd Magazine

Page 58

Thanet

Natasha’s Challenge for Pilgrims Hospices In memory of her beloved mother, Joanne Leadbeater (formerly Karczewski), who sadly passed away in 2018, Natasha Karczewski is raising money for charity by taking on the gruelling London Marathon this October. Natasha, 25 and middle of five sisters, is raising money for Pilgrims Hospices, a charity close to her family's heart, and one which provided end-of-life care to her mother Joanne after she was diagnosed with an aggressive type of cancer known as a glioblastoma grade 4 brain tumour in 2017. This isn’t Natasha’s first stint at fundraising for the charity, having previously taken on a skydive in 2017 and a wing-walk in 2021, raising an impressive £400 and £1800 respectively. Pilgrims Hospices has also been a part of the family for most of their life, with Joanne working as a Senior Health Care Assistant for the charity between 2010-2014, and then retraining as a Palliative Nurse from 2014 for them in the community and residential. Taking on the London Marathon is no small feat, completing the 26.2 miles is an outstanding achievement by itself, but with the added responsibility of raising funds making it tougher we caught up with Natasha, Marketing and Recruitment Manager for Care Match UK, to find out how she’s preparing, the inspiration behind her incredible fundraising journeys so far, and how our readers might be able to support her in return.

58

Please mention

Speaking to us at CommunityAd, Natasha explained: “I actually applied to take on the skydive a month before my mum had her first seizure in June 2017. I’ve always loved charities, I’ve supported the RNLI a lot and I wanted to move on to challenges that can raise money but also give me a sense of purpose and do a bit of good after finishing university. “In September, she went to King’s Hospital on my younger sister’s 18th birthday for brain surgery but they couldn’t remove it all as it was too dangerous. That’s when they told us later on that it was a glioblastoma brain tumour. “A couple weeks after my sister’s wedding in June 2018, I got a text message saying she’d gone back in, and that was last time she went into hospital. I started to raise money for my birthdays on behalf of Pilgrims, raising around £300 each time. After she passed away I continued to do the personal fundraising, but of course we had the pandemic." During the lockdown Natasha decided to look for another challenge, and that’s when she found the wing-walk, and with the aid of businesses, family and friends, put on a raffle which helped raised over £1800.

Magazine when responding to advertisements


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.