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U.S. church opens arms to Iraqi girl with birth defect

LINK: Click to open full size version of image
A UMNS photo by John Gordon

Samantha Ousley (left) and Ghofran Alyass have become like sisters since Ghofran arrived in Tennessee.
March 28, 2006

By John Gordon*

MARYVILLE, Tenn. (UMNS) — Ghofran Alyass traveled from Iraq to Tennessee for surgery she hopes will give her more years with her family.

Along the way, she found her family growing as she developed a special bond with a new “sister.”

Ghofran, 10, became fast friends with Samantha Ousley, 8. Samantha’s family is hosting Ghofran and her parents while they are in the United States.

“I’m very happy,” says Ghofran, who was born with spina bifida. “Samantha, my sister.”

Samantha, an only child, found a new international playmate.

“It really felt good because before, I was lonely and I really didn’t have anybody to play with, except at school,” she says.

The friendship between the two girls developed after Samantha’s father, Ted Ousley, started a campaign to bring Ghofran and her parents to Tennessee. Ousley, a radio personality known to his listeners as Gunner on WIVK in Knoxville, learned of Ghofran’s plight while embedded with American troops in Iraq.

LINK: Click to open full size version of image
A UMNS photo by John Gordon

Jordan Rogers and her First United Methodist Church of Maryville, Tenn., Sunday school class make a blanket for Ghofran Alyass.
Ousley’s church, First United Methodist of Maryville, took up the cause and raised $10,000 to cover the family’s travel and other expenses.

“Helping a family is a huge thing because, you know, word will spread,” Ousley says. “You don’t do it at the point of a gun, and I think we’re realizing that more and more.”

Reaching out

The Rev. Brenda Carroll, co-pastor at the Maryville church, says even with the surgery, Ghofran will not be able to walk, but the procedure should extend her life and allow her better mobility in a wheelchair.

“Once you ever see Ghofran the first time, there’s never any question that you’re going to do everything you can to help that child,” Carroll says. “We want to help that family to have this precious child in their midst for as long as they possibly can.”

Members of a children’s Sunday school class at First United Methodist made a blanket to keep Ghofran warm and give her reassurance thousands of miles away from the war in Iraq.

“You know that there’s a lot going on (in Iraq), bombs are going off and stuff,” says Elizabeth Morton, ­10, a fourth-grader who worked on the blanket. “And just to help her, to comfort her with blankets and stuff, makes me feel good inside.”

LINK: Click to open full size version of image
A UMNS photo by John Gordon

Ted Ousley (right) and his wife, Laura, host Ghofran Alyass and her family. Ousley met Ghofran while embedded with American forces in Iraq.
‘Thank you’

Ghofran has never attended school in Iraq because of her medical condition, but with Samantha’s help, she learned the English alphabet. Ghofran also taught Samantha how to count in Arabic.

“I feel all the people like me and love me,” Ghofran says through an interpreter. “Thank you for this family. Thanks.”

Samantha says she hopes the surgery will be successful and help her new friend lead a better life when the family returns to Iraq.

“I would feel really sad if she really didn’t get better. I really want her to get better,” she says.

Ghofran’s father, Abdul, says he has seen his daughter smile more since her arrival in the United States.

“She’s different now, she’s different,” he says. “I am very happy because I can see the future for my daughter.”

Ghofran’s surgery is scheduled for April 11 at East Tennessee Children’s Hospital. The operation is expected to last about 17 hours.

Spina bifida is a birth defect caused when the spine does not close completely. Researchers are not sure what causes the disorder.

LINK: Click to open full size version of image
A UMNS photo by John Gordon

Ghofran Alyass, with her mother, Zeinab, swings at a park in Maryville.
Members of the surgical team are donating their time to help Ghofran. A foundation is also covering hospital expenses, so there will be no cost to the family.

“I want (to) ask all the people and all the church to pray (for) Ghofran and ask God to help my daughter,” says mother Zeinab Alyass.

A new outlook

Samantha’s mother, Laura Ousley, says the friendship between the two girls has given Samantha “a different way of looking at life.”

“She (Ghofran) has enriched our lives,” Mrs. Ousley says. “She’s shown us that, no matter what you’re situation is, what matters is what’s in your heart. She’s got a big heart.”

Ghofran’s new friends are also hoping she will be able to attend school after she returns to Iraq.

“She’s a smart little girl, and she’s never been able to go to school,” Rev. Carroll says. “We certainly pray that could happen for Ghofran.”

*Gordon is a freelance producer and writer based in Marshall, Texas.

News media contact: Fran Coode Walsh, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5458 or newsdesk@umcom.org.

 
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Holston Conference
Board of Church and Society
UMCOR
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