As we sat together at bedtime last night, my 9-year-old Meir gazed wide-eyed at his book about the Chofetz Chaim. “When I grow up, I want to be a talmid chacham like him,” he said. My eyes immediately welled with tears, and I walked into the next room to get a tissue. Of course we would be thrilled if our little Meir would grow up to be a Torah scholar … But at this point, I would be thrilled if Meir would grow up at all.
He was born with a heart defect, and has already had 5 surgeries. The 6th is the one that could really save his life: Doctors have told us we should fly to Boston immediately to save him. How could I possibly tell him that we can’t afford it?
We’re just a simple family. I’m raising 11 kids, Baruch Hashem. My husband’s business took a hard hit from the pandemic. We made a Chesed Fund page to raise money for Meir’s surgery but as I scroll through the many stories of people I need I fear that we will never make enough. My heart breaks. I would do anything to see him grow, to be a man, to achieve his dreams. But if we cannot get this surgery, Meir’s story ends here.
I closed the Chofetz Chaim childrens’ book, and tucked my little boy into the bed. We said shema together and I shut the lights. And as he snuggled into the covers, I davened with tears in my eyes and all of the strength in my heart, that the book of Meir’s life should not close as well.
CLICK HERE TO HELP MEIR GET HIS SURGERY