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American Man's Miracle
... Leads to French Nun's Canonization
BY JUDY ROBERTS REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
April 26-May 2, 2009 Issue |
Posted 4/17/09 at 6:02 AM
OMAHA, Neb. â Dr. Edward Gatzâs story is one of Easter hope and triumph.
The 71-year-old retired physician
was expected to live no more than six months after being diagnosed with cancer
of the esophagus.
But 20 years later, he is alive
thanks to a miracle that will lead to the canonization of Blessed Jeanne Jugan,
foundress of the Little Sisters of the Poor, on Oct. 11.
For a person to become a saint, a
miracle must be attributed to his or her intercession after beatification.
Gatzâs wife, Jeanne, and the late
Jesuit Father Richard McGloin, a friend of the couple, prayed to Blessed Jeanne
daily following the diagnosis, though it was not until 13 years later that, at
the urging of another priest, they told the Little Sisters what had happened.
A seven-year process of gathering
information and witnesses followed, culminating in the Vaticanâs decision to
authenticate the miracle and canonize Blessed Jeanne, who started the Little
Sisters in France after taking in an elderly blind woman on a winter night in
1839. Today, the congregation of more than 2,700 women operates 202 homes for
the aged poor around the world.
Gatz and his wife knew little about
Blessed Jeanne, who was beatified in 1982, when he first suspected something
was amiss with his health in 1988. A
dermatologist he had consulted about some small bumps on the backs of his hands
thought they might be caused by an âoccult neoplasmâ (hidden cancer), and he
sent Gatz, an anesthesiologist, back to his internist, Dr. David Jasper of
Omaha, Neb.
After a series of tests showed
nothing that would confirm the dermatologistâs suspicions, Gatz thought he
might have cancer of the transverse colon â
his mother had died of the disease at age 45 â
but because he had no other symptoms, he continued working his usual 84-hour
week until he could have an endoscopy on Jan. 9, 1989. That test showed a large
tumor in the esophagus extending into the stomach.
âHis cancer was invasive through the
wall of the esophagus, and this is almost always fatal,â Jasper said, adding
that no one else in his 34 years of practice has ever survived this type of
cancer to the extent Gatz has.
On the day of the diagnosis, Gatzâs
wife phoned Father McGloin, who told her to pray to Blessed Jeanne âevery day
without fail.â The priest had developed a devotion to the Little Sistersâ
foundress while serving as a chaplain at the sistersâ home for the elderly in
Milwaukee in the 1950s.
âMiracle Manâ
Father McGloin subsequently sent
Jeanne Gatz a novena prayer to Blessed Jeanne when she accompanied her husband
to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., where he underwent a palliative surgery
to allow him to take nutrition. The radical procedure involved removing the
tumor and parts of the stomach and esophagus.
About three months later, Gatz
returned to Mayo for follow-up and learned he was clear of any major spread of
the cancer. He had decided not to have chemotherapy or radiation because he was
told that neither would cure him, but he was instructed to continue having
regular exams back in Omaha.
After each exam, nothing would be
found. âEvery time, I expected bad news, and I didnât get it,â he said.
Two and a half years after the
surgery, doctors at Mayo did additional studies on Gatzâs tumor at the request
of an oncologist in Omaha. Based on the
cell type, he was deemed âluckyâ to still be alive. âI knew it was a gift from
God,â Gatz said.
Meanwhile, he was learning to live
with the effects of the surgery that had been performed so he could eat during
what were to have been the last months of his life. What was left of his stomach, he explained,
was now in his chest, altering his digestion and requiring him to sleep with
his head elevated.
Gatz was able to change his diet and
stabilize his weight and, with each year, has found he can eat and do things he
couldnât do before. âThe miracle goes on,â he said.
However, because of his condition,
he was never able to return to the work he loved in medicine, which had
included teaching and research, in addition to caring for patients.
âI was just so thankful for every
day that came,â he said. âI try to live my life as though each day is my last
day and accept each day as it comes. . .
. So, it was that type of attitude that got me through with more ease than
most.â
When doctors he knew would call him
âthe miracle man,â he would correct them by saying, âI am the recipient of a
miracle.â He believes God may have chosen him to receive the miracle so that he
could defend it for the cause of Blessed Jeanneâs sainthood. âHaving written
scientific articles before this, I could certainly present it in a way that the
conclusions were inexplicable and, therefore, miraculous,â he said.
Soft Spot for Americans
Mother Marguerite McCarthy, who was at the Little Sistersâ home in Kansas City, Mo.,
when Jeanne Gatz called about her husbandâs miracle, said Gatzâs medical
background made him an excellent spokesman for the cause. In addition to his
medical degree, he has a doctorate in pharmacology and is knowledgeable about
all the details related to the type of cancer he had.
âHe
obtained all his records himself for us,â Mother Marguerite said, âand he
worked hard once we asked him to do this. He was very cooperative, not because
he wanted to be known or considered himself worthy, but because he wanted to
see our foundress receive the honor she was due.â
Passionist
Father Dominic Papa, vice postulator of Blessed Jeanneâs cause, said he
considers the miracle of Gatzâs cure to be extraordinary: âThere really isnât a
typical one, but I would say this is really an outstanding miracle.â
Mother
Anne Joseph Doyle of the Little Sistersâ home in Oregon, Ohio, said many of the
sisters find it interesting that the miracle was granted to an American because
Blessed Jeanne was said to have had a soft spot in her heart for Americans.
âWhen in Latour, [where she spent her last 27 years,] she always tried to be
very kind and give the Americans attention,â Mother Anne said. âShe said, âThey
are so far from home.â It seemed like a delicacy to us, almost, that the
recognizable miracle would have been one from America.â
Jeanne
Gatz said her involvement in the miracle has given her a sense of great
purpose. âI have a totally awestruck feeling about the whole thing, how God has
smiled upon us and granted this huge miracle. This is such a humbling
experience. ... He chose us; he chose Ed, and I got to have him for all these
many more years because God gave us this tremendous blessing of a cure.â
Judy Roberts writes
from Graytown,
Ohio.
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