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Julie Brock-Garcia was disappointed when her Make-A-Wish Foundation appeal was rebuffed.
She had wanted to meet Arnold Schwarzenegger. But when the wish reached
the California governor’s office, the response was a polite “sorry but
he’s too busy.”
The Make-A-Wish Foundation makes dreams come true for children with
life-threatening diseases. A year and a half earlier, the Kansas City
youngster had come down with a disease affecting her heart and lungs,
according to an Associated Press story.
The family received a lot of prayer and other kinds of support from
family and friends and people in the community. Classmates at St. Agnes
Catholic Grade School in Roeland Park prayed but they also held a
fundraiser to send Julie to Lourdes, France, in search of a miracle. In
May 2008, she and her family made the trip to the site of Our Lady of
Lourdes shrine.
Julie did not receive the miraculous cure of her disease, but she
returned home healthy enough to not need her oxygen tank or her
wheelchair.
“Instead of healing her heart,” her mother, Pam, said, “He opened it.”
Julie began noticing things most children didn’t, like poverty,
homelessness and hunger. One night, while the family sat at a red
stoplight, Julie noticed a homeless man holding a sign: “Hungry. Need
food.” Julie and her younger brother, Peter Jr., begged their mother to
let them share the cookies they had just purchased. They watched the
man gratefully accept and eat the chocolate chip and snicker doodle
cookies.
Only a few weeks later, Julie had her mom phone the Make-A-Wish
Foundation to change her wish. Pam Garcia asked a couple of questions:
Could the wish be a donation to a food pantry? And could they wait
until Julie’s daddy came home from Iraq so he could witness the
presentation?
It was the first time the Make-A-Wish folks had received a request
like that. They agreed and located a food pantry near where Julie and
Peter had helped the homeless man. It was called Guardian Angels and
was in the same parish that Peter Sr. had attended as a boy.
Accompanied by the Garcias, the Foundation presented a check for $5,000
to the food pantry.
Subsequently, Gov. Schwarzenegger heard the touching story,
reconsidered Julie’s first request and invited her to California to
meet him.
Some miracles come in the form of sudden physical healing. But miracles are
more likely to be evidenced in a heart made more sensitive and
compassionate toward others — literally a miracle of the heart.
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