Another newspaper article on the Blood Issue

by leftbelow 10 Replies latest watchtower medical

  • leftbelow
    leftbelow

    http://www.sptimes.com/2008/02/24/Life/Woman_can_t_let_grand.shtml

    Why is it the sanctity of life (which I believe was the first consideration in Jewish law) set aside for this sick practice. This fight has to be won. I hope she can find peace and bring more exposure to this problem.

  • flipper
    flipper

    LEFTBELOW- It is going to take people like Olga here in this story to be very vocal and others with lots of money $$$ to sue the Watchtower society as time goes by for needless deaths like this young mans. Thanks for posting this story - I'm sure it will open some eyes

  • DT
    DT

    This is a powerful article. It's good that she is holding that organisation responsible for the death. I wrote an article about this at this link: http://watchtowerblood.blogspot.com/2008/02/grandmother-mourns-death-caused-by.html

  • cognac
    cognac

    Wow, this is really sad...

  • leftbelow
    leftbelow

    Looks like human sacrifice is alive and well in the WBTS

  • Yizuman
    Yizuman

    This is sad and this needs to be addressed somehow to someone that will listen and put a stop to this awful practice.

  • Gayle
    Gayle

    When I was 14 yrs old I would have done the same thing as Dennis, her grandson, to refuse to take a blood transfusion. Only, I was fortunate, I got to grow up and review all the teachings of JWdom and realize the mind control tactics done on us. Now I am a grandma enjoying my own free will and free mind. The organization so needs to pay for the the lives of thousands and for tens of thousands more that, may have not needed blood but had extra anxiety of the blood issue to face during a critical time.

  • Hope4Others
    Hope4Others

    She has a lot of hurt going on here, I hope she can find a measure of peace & help to somehow to deal with the pain and anger she feels. She is speaking out to others, perhaps as she mentions it helps her to keep going. The truth of the matters concerning jw teachings needs to be known.

    Hope4Others

  • blondie
    blondie

    Woman can't let grandson, a Jehovah's Witness, die 'in vain'

    Olga Lindberg remains consumed by the idea that her grandson died because of misguided faith, and she is driven to share her belief.

    By Andrew Meacham, Times Staff Writer
    Published February 24, 2008


    The ashes lie in a tiny green urn, on the coffee table of a St. Petersburg living room. The room is filled with figurines and chiming clocks, beside cards and a photograph of a smiling teenage boy.

    Olga Lindberg, 66, got the ashes by agreeing not to attend the funeral of her grandson, Dennis Lindberg. Her daughter - Dennis' aunt and guardian - made the offer in what has been their last communication.

    The mother-daughter relationship splintered after Nov. 8, when Dennis, 14, was diagnosed in a Seattle hospital with leukemia. His doctors had given Dennis a 70 percent chance at a full recovery, provided he accept repeated blood transfusions.

    Though badly depleted from chemotherapy, Dennis refused because he was a devout Jehovah's Witness.

    In a case that drew national attention, Dennis held firm. He died Nov. 28 at Children's Hospital and Regional Medical Center in Seattle, hours after a judge denied a legal attempt to force the transfusion.

    His death split Olga's family and tested her faith, launching her on a mission to sway public opinion against the church. She knows that in her grief, she has become a zealot as passionate as any church member. But she presses on - for Dennis, she says, but also to purge her nightmares and her guilt.

    "I know it's not right what I'm doing," she says. "But it's the only way I can know that my little grandson did not die in vain."

    The daughter of a German soldier, Olga emigrated to the United States 45 years ago with an American GI.

    She bore a son and a daughter, Dennis and Dianna. They were a military family, moving around the country and Germany until husband Albert, now dead, retired in St. Petersburg. Dianna attended St. Petersburg Junior College before moving to Washington state.

    Dennis and his girlfriend had a son, also named Dennis. He was curious about everything, especially his German ancestors. When he saw Olga, he called her Oma instead of Grandmother and said ich liebe dich to tell her he loved her.

    Dennis' family moved a lot, and during her visits Olga grew concerned about the conditions in her son's home, the lack of food and the adults who always seemed to be hanging around.

    In 2003, Olga's phone rang. It was her daughter, Dianna Mincin. She'd gotten a call from a family in Idaho. Dennis' parents were drug addicts; they had left him stranded with a babysitter for four days.

    "You go down to Boise, Idaho, and you get this little boy," Olga told Dianna.

    - - -

    Dennis flourished in his aunt's home in Mount Vernon, just outside Seattle. He loved the theater, skateboarding and the color pink. He dressed extravagantly, sometimes in suits.

    In middle school, Dennis was popular and respected, befriending lonely or shy students. Or so Olga is told. Much about what she learned of Dennis came from Morgan Curry, Dennis' girlfriend in sixth and seventh grades.

    He had also become increasingly active in the Jehovah's Witnesses, a faith with 30,000 members in Washington state, including Dennis' aunt. He used his personal story as a fulcrum, evangelizing to young people about the evils of drugs just as he witnessed door to door on Saturdays. He told his family that he wanted to be an electrician and help build Kingdom Halls.

    Dennis was baptized in February 2007, meaning he was now ordained to do God's word. That was about the time Dennis' father legally gave up his parental rights, signing over guardianship to Dianna, 45. By then, Dennis' parents said they had stayed clean for four years but still had too many health and money problems to care for their son.

    In November, Dianna called Olga in St. Petersburg to say that Dennis had leukemia and had been admitted to Children's Hospital in Seattle.

    When Olga offered to fly there, Dianna said everything was under control. She phoned Dianna daily, and learned that doctors wanted Dennis to have a blood transfusion in addition to chemotherapy.

    Jehovah's Witnesses believe there is no substance more sacred than blood, which is not to be "eaten" - taken into the body as in a transfusion.

    "He doesn't want it," Dianna told Olga. She said she needed to respect Dennis' wishes. To Olga, respecting a 14-year-old boy's wish to die seemed outrageous.

    Olga began leaving messages on Dianna's answering machine. "If you let that boy die, you die along with him," she told her.

    Dennis knew from church teachings that the penalty for accepting blood was worse than death - excommunication and eventual damnation.

    "If someone knowingly and unrepentingly undergoes a blood transfusion," said J.R. Brown, the Jehovah's Witnesses' national spokesman, "we would regard that person as no longer a member of our church because, obviously, he does not believe what we believe."

    In St. Petersburg, Olga searched for a plan of attack. She called her son, then her lawyer. Neither could help.

    "I finally realized that the Jehovah's Witnesses don't believe in blood transfusions," she says. "Then I started to worry."

    - - -

    Washington's Child Protective Services contended that Dennis was too young to refuse life-saving treatment, and filed a motion to compel the transfusion. The state flew in Dennis' parents, who wanted Dennis to accept the blood.

    Dennis was transferred to a hospice wing. His room became a rallying point for up to 20 Jehovah's Witnesses and family members, who slept on the extra bed and on the floor or spilled into an adjacent lobby. They played a video game called Battleship with Dennis, watched DVDs and ordered pizza.

    Attempts to stimulate Dennis' red blood cells with EPO, a hormone found in bone marrow, failed. Doctors gave the boy a 70 percent chance at recovery if he submitted to three years of chemotherapy and transfusions.

    Olga was allowed to speak to Dennis by phone. She pleaded with him to let the doctors help him. She heard several adult voices in the background.

    "Oma, it's okay," he told her. "I'm going to meet Jehovah. I'm going to have eternal life."

    "You need blood now," she said, before the phone connection abruptly ended.

    Whenever Olga tried to reach Dennis' room after that, a nurse told her he was sleeping.

    - - -

    As Dennis lay dying, the drama of his refusal played out in court. At the hearing, Teresa Vaughn, Dennis' sixth-grade teacher, heard Dianna compare Dennis' friends to Satan trying to tempt Jesus away from being crucified. Dianna says she doesn't remember saying that.

    In a highly publicized ruling on Nov. 28, Superior Court Judge John Meyer denied the state's request to force a blood transfusion, calling the decision the most difficult of his career. The testimony of Dianna and others about Dennis' convictions impressed the judge, who added that he would make a different decision if the patient were his own child. Around 9 that evening, Dennis died.

    Olga flew to Seattle. She went to a memorial service with 150 of Dennis' friends, former teachers and schoolmates. Even more people attended the funeral Dianna had organized. Family members on both sides had agreed to a deal offered by Dianna: If Olga and Dennis' parents would stay away from the funeral, she would share Dennis' ashes with them.

    - - -

    Dennis' death consumed Olga, and she never stopped to grieve. Only her favorite TV shows - 24, Lost, her soaps - provided an escape. She threw away the Jehovah's Witnesses Bible Dianna had given her.

    One Friday, Olga drove a few blocks to the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses on 69th Street N in St. Petersburg. She burst in on a Bible study and addressed the group.

    "You are all murderers," she remembers saying.

    The Jehovah's Witnesses were shocked. She looked "boiling mad," remembers Frances Boyne, 76, who was there that day. The Jehovah's Witnesses were familiar with Dennis' case. They told her it had been Dennis' choice to refuse the blood.

    Olga addressed a group of children, the eldest about 6. "You and you and you and you," she said, pointing to them and then to the adults in the sanctuary. "If you ever get sick, they are going to let you die."

    - - -

    On a Saturday morning in January, at an Albertson's store, Olga buys diet food, deodorant, smoothies. She sees an older woman by the produce and pulls her cart up near her.

    "Do you have grandchildren?" she asks. "See this little boy?" She shows the woman the picture she always shows people, of Dennis playing the guitar on his hospital bed.

    "The Jehovah's Witnesses killed that little boy," she says. She begins to tell the story. The woman remains still and birdlike - poised for flight. She says she has heard about that kind of thing, and moves away.

    Over by frozen foods, she tries again with a white-haired woman. Angelina Fisher, 80, says that Jehovah's Witnesses would not be able to get into her gated community in South Pasadena. She soon steers the conversation to calories and yogurt.

    After one more conversation with a couple who seem sympathetic, Olga swings her cart into the next aisle. Then she stops, rests her foot and elbows on the cart, puts her face in her hands and cries.

    - - -

    Olga carries the photo in her purse. She approaches customers at the post office. At the mall. In grocery store lines. She shows them the picture of Dennis with the guitar. Before she is finished, she will padlock Dennis' death securely to the Jehovah's Witnesses.

    "When they listen," she says, "I get a little bit of relief."

    Dianna is grieving, too. She remembers how firm Dennis was in the hospital - how she asked him each day if he was still comfortable with his decision. Every day he told her he had no regrets. He hoped to go to sleep and be awakened into a paradise on earth, a restored Garden of Eden where there is no leukemia. A few days before he died, Dennis asked his aunt what preparations he might make for her in the paradise, should he be resurrected first. She can't wait to see him there.

    Dianna says she knows the relationship with her mother, whom she calls "an extremely emotional, fanatical woman," is likely over. "My mother has rejected me because of my faith," she said. "I have not rejected her."

    As Dennis' death recedes in time, Olga has trouble sleeping. She prays nightly for forgiveness. She should have known a conflict like this could have developed out of her daughter's faith. Maybe she should have taken Dennis herself when he needed a family, instead of giving him over to Dianna. Somehow, she should have seen it coming.

    Every so often, Olga is startled awake by a recurring dream. She sees Dennis sitting in a bed. He is alone, and calling to her for help.

    Andrew Meacham can be reached at [email protected] or 813 661-2431.

    © 2007 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
    490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111
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  • BluesBrother
    BluesBrother

    It is a pity that you cannot shove this in the face of dubs in denial..like this experience in Looloo's recent thread, cut and pasted here, I hope she does not mind

    they knocked on her door she answered and said if you are jehovahs witnesses then i dont want to be one as you dont allow members to have blood transfusions , they said "that is all nonsence" utter nonsence" she said "so its not true about the girl that died after giving birth to twins then?" one said "no its not ,

    I know a few like that - who maintain that it all lies and it has to be doctors fault if the worst happens

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