By Mitch Albom
Spirituality without religion can be deadly
Prayer is good. But it doesn't mean you can just sit there.
An 11-year-old Wisconsin girl grew deathly ill recently while her
parents prayed for her recovery. They weren't in a hospital. They
weren't in an emergency room. They were in their home. Although the
girl had probably, for about a month, shown symptoms such vomiting,
nausea and extreme thirst — all signs of a diabetic condition — they
refused to call a doctor.
G-d, they felt, would take care of it.
"We stayed fast in prayer," the mother told the media. "We believed
that she would recover."
Instead, the girl died.
The parents say they follow the Bible. But someone has to show me where
in the Bible it says that doctors are evil, a heathen concept, an
insult to your faith. Until then, these cases of adults allowing
children to suffer — in some cases, die — in the name of true believing
is nothing more than killing while on your knees.
The girl, Madeline Neumann, reportedly had not seen a doctor since she
was 3. Three? That alone is a serious concern. How many of your kids
went from 3 to 11 without a doctor visit?
But to have a child endure diabetic ketoacidosis, a life-threatening
insulin loss that in any normal case is highly observable (fatigue,
constant thirst and urination, severe weight loss, vomiting) and to
stand by and ask G-d to fix it, well, that's not noble. That's not
righteous.
That's child abuse.
If not murder.
A TRAGIC ENDING
In the end, only a sister-in-law's call to police led to intervention.
According to media reports, the extended family had been trying to
convince the Neumanns to get their daughter help for several days. "She
believes in faith instead of doctors," the woman reportedly told a
police dispatcher of the mother.
When authorities finally arrived at the house, an ambulance was called,
but it proved too late.
Now investigators must decide what to do. Should they charge anything?
Was a crime committed here? The mother claimed that she didn't really
notice serious symptoms with her daughter, just "a tiredness within the
last two weeks" and a sudden turn for the worst.
But her own relatives were concerned enough to call police. Besides,
going eight years without a doctor is a pretty sure sign you think
outsiders are not necessary. Most parents go running to physicians if
their kid so much as sneezes. Ignoring diabetic reactions, at least the
kind that usually come with ketoacidosis, suggests a deliberate choice
against medical aid.
Now, it is not my place to tell people their beliefs, but I will say
this: If you think you can make it on your own, the hands of G-d moving
you around the board, that's your prerogative.
But don't decide that for your child.
A child must be protected. Parents have that obligation. And if they
fail it, society should be a backstop.
KNOWING WHEN TO ACT
Now I know there are many of us who believe "G-d has a plan." And I
hope and pray that's true.
But I'm betting his plan doesn't include us sitting around doing
nothing. We work, yet have faith. We have fun, yet have faith. We eat,
yet have faith. If you can indulge in some forms of 21st century
activity, why not others?
Faith is good. In my view, it's vital. But in this day and age, to
refuse to see doctors is living in a time warp. And when a child's life
is threatened, ignoring the modern world should not be an option.
There's an old story that goes something like this: A fisherman is
drowning. He prays to G-d to save him. A boat comes and offers him a
rope. "No, G-d will save me," he says. Another boat comes. "G-d will
save me," he repeats. A third boat. Same thing. Finally, he drowns.
When he gets to heaven, he's upset. He asks G-d, "Why didn't you save
me?" And G-d says, "I sent you three boats."
Maybe G-d sent us doctors, nurses and the intellect to fight and cure
our diseases, too. In that case, praying while Madeline died was not
only misinterpreting faith, it was insulting it.
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Child abuse, disguised as faith
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