The Mission of Rotaplast International is to provide free reconstructive surgery and treatment for underprivileged children worldwide, to provide
education, and to advance research in the prevention of cleft lip and palate.

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The Cleft Parent Guild began over 40 years ago as a support group for parents of children with cleft lip
and / or palate who wanted and needed more information about their birth defect. The Cleft Parent Guild was affiliated with the Cripped Children's Association of Los Angeles. Members had the opportunity to meet and ask questions of well known and respected specialists from many disciplines.

The group was fortunate to have received donations from the Vikings Organization and several endowments. This has permitted the all volunteer board to offer financial assistance to its members.

The Cleft Parent Guild has been a major supporter of Rotaplast and it's international work to educate, gather data and treat cleft palate and lip.


SPECIAL THANKS TO ROTAPLAST MISSION TO INDIA SPONSORS

Rotary Districts Districts 5260, 5240, 2980 and the Rotary Club of San Jose, Catholic Health Care West and St. Francis Memorial Hospital of San Francisco


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SWC EDITIONS publishes quality books of photography, journalism and fine art. The company was founded in 2000 by noted entrepreneur and photographer, Wayne Schoenfeld. Recent offerings have included selections by such well known photographers as Joyce Tenneson, Mark Frank, Danny Conant, Kathleen Douglas, Carolyn Johnson and Jerry Johnson as well as four monographs by Schoenfeld, himself. Other artists whose works have been published by SWC EDITIONS include well known painter, Luc Leestemaker and engraver Solomon Illouz.

SWC EDITIONS supports humanitarian efforts throughout the world.

In 2001, SWC EDITIONS published "EXHALATIONS," edited by Joyce Tenneson. All of the funds from the sale of the book were donated to Deep Root, an association of native artists that raise funds to help homeless children in Mexico. In 2003, SWC EDITIONS published , "ALMOST PERFECT: An American Volunteer Medical Mission to Vietnam, " photographed by Wayne Schoenfeld. All funds from the sale of the book are being dontated to Rotaplast International to support their volunteer surgical teams. In 2004, a collaborative new book photographed by Wayne Schoenfeld and written by Rex Weiner about Rotaplast's MISSION TO INDIA will be published. All funds from the sale of this book will be donated to Rotaplast.

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Daily Journal - Karaikal, India
January 21- February 1, 2004


Wednesday , January 21, 2004 I fix my eye hopefully on the opposite sidewalk, make a silent appeal to the broad spectrum of local deities from Ganesh and Shiva to Allah, Christ and whomever, and perform the death-defying feat of crossing Karaikal’s main drag at morning rush hour… braving a furiously-paced pageant of monkeys and mendicants, auto-rickshaws and motorcycles, roosters and nanny goats, along with bicyclists, bullocks, burkhas, businessmen and a couple of buses passing two abreast at full tilt, everyone’s horn wailing to high heaven. MORE>>

 

Thursday, January 22
The boy with the haunting eyes peering out over the shirt collar yanked up to his nose like a veil is just about the worst case the Rotaplast doctors have ever seen. A kerosene stove explosion a couple of years ago left sixteen-year old Rajkumar with tight bands of mottled scar tissue around his neck pulling his head down, the chin melted away and lower lip fused to his chest; A painfully open cavity gaped where a mouth should be. MORE>>

 

Friday, January 23
Mr. Pakirasamy from the tiny Tamil village of Annakuppy stood in the white-tiled corridor of the Vinayaka Hospital watching his five-year-old daughter being led away into the OR where Dr. Mel Spira was waiting to fix up her incomplete cleft palate. Pakirasamy was the first of the long line of patients to register yesterday. It had been a long process to this point. Now it was all happening. MORE>>

 

Saturday, January 24
White caps danced to a morning breeze tickling the Bengal Sea as the sun climbed over the South India coast. A gaggle of kids from a fishing village clambered happily over the painted plaster deities of a beachside Hindu temple. Barefoot farmers ambled off to work in the rice paddies surrounding Vinayaka Hospital, about six kilometers from the Tamil Nadu town of Karaikal. MORE>>

 

Sunday, January 25
A power failure last night at 7:40 pm plunged all of K-town – and the operating rooms at nearby Vinayaka Hospital - into darkness. Rotaplast surgeon Ron Gemberling bent over a patient in OR 1, working on a lip repair. Surgeons Capozzi and Spira were in OR 3 and getting read to cut a suture to complete a nasal revision.MORE>>

 

Monday, January 26
Republic Day… India’s nationwide blowout. Schools close, offices shut down, families go visiting. But this was no holiday for the Rotaplast team. Before dawn at Vinayaka Hospital they were in the OR working on the first of today’s cleft lip and palate cases and looking after the Post Ops from before. MORE>>

 

Tuesday, January 27
Waking up groggy at nine in the morning in the Post Op ward, twenty-eight year old Ganthimithy Kodamathy looked up to see a big man hovering a few feet from her face pointing a camera, another guy waving a flashing light and someone else scribbling on a notepad. Maybe it wasn’t her best moment – or ours – but after surgery last night, the results were pretty dramatic. She looked 100% better than when we’d snapped her picture and chatted yesterday. MORE>>

 

Wednesday, January 28
Gray troops of clouds marching in from the Bay of Bengal dumped cooling torrents of rain on the Coramandel Coast this morning, mercifully breaking the heat of the past few days. In the muddied streets of Karaikal, women hurrying for shelter gathered sodden saris into headscarves and men lifted dhotis as they stepped over the puddles. MORE>>

 

Thursday, January 29
“2 Elephants Electrocuted” says the page five headline in The Hindu, the local English language daily slipped underneath our doors each morning at the Paris hotel. It seems a couple of pilfering pachyderms from the Sirumugai Reserve, reaching across a farmer’s electrified fence for a bunch of bananas, met a shocking fate. The fences are supposed to be battery-powered but an illegal direct current hook-up is suspected. Authorities are investigating. MORE>>

 

Friday, January 30
There’s a buzz up and down the wards of Vinayaka Hospital as the sun rises over the Bay of Bengal. Today is the last day of surgery and all four ORs are busy. Tomorrow the Rotaplast team examines the one-hundred-plus patients who have received reconstructive facial surgery; most will check out and go home to new lives. MORE>>

 

Sunday, February 1
Puspa’s six-month-old baby daughter, Santosh, was squirming in her arms. It was 10:30 am Saturday morning and the infant’s lip carried a reddish, still raw scar where the Rotaplast doctors had repaired a jagged cleft a few days before. Now mother and child were itching to go home after a week at Vinayaka Hospital. MORE>>

 

To be placed on the email list for announcement of the completed book, “Mission to India,” notify us at rexweiner@sbcglobal.net. All proceeds will go to Rotaplast.

 


 

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*Rotaplast International, Inc. is not a project of Rotary International, which assumes no liability therefore