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Said to be
at center of miracles, girl in Worcester is example of human dignity

Written by Michael
H. Brown
Reported in
Spirit Daily.com
online newspaper. Back in 1992 I stayed for two nights in the home
of a poor little eight-year-old child named Audrey Santo in Worchester,
Massachusetts. I had been invited to speak in the area by her mother,
and had the opportunity to visit with Audrey, who had been comatose,
or at least unable to communicate with the outside world, for about
five years, since nearly drowning in a swimming pool in 1987. It
was a heartbreaking story, and her mother, Linda, had courageously
kept the child alive -- providing her with meticulous and round-the-clock
nursing care.
There was little
Audrey, a symbol of life, and thank God, she is still with us today.
Many are those who claim miracles occur around her: statues that
exude oil or Communion Hosts that bleed. Audrey has what's called
akinetic mutism, and is fed through a tube in her stomach. She couldn't
communicate with me back in 1992, but there were vague hints of
awareness, and when I posed a question to her about someone, a tear
formed in her eye, as if in response to the query. I stayed in the
room directly across from her and ventured to her bedside on occasion
to say a Scriptural Rosary for and perhaps with her.
This was years
before Audrey became well-known. She has since been featured in
The New York Times and on national TV. Many of you know her story.
She is considered by her family as a victim-soul, and her room is
full of holy objects. Thousands have stopped by Worcester to glimpse
at her through a pane. The bishop has investigated, and has neither
confirmed the alleged miracles nor rejected them. "Although
we cant explain why oils and claims of blood are appearing
on religious articles in the home, there is no obvious evidence
of chicanery," said a report
in 1999, noting that further study was needed.
"The
most striking evidence of the presence of God in the Santo home
is seen in the dedication of the family to Audrey," said
Bishop Reverend Daniel P. Reilly himself. "Their constant respect
for her dignity as a child of God is a poignant reminder that God
touches our lives through the love and devotion of others."
Think of this:
a child who for 14 years now has been motionless on a sickbed with
absolutely constant nursing attention. She might succumb within
minutes without it. But her family didn't let that happen. She is
a symbol of human dignity in the very same city where a firm, Advanced
Cell Technology of Worcester, has taken the exact opposite route
by cloning the first human embryo (or at least the first publicly
announced) -- which is possibly the most undignified thing that
has been done to the human race.
I think this
is Audrey's true mission. I think this is why she has lived so long
in such a state. I don't know about the oiling pictures or statues
or whatever (although I am certainly open-minded), but it is
her very existence in this society that is the true miracle -- and
a beacon to the rest of the world at a critical time in the history
of homo sapiens.
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