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New book
says that at least 400 cures have been reported at apparition site
of Medjugorje

Reported in
Spirit Daily.com
online newspaper. A new book by a medical writer says that more
than 400 healings have been recorded at the apparition site of Medjugorje
in former Yugoslavia -- from the healing of bone spurs and deafness
to cancer remission and recovery from severe brain damage. The book,
A Place of Healing, by Connecticut medical writer John Dinolfo,
documents several dramatic cures, including the case of a boy healed
of spina bifida after his grandmother placed a photograph of him
on the altar at St. James Church in the remote village. " He
leads a normal life and very active life," writes Dinolfo of
the boy today, "without symptoms of spina bifida" (a deformity
in the spine that can result in extensive neurological disabilities).
The figure of 400 represents only those cases logged at the parish.
Many others have gone unreported. But such cases are often crucial
to the final acceptance of an apparition and may well figure into
the drama of Medjugorje -- where controversy still rages over authenticity
of the most publicized apparitions since Fatima.
Dinolfo recounts
the story of Megan McMahon, a child from Upper Darby, Pennsylvania,
who was born with a potentially deadly eye cancer called bilateral
retinoblastoma and was taken to Medjugorje in 1987 - where Megan,
by then three, reportedly saw the Virgin herself. "Megan was
at the one end of the pew, and her mother Jeannie knelt in the center
aisle, facing the front," recounts Dinolfo. " Seer Marija
Pavlovic and others were in a room in the balcony of the church.
As Jeannie continued to pray,
she was unaware that the nightly apparition had started in the balcony
room. Suddenly Megan called out, 'Mommy, is that the Blessed Mother?'...
Then Megan, with outstretched arms, began to say loudly, in a sing-song
voice, 'I love you Blessed Mother.
I want to kiss and hug you.'" So striking was the occurrence
that those around the girl began to weep. When asked later what
she saw, the girl also mentioned "the big angel," the
color blue, and three or four "baby angels." When the
girl recovered, according to Dinolfo, her surgeon at Philadelphia's
Wills Eye Hospital expressed belief that the force of prayer had
"definitely" been at work.
Other cures
are legion. We recently reported the case of Art Boyle - a Boston
businessman who had cancer but no longer needed surgery when he
returned from Medjugorje. While the figure of recorded cases may
be around 400, there are almost surely thousands of others among
the estimated 23 million who had visited by the fall of 2000. "According
to the Franciscan priests of Medjugorje, countless healings of depression,
suicidal tendencies, and other severe mood disorders have been reported
in Medjugorje," says the book, being printed by the Ave Maria
Centre of Peace in Toronto and distributed by Saint Andrew Publications
in Pennsylvania.
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