by Jakob Marschner
Cristian Felice suffered from ALS which leads to sure death. But
while in Medjugorje on September 26, he heard a voice tell him to climb
Apparition Hill where he broke into tears. His respirator put away with his
feeding tube next, he appears as world´s first to recover from ALS.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a killer. Also known as Lou Gehrig’s
Disease, the first patient is yet to survive the neurodegenerative disease that
affects the nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord.
However, this first patient appears to be Cristian Felice, a 37 years old
father of two from Piane Crati near Cosenza in southern Italy.
What appears to be his healing came about on September 26 in Medjugorje. A
patient for five years with his lower limbs paralyzed, Cristian Felice’s
respirator has been put away already, and in two weeks time his feeding tube is
set to go the same way, the regional newspaper Gazzetta del Sud is reporting.
While Cristian Felice’s medical files require further examination, his
physical improvement has been attested to by doctors, the paper also
informs.
“On September 26, Cristian heard a voice that drove him to climb Apparition
Hill. He ascended the hill along with his wife and two priests. They were the
ones to see him stand up (from his wheelchair, ed.), they saw him walk
to the big statue that marks the exact spot where Our Lady first appeared to
the visionaries. There, they saw him cry” Gazzetta del Sud writes.
Overwhelmed by what happened, Cristian Felice is not ready to tell his story
yet. Church authorities in Cosenza have been informed of his seeming cure, the
regional newspaper Il Cirotano reports.
On October 5, a prayer vigil of thanksgiving was held in Cristian Felice’s
hometown. Applauded by about 100 people, he arrived by walking along with his
wife, a Rosary in hand, Gazzetta del Sud reports from the event.
ALS is deadly due to its breaking down the motor neurons between the brain
and spinal cord. When the motor neurons die, the brain’s ability to initiate and
control muscle movement is lost. With voluntary muscle action progressively
affected, patients in the later stages of the disease may become totally
paralyzed.
source http://www.medjugorjetoday.tv/
10/7/13
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