Category Archives: 30th anniversary

“Let’s not let the flame lit by my son blow out”

Article published on ‘Il Corriere della Sera’, Italy

The recent anniversary of my seven-year-old son Nicholas Green’s organ donation—marking the 30th anniversary!—has stirred such profound emotions among Italians of every class, region, and creed that it’s essential not to let the power of the message carried by the media reports fade.

The number of articles published over the three days of events that my wife Maggie and I attended in Italy was “enormous.” I believe no other case in the history of organ donation has ever captured the world’s imagination in this way. The media coverage of the October 1st anniversary included dozens of important stories in major newspapers and on some of the most well-known TV and radio programs. The reach of the audience was incredible, as shown in the report by Andrea Scarabelli, the Italian spokesperson for the Nicholas Green Foundation. “The list of articles, reports, radio, and TV interviews is truly impressive. The volume was astonishing, but even more so was the quality, with all major Italian media outlets writing about us or even interviewing us. The quality refers not only to the media names present on the list but also to the content of almost every article.”

Corriere della Sera - Italy - Nov. 10 2024

Nicholas was struck by a bullet on the Salerno-Reggio Calabria highway and died on October 1, 1994. Maggie and I decided to donate his organs and corneas, which went to seven seriously ill Italians, four of whom were teenagers. This decision changed Italy’s attitude toward organ donation.

Media coverage is crucial in saving lives because, despite the admirable increase in donations in Italy—quadrupled compared to before Nicholas was killed—the percentage of Italians who say they do not want to donate remains stubbornly high. Unless this changes, people on the waiting list will continue to die in tragically high numbers.

This is not just a statement from a loving father. The most renowned name in transplant history, Professor Thomas Starzl of the University of Pittsburgh, widely regarded as “the father of modern transplantation,” wrote to my wife Maggie and me: “You and your family have done more for organ donation than anyone else I know. You can be certain that the interest will be great among those specifically involved in transplants and, in principle, by those seeking to better understand the essence of humanity.”

This was 26 years ago when we were only in the early stages of our campaign! What would Professor Starzl say now?

Reg Green

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Filed under 30th anniversary, In the news, Italia, Italy, Nicholas' story

Sculptor visits his unique masterpiece

The picture below shows  Bruce Hasson, the San Francisco sculptor who created and built the Children’s Bell Tower in Bodega Bay, California where our family lived when Nicholas was alive. With Bruce is his wife, Monica. From the tower hang 140 bells, mostly sent by Italian families, many of whom have lost a child. I call it a little piece of Italy’s soul by the Pacific Ocean.

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The centerpiece bell, which has on it Nicholas’ name and those of his seven recipients, was cast at the Marinelli foundry, which has been making bells for the Papacy for a thousand years. Before it was flown to the United States, it was blessed by Pope John Paul II who, like the sculptor, was deeply moved by the donation of Nicholas’ organs and the Italian people’s generous-hearted response.

Message from an Italian family visiting the Children's Bell Tower

People from all over the world visit the tower and often leave something to keep the memory alive, like the moving note above, from a compassionate family that reads, “We are from Italy, near Genoa. We know the sad story of your son, Nicholas. Just a bouquet of flowers to remember. God bless you!”

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Filed under 30th anniversary, Bodega Bay, Nicholas' story, The Children's Bell Tower

30th Anniversary of the donation of Nicholas’ organs

To commemorate the 30th anniversary of the killing and organ donation of Nicholas, Reg and Maggie Green will travel to Italy, where he was shot, for a series of conferences to raise organ donation. Nicholas’ story stimulated similar decisions all over the world and saved many thousands of lives.

     The tour includes the Bambino Gesù children’s hospital in Rome which is managed by the Holy See, the worldwide governing body of the Catholic Church and is widely referred to as the Pope’s own hospital for children; Niguarda hospital in Milan, one of the top transplant hospitals in Europe; and the University of Messina Polyclinic, where Nicholas died. 

     Top echelons of the medical and administrative staff will attend along with journalists from the leading newspapers, magazines, radio and television. 

    “This is an occasion unique in the history of transplantation,” Reg Green says.  “Many of the most famous people in the world in 1994, when he was shot, are now rarely thought of. But the story of a small boy of seven is still affecting life-and-death decisions by families all over world.” 

     Nicholas’ parents will also meet three of his recipients. 

  • September 26: A conference at Bambino Gesù Hospital in Rome, with doctors and executives from the hospital;

Bambino Gesù - conference - Sept. 2024

  • September 27: Conference at Niguarda Hospital in Milan, with doctors and executives of the hospital, Aido (Italian Association for Organ Donation) branches, etc., including the screening of a TV movie made 26 years ago about Nicholas’s story, featuring Jamie Lee Curtis. For the complete program, please visit https://www.ospedaleniguarda.it/news/leggi/niguarday-ospedale-in-festa-per-la-cultura-del-dono-spettacoli-gratuiti-e-aperti-a-tutti
  • September 28: Mr. Green will be in Milan until early afternoon, while Mrs. Green will be in Messina for an international conference held there every year in memory of Nicholas (the conference is called ‘DONARTE’). Official commitments for this conference are scheduled for the afternoon, including a boat race in memory of Nicholas.

DONARTE EVENT

  • September 29 (until mid-afternoon): opening ceremony of Donarte conference in Messina. Mrs. and Mr. Green are expected to meet three of Nicholas’s organ recipients.
  • September 30 and October 1:  the Greens will be in Rome to be interviewed by TVs and media.

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Filed under 30th anniversary, Events, Italia, Italy, Jamie Lee Curtis, Nicholas' Gift movie, Nicholas' story