Trenton makes a wish to help children of Haiti

By Kuhl, Nick on February 7, 2018.

Nikki Jamieson

Southern Alberta Newspapers

– Picture Butte

ssnews@sunnysouthnews.com

A 13-year old in Picture Butte is getting clean water to children in Haiti with his wish.

Trenton Dyck was diagnosed with stage four alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (ARMS) in October 2017. When the Children’s Wish Foundation of Canada approached him to offer a chance to fulfil a wish, he chose to use it to help others.

Trenton used his wish to donate $6,000 to help bring clean water and sanitation to children living in extreme poverty in Haiti.

“Water is such a huge part of everybody’s life,” Dyck said.

“There’s so many people who don’t have any clean water, and the water they do have makes them sick. We take that for granted a lot because we just get it straight from our taps. Something like this would help hundreds and hundreds of people, and disease would go down.”

“He’s always wanting to help people,” said Dyck’s father, John.

“That was his choice, instead of having something that would just strictly benefit basically him and his class, a few days of life here, he wanted something that would keep on going and be helpful to kids that are living in (poverty). It’s a thing that will help people that are living.”

Dyck is described as an inquisitive child who asks lots of questions, and has a love of science. He could often be found helping out with the children’s ministries at his church and in the community.

He has a very advanced form of ARMS, and was given a couple of weeks to live earlier this month. ARMS is a type of rhabdomyosarcoma, which is a cancerous tumour that starts in muscle cells or tissues that are precursors to those cells, and can spread to other parts of the body.

It can invade, grow into and destroy nearby tissue. It can also spread, or metastasize, to other parts of the body. It is the most common type of soft tissue sarcoma that occurs in children.

With his wish, Dyck hopes to be able to help others in need.

Because of the 2010 earthquake and Hurricane Matthew in 2016, southern Haiti’s infrastructure was devastated, leading to problems like contaminated water and the prevalence of water-born diseases such as cholera. Providing clean water to those effected would dramatically lower the cases of waterborne-diseases in highly effected areas.

“There is a study that showed, out of the population, the disease rate went down from 85 per cent to five per cent,” said Dyck, on the effects of having access to clean water.

He hopes others will help contribute to his wish. Donations made there will go towards safe water supply systems, including wells, rain catchment systems and reverse osmosis facilities; sanitary latrines and hand-washing stations; waste management; and community education and training.

To donate to Dyck’s wish, visit http://www.compassion.ca/trentons-wish.

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