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Steeling
their courage
Ironworkers at Dana-Farber
resume a beloved ritual, providing moments of joy for young cancer patients
By Michael Levenson, Globe Staff | February 21, 2009
Eighteen-month-old Kristen Hoenshell has
a rare and aggressive form of cancer. What began as a tumor behind her eye
has led to surgery and 38 weeks of weekly visits to Dana-Farber Cancer
Institute, where she receives powerful doses of chemotherapy that leave her
weak and occasionally sick.
Yesterday, when she showed up for another
round of treatment, she was greeted by something special. As her cousin
Megan Souza pointed out the window of a third-floor walkway, ironworkers
perched on the sixth floor of a partially constructed building nearby
hoisted a massive I-beam into place. It was emblazoned, in bright pink spray
paint, with Kristen's name.
"Look out the window," Souza said, as she
held Kristen in her arms. "There's your name up there. There's your name,
Kristen." The girl, bald from her treatments, smiled shyly.
It has become a beloved ritual at
Dana-Farber: Every day, children who come to the clinic write their names on
sheets of paper and tape them to the windows of the walkway for ironworkers
to see. And, every day, the ironworkers paint the names onto I-beams and
hoist them into place as they add floors to the new 14-story Yawkey Center
for Cancer Care.
The building's steel skeleton is now a
brightly colored, seven-story monument to scores of children receiving
treatment at the clinic - Lia, Alex, and Sam; Taylor, Izzy, and Danny. For
the young cancer patients, who press their noses to the glass to watch new
names added every day, the steel and spray-paint tribute has given them a
few moments of joy and a towering symbol of hope.
"It's fabulous," said Kristen's mother,
Elizabeth, as she held her daughter and marveled at the rainbow of names.
"It's just a simple little act that means so much."
Most days, the walkway fills up like the
passageway of an aquarium, packed with children gazing through the glass.
When a new name goes up on the building, the children cheer and clap.
Yesterday, Juclaubern Palmer Osias, a 16-year-old from Holbrook who was
diagnosed with cancer last year, saw his name immortalized in green paint on
a beam on the seventh floor.
"It's your name," he said. "It makes you
feel important."
It's given a sense of satisfaction to the
ironworkers, too.
"Everybody saw the kids smiling," said
Mike Walsh, the foreman for the ironworkers, from Local 7, whose wife,
Sheila, is a nurse at Dana-Farber. "And that's what you want to do, is keep
them smiling, especially if they're going for treatment in there."
The ironworkers made a similar tribute in
1996, when they painted the names of young cancer patients on beams they
used to build the Smith Research Laboratories at Dana-Farber. For a time, a
short film about the project was shown in movie theaters to raise money for
the Jimmy Fund.
This time, the ironworkers knew they
wanted to honor the children again. Over the last month, they have painted
more than 100 names on the building and emblazoned part of their crane with
a likeness of SpongeBob SquarePants. They have also painted a few special
messages on the steel, like "Hi Hanna Get Well ASAP :)"
Yesterday, crawling on their stomachs in
the bitter cold and whipping winds, the ironworkers looked down at the
latest batch of names posted in the walkway window. Looking up at them were
Kristen and her sisters, Cathryn, 5, and Hannah, 3, who have been
accompanying her to chemotherapy. They pointed as the ironworkers painted
the girls' names onto the side of a 4-ton I-beam and hoisted it on to the
seventh floor.
"She'll always be a piece of this
building, which is a good feeling to have," Elizabeth Hoenshell said,
holding Kristen. "They don't have to do this, the guys. They could just do
their job and do a good job at it and give us a building that we can get
treatment at, but they go the extra step and that's huge."
One day, years from now, Hoenshell said,
she hopes to take Kristen back to the clinic, and show her where her name is
inscribed. "I'm going to stand her right here at this pedestal and say,
'Look right up,' and 'That was you,' " she said. "Maybe I'll take her over
there for a little walk. She can step on her name," she said, laughing.
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