Congratulations to
Laurie M.
winner of
- Winner selected by Random.org
- Giveaway copy provided by the publisher
Bay had no great desire for an official appointment, but he knew that a position of some kind would make it much easier for him to pursue his interest in Charlotte Baird. As an impecunious cavalry captain on half-pay he was not much of a catch, …(page 85)
Today I’m pleased to welcome Karen Chase, author of POLIO BOULEVARD.
Polio As A Global Threat
By Karen Chase
Author of POLIO BOULEVARD
In 1953, I was a ten-year-old girl living in an affluent suburb of New York City, mildly aware of hysteria in the air. We were in the midst of the Cold War, we were in the aftermath of World War Two, and polio was a hot source of fear. The mysterious, crippling disease led to the closings of swimming pools, movie theaters and drinking fountains. Terrorized parents worried for their children.
Even so, I was merrily riding my bike, jumping rope, and playing hopscotch with my friends. But one morning that fall, I woke up with a stiff neck, a high fever and lots of pain. I had been stricken with polio.
That children in Pakistan, Nigeria, Afghanistan, Syria and Iraq wake up in their beds with pain and fever as polio invades their bodies is a devastating thought. How can this be? Because of the preventative power of the Salk Vaccine, it is avoidable.
In the spring of 1954, when I was a patient in the polio ward at Grasslands Hospital in Westchester County, I was happily playing Monopoly with my friends. The radio was on. A voice announced that a doctor named Jonas Salk had invented a vaccine to prevent polio. Some of us turned silent, some of us laughed, and one patient blurted out, “Too late for us!” Here we were, a group of ill children on stretchers and in wheelchairs living through an historical moment when polio’s peril was replaced by joy and relief.
But polio remains a global threat. Still, there are nations where the virus does its deadly work. There are even some places like Pakistan and Nigeria where aid workers trying to dispense the polio vaccine have been assassinated.
The World Health Organization, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and the International Rotary Club have dedicated themselves to making the earth polio-free. Through their efforts and their dollars, combined with many countries’ internal efforts, polio has been eradicated in most of the world.
Recently, while spending time in New Delhi, I saw billboards that publicized polio as an existing threat. But I also learned that the Indian government was sending out massive numbers of people to families and religious leaders in order to foster understanding about immunizations. Aid workers were being sent to the most remote villages in the country to dispense the vaccine. Even Bollywood stars and celebrity cricket players joined in. Huge efforts from within the country, combined with international dedication, have made India polio-free as of 2013, making India a prime example of how polio can be stricken from this earth.
Since writing my memoir, Polio Boulevard, I have had a chance to reflect on how the creation of the polio vaccine was too late for me and my Monopoly-playing cohorts on the polio ward, but not too late for the world’s children to avoid the disease once called infantile paralysis.
____
Praise for Polio Boulevard
“In the early ’50s, during the polio epidemic, I worked as a physical therapist. I saw firsthand the crushing suffering children and their families endured. I also saw their bravery and love for each other. Karen’s memoir is a truly remarkable piece of history.” – Olympia Dukakis
“Polio and poetry would seem to be near-opposites. Yet in Karen Chase’s compelling memoir of a terrifying disease she and so many others contracted in childhood, we watch polio’s unwelcome transformations to be matched and outdone by the twists and turns of a poet’s mind. Bravely and with surprising humor, Chase has turned the unlikely, the unlucky, even the tragic into beauty.” –Mary Jo Salter, poet and author ofNothing By Design and A Phone Call to the Future
____