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Pope Leo XIV declares a miracle at a Rhode Island hospital, says dying baby was saved by a prayer

Pope Leo XIV declares a miracle at a Rhode Island hospital, says dying baby was saved by a prayer

New York Post19-07-2025
Pope Leo XIV declared the 2007 recovery of an ailing premature baby at a Rhode Island hospital a miracle, crediting a physician's prayer with saving the baby's life, the Vatican announced.
Little Tyquan Hall, who was born via emergency cesarean section, suffered from oxygen deprivation, was pale, cyanotic, and barely had a pulse — and doctors did not expect him to survive, according to the Diocese of Almeria.
In a desperate plea, attending physician Dr. Juan Sanchez, a native of Huercal-Overa, Spain, prayed for the miraculous intercession of the region's patron, 19th century Father Valera Parra, WJAR reported.
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Pope Leo XIV.
POOL/AFP via Getty Images
A few minutes after the faithful prayer the child's heart began to beat normally without medical intervention.
Despite the scientifically inexplicable recovery, Tyquan was expected to have serious neurological damage due to the severe lack of oxygen in his first hours of his life.
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Tyquan, however, grew up strong and hit all of his developmental milestones — including speaking at 18 months and walking at 2 years, according to WJAR.
The miracle intercession declared by Pope Leo indicates that Father Valera Parra could be on the path to sainthood.
Reverend Timothy Reilly of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence, celebrated the official declaration.
'We are thrilled that this recognition will move the cause of beatification and canonization forward for Venerable Servant of God Salvador Valera Parra,' Reilly said in a statement reported by WJAR.
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Despite having hardly a pulse and being deprived of oxygen for the first hours of his life, little Tyquan Hall grew up to be a healthy baby boy.
Seventyfour – stock.adobe.com
'The cool thing is, the more you think about the miracle itself, Father Valera lives in the 19th century. He never came to the U.S. We have no knowledge of him coming here. Never came to Rhode Island,' Reilly said.
'And yet, because the doctor called out and called upon his name for help in the situation back in '07 on behalf of that little baby, he decided to intervene and ask God for a miracle,' the reverend concluded, according to the outlet.
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Valera Parra lived in Spain from 1816 to 1889. He was a humble diocesan priest who has had no miracles or great acts attributed to him during his lifetime.
The first American pope has also pushed forward the cause of the first Millennial saint — Carlos Acutis, a charitable British 15-year-old who died in 2007 of leukemia and whose body remains uncorrupted in a glass tomb in Assis, Italy.
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How a Viral Image Is Fueling the Fight over Reports of Starvation in Gaza
How a Viral Image Is Fueling the Fight over Reports of Starvation in Gaza

Newsweek

time2 hours ago

  • Newsweek

How a Viral Image Is Fueling the Fight over Reports of Starvation in Gaza

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Photographs of a young Palestinian child appearing to suffer from severe malnutrition have emerged over the past week as a new symbol of the humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip, where the war between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas movement is grinding on amid repeated failed ceasefire initiatives. But the images have also set off a firestorm of controversy, with a number of sources arguing that one-and-a-half-year-old —photographed being cradled by his mother, Hidaya—also suffered from underlying conditions contributing to his emaciated state, and that his "non-emaciated" brother was cropped out of the photos. 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In a March 2024 interview with the Israel Hayom newspaper, Trump asserted that "Israel made a very big mistake" in releasing footage of its offensive in Gaza. "These photos and shots—I mean, moving shots of bombs being dropped into buildings in Gaza—and I said, 'Oh, that's a terrible portrait,'" Trump said at the time. "It's a very bad picture for the world. The world is seeing this." W.J.T. Mitchell, a noted media theorist and professor at the University of Chicago, argued that the role of "visual images is crucial" in the information war currently raging against the backdrop of the conflict between Israel and Hamas. "They have an immediate impact on the viewer, and make it much harder to deny what is going on," as does "the testimony of objective observers and humanitarian workers (who are also suffering—and fainting while they work—from malnutrition)," Mitchell told Newsweek. 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Be careful where you use this ‘colonic sweep' hack — doctor warns you might poop right away
Be careful where you use this ‘colonic sweep' hack — doctor warns you might poop right away

New York Post

time3 hours ago

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Be careful where you use this ‘colonic sweep' hack — doctor warns you might poop right away

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Fridge Cleaning Etiquette: How Often and How to Do It Right
Fridge Cleaning Etiquette: How Often and How to Do It Right

CNET

time4 hours ago

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