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Photo of Unborn
Baby's Hand Continues to
Change Hearts and Lives -- Part
Two of Two
By Liz Townsend
One moment can change
your life. That's what Michael Clancy has discovered in the eight and a half
years since he snapped the groundbreaking photo of an unborn baby clutching
his doctor's hand during fetal surgery.
Clancy is now a
fervent pro-lifer, spreading the message that unborn babies are precious
human beings and deserve protection. He will be a featured speaker at the
upcoming NRL Convention in Washington, D.C., July 3–5.
"It was the earliest
human interaction ever recorded," Clancy told NRL News. "It proved that the
child at 21 weeks in utero is a reactive human being."
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Unborn baby Samuel
Armas reaches out to his doctor during fetal surgery in August 1999.
Michael Clancy, the photo-grapher who snapped the amazing image, will share
his
first-hand witness to the humanity of the unborn at the
NRL Convention
in July. |
When he took the photo
in August 1999, Clancy was a freelance photographer filming the fetal
surgery procedure for USA Today. Unborn baby Samuel Armas had been diagnosed
with spina bifida and hydrocephalus, which occur when the spinal column
fails to fuse properly, leaving a lesion (or opening) that is highly
susceptible to infection. Dr. Joseph Bruner and his team at Vanderbilt
University were operating to close the lesion.
After the incision was
made in mother Julie Armas's abdomen, her uterus was removed and laid on her
thighs. An opening was made in the uterus, and the surgeons were supposed to
operate on Samuel without any part of his body emerging from inside.
However, as Clancy
eloquently describes on his web site,
www.michaelclancy.com, "out of the corner of my eye I saw the uterus
shake, but no one's hands were near it. It was shaking from within.
Suddenly, an entire arm thrust out of the opening, then pulled back until
just a little hand was showing.
"The doctor reached
over and lifted the hand, which reacted and squeezed the doctor's finger. As
if testing for strength, the doctor shook the tiny fist. Samuel held firm. I
took the picture! Wow! It happened so fast that the nurse standing next to
me asked, 'What happened?' 'The child reached out,' I said. 'Oh. They do
that all the time,' she responded."
The amazing photograph
of Samuel reaching out to his doctor appeared in USA Today and The
Tennessean September 7, 1999. Although Clancy never sought notoriety, his
work immediately caught the attention of the media and of people around the
world.
Clancy was shocked,
however, when fetal surgeon Joseph Bruner told USA Today in May 2000 that
the photo did not show purposeful movement by Samuel. Bruner claimed that he
saw the hand near the incision and he "reached over and picked it up. … The
baby did not reach out. The baby was anesthetized. The baby was not aware of
what was going on."
But Clancy posted on
his web site the series of frames that depict the moment of contact between
Samuel and Dr. Bruner, and they show that Samuel is moving his own hand,
grasping the doctor.
"The doctor questioned
my credibility," Clancy told NRL News. "But Samuel punched out, and even
damaged the surgical opening. That 21-week-old child reacted to the touch of
his surgeon."
Clancy went on to
testify at a congressional hearing in 2003 along with then-three-year-old
Samuel, who was born 15 weeks after his surgery. During the hearing, as
reported in National Review, Sen. Sam Brownback pointed to a large copy of
Clancy's photo and asked Samuel who it was. "Baby Samuel," he answered.
Brownback then asked what was happening. "They fixed my boo-boo," said
Samuel.
Although he considers
himself "shy," Clancy agreed to speak at the annual banquet of a local
crisis pregnancy center about two and a half years ago. After he spoke,
"they gave me the first standing ovation I ever had," Clancy recalled.
"Afterwards, 20 to 30 people were lined up to speak with me, and told me I
need to continue telling my story."
Clancy listened to
their advice, and is now telling people about his first-hand witness to the
humanity of the unborn. He also encourages people to download the photo from
his web site and distribute it far and wide.
"It changes one heart
at a time, that's what this picture does," he said. "This is God's work.
This is the youngest interaction with a child inside the womb ever recorded.
As long as it keeps being put where people can see it, it can save lives."
Part One |