The life of a man New Jersey that he urgently needed treatment for a serious illness changed radically when he went up super go on a trip and told the driver about his problem.
bill sumiel71 years old, was withdrawn from a dialysis center in Newark, Delaware on October 30, 2021 by Tim Letts33, who worked for the ride-sharing app.
The pair quickly struck up a conversation during the 30-minute drive to Sumiel’s Salem, New Jersey, home, and Letts learned the devout Christian was in desperate need of some help. kidney transplant for more than three years.
“On the car ride I told him about my dilemma,” Sumiel said in an interview with ABC6. “About halfway after talking the whole time and slowly making friends, Tim said to me, ‘I think God put you in my car‘”.
Then, to Sumiel’s amazement, surprisingly Letts offered to donate one of his kidneys.
“He told me, ‘If you write down my name and my number, I’ll give you a kidney,'” Sumiel recalled. “I was shaking so much so that I couldn’t even write their data,” he added.
To donate, Letts needed compatible blood and tissue types. True to his word, the Uber driver, who is also an Army veteran, was tested and found to be compatible.
For Letts, the decision to donate was an easy one. “I was inspired by how genuine this man was,” he told Town Square Delaware of his first meeting with Sumiel. “He was happy. He was kind and you could tell he was in painBut he didn’t let that fact stand out.”
“I didn’t want to look in the mirror in the future and tell myself I hadn’t done anything for him or think that other people had convinced me that not do what I wantedthat he had to donate the kidney,” Letts continued.
“Good people need good people to support them, e you are not a good person if you are not willing to help another good person,” said the Uber driver.
Luckily for Sumiel, the surgery was performed in 2022 and was successful: his body has accepted Letts’ kidney.
A year and a half after her miraculous encounter with Letts, Sumiel said she’s almost there live life normally.
“Donating a kidney is the gift of life and I feel very lucky to have that gift. I can almost relive my life back to normal,” she said.
“I know that Miracles have happened in the past. Maybe it never happened to me, maybe yes. But now I really have these reinforced beliefs.”
After the donation, Letts moved to Stuttgart, Germany, but is still in constant contact with Sumiel, who he said will be a “friend for life.”
“I don’t think politics or history really defines whether or not two souls can be friends,” Letts said.I saw someone I felt a connection with, someone I felt I could make a difference for. And I acted accordingly,” Letts concluded.
Source: Clarin
Mary Ortiz is a seasoned journalist with a passion for world events. As a writer for News Rebeat, she brings a fresh perspective to the latest global happenings and provides in-depth coverage that offers a deeper understanding of the world around us.