The New Zealand Herald

KARLPAT’S CHRISTMAS WISH TO SEE SON

- Phil Taylor Words

The Herald and The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ are working together to bring the Gift of Sight to the Pacific, where four out of five people who are blind don’t need to be. Alarmingly, an increasing number of these are young people, suffering from diabetes-related eye disease. This week, we bring you stories of just a handful of these people and invite you to help us raise money for a sight-saving machine that can improve the lives of people like them.

Karlpat Edul doesn’t look the type to have had his life put on hold by a disease like diabetes. It is often associated with obesity but Karlpat is long and lean. Look beyond the wheelchair, at his broad shoulders. They tell the story of who he was. Before the coma, Karlpat, 51, was a hard worker.

He laboured for years as a motor mechanic. He responds to a question about the time before his illness with a sad smile. “Yes, I was strong.”

He had two trips to New Zealand, to Hastings and Alexandra orchards, pruning, picking, packing; apples and peaches, apricots and cherries. In Central Otago Karlpat saw snow.

Diabetes was diagnosed in 2014 when he fell into a coma but doctors believe he developed the disease years earlier, something that is supported by the state of his eyes.

Undiagnose­d diabetes has caused irreversib­le damage. High blood sugar levels have caused blood vessels in the back of his eye to bleed. The condition is called diabetic retinopath­y and without surgery there is a real risk of total blindness.

Karlpat has had two laser surgeries to date. While the damage cannot be reversed, these have preserved his sight for the time being.

He told the Herald his sight is “blurry”. When his eyes were checked in October, no further damage was found but further laser surgeries are almost inevitable. His eyes will be checked again early next year.

While in the coma Karlpat was flown from his home on Ambrym Island hundreds of kilometres to hospital in Port Vila.

When he woke two weeks later, he found himself trapped. “I went stiff. I couldn’t use my arms or legs.”

He spent 18 months in hospital with his wife, Susan, at his bedside.

Movement is gradually returning after four years. Karlpat has regained the use of his arms and can walk a few paces with a frame. “But my knees are stiff and get sore and then I have to sit or I might fall down.”

He has not been back to his home since because he needs to be in Port Vila for treatment.

He and Susan live with Karlpat’s brother and his family. Their simple room is sparsely furnished. Wires protrude from walls. A bare bulb provides the sole illuminati­on. Outside is a stove where all the cooking is done.

They have no money because neither is able to work. “My family have to help pay for our living and our food.” These are greatly reduced circumstan­ces for a man who had a good job, a happy family and a carefree life.

Through an interprete­r, Susan said she doesn’t feel free. All she does is stay home and care for her husband.

Karlpat talks about his goal to visit his island to see his son, who they left in the care of relatives. He would love to be home for Christmas. He misses the life he has lost — walking, fishing, working.

“I didn’t know about diabetes or how you get it. Since I learned about it I have changed my diet. I do exercises. But healthy food is expensive. It is difficult.”

On Ambrym there is space to grow their own crops, life there is less expensive. In Port Vila most people don’t have space to grow vegetables.

The big question is: Will he ever be able to return home permanentl­y?

“Maybe,” is all he can say.

 ?? Chris Tarpey
Pictures ??
Chris Tarpey Pictures

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