The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)
Lily stays strong as cancer fight fund smashes all targets
support: Nineyear-old dance champion gets messages from all over the world
Almost £19,000 has been raised for a young dance champion fighting a rare form of cancer.
The crowdfunding campaign for nineyear-old Lily Douglas has – in just six days – shattered the family’s initial target of £3,000.
Lily, who this week begins chemotherapy treatment for severe bone cancer Ewing Sarcoma, has received messages of support from around the world.
Since the GoFundMe campaign was launched last week, around £18,980 has been raised to help support the family and pay for temporary accommodation and time off work.
The Perth youngster was diagnosed after she complained of pain while taking part in a competition last month. It emerged she had been dancing for some time on a fractured leg.
Lily, who competes in ballet, stage and freestyle dancing, has been receiving treatment at the Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Edinburgh.
At the weekend, she was visited by former Strictly Come Dancing judge Arlene Phillips, who has donated towards the campaign.
She has also received video messages from members of the cast of new Broadway musical the Great Comet and top Australian dance tutor Rebecca Davies.
Lily has around 80 dance trophies and a series of world-class titles under her belt.
The St John’s Academy pupil has missed the UDO European Street Dance Championships in Germany, for which she qualified earlier this year.
She now faces surgery to have the bone beneath her knee removed and replaced with a metal plate.
Mum Jane said Lily was facing her future with courage.
“She is so strong,” she said. “She performed at a recent party for my mum and dad in Dundee. None of us knew she had a fractured leg, she didn’t complain once.”
Jane, a manager at Primark in Perth, added: “The doctors cannot believe how strong she is. She knows she has cancer and is disappointed about what she is missing but she’s still smiling. “If anyone is going to fight it, it’s her.” She added: “Lily does not understand about the treatment. She does not want to lose her hair. And she still wants to go dancing.”
Ms Davies recorded a message of support with her young pupils. She said: “We’re thinking of you and we would love one day to come to Scotland and dance with you.”
Miss Scotland Lucy Kerr has also posted on social media about Lily. She wrote: “So sad to hear the heartbreaking news of this little superstar.
“After doing my research for Action Medical Research, I know how much this rare form of cancer can affect the family, therefore needs as much help and support as possible.”