TEENAGER
WHO BARELY SURVIVED TRAFFIC
ACCIDENT RETURNS TO THANK LA COP WHO STARTED A
PRAYER CHAIN FOR HER RECOVERY
By
Michael Ireland
Assist
News Service
September 4, 2004
It seemed at first that Alice Mowatt didn't have a prayer of
a chance of surviving being struck by a car on a busy Hollywood
street, according to Bob Pool, a staff writer for the Los Angeles
Times newspaper.
Authorities
listed Mowatt as a probable fatality when the teenage British
tourist was rushed to the hospital with severe head injuries.
But an hour later there was one prayer. And soon after that
there were thousands, said Pool.
"As doctors
struggled to save Mowatt, the Los Angeles police sergeant assigned
to investigate the crash was so moved that he stepped out of
the emergency room and launched an international prayer circle
on her behalf," he wrote. "One nurse flat-out told me she'd
never seen anyone come back from an injury like that," said
Sgt. Dan Horan. "But another nurse said she'd seen miracles
happen there, so we could pray. So I did."
No police
training manual lists prayer as a tool. But Horan, 47, did something
he had never before done during his 20 years on the police force:
He stood outside Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and dialed up friends
on his cell phone to ask that they say a prayer for the victim
of a traffic accident he was investigating, Pool wrote.
Horan's
first call was to a deputy district attorney: "I said, 'Here's
what's going on. This girl's name is Alice and she's 19 years
old and she's really badly hurt and needs some prayers.' "
He asked
his friends to ask their friends to help. Soon, hundreds from
all walks of life were praying for someone they'd never heard
of before - a chain reaction that would continue for weeks and
bring her piles of get-well cards and letters, said Pool.
"I was standing
at the nurses' station when Dr. Wilson, the trauma specialist
on duty that night, made the call to Alice's parents," Horan
said. "He told them she was in very grave condition and that
they should just get here. I just thought about her poor parents
getting that phone call, having to jump on a plane and take
that long ride from London to Los Angeles not knowing if their
daughter would be alive when they got here."
Alice Mowatt
almost wasn't. Pool continued: "She was barely clinging to life,
her badly swollen brain cutting off its own oxygen supply. Doctors
induced a coma as they fought to reduce intra-cranial pressure.
At one point
last rites were administered and there was talk of possibly
harvesting her organs. Several times there were discussions
about taking her off life support."
By the time
parents Anne and Rigel Mowatt and sister Lucy, 22, reached Los
Angeles, Horan had telephoned or e-mailed nearly everyone he
knew. He
asked each to pray for the injured young woman - and that they
ask others to do the same.
The Mowatts
spent their days at Alice's bedside. For a time, they didn't
know of Horan's prayers - or that he was returning nightly during
his police shift to look in on her.
"One day,
one of the nurses said, 'Did you know that the policeman's been
coming in to see Alice every day?' He came to see her every
day for 10 weeks. It's just amazing,"
Anne Mowatt
said. "At the beginning we didn't realize he had asked people
to pray for her. But after a while we knew. In England, all
we'd seen of the LAPD were these cop shows. To see such a gentle
person from the LAPD was just amazing, amazing."
The cranial
swelling began to recede two weeks after the accident. Horan
remembers his delight when he spoke with Alice Mowatt and she
was able to respond for the first time. By then, the police
sergeant knew details of the girl's life - and of the accident
that nearly ended it, Pool said.
Pool wrote
that Mowatt had been hit by a BMW sport utility vehicle in a
Cahuenga Boulevard crosswalk near the Hollywood Bowl at 7:45
p.m. on Sept. 23, 2002. She had been heading toward a youth
hostel after sightseeing along Hollywood's Walk of Fame. The
35-year-old West Los Angeles man driving the SUV was not cited. Mowatt
had spent part of the summer working in a North Carolina store
before ending her visit with a tour of the United States. She
had been scheduled to return to Britain the day after the accident.
Two months
later Mowatt was strong enough to return by air ambulance to
London for further hospital treatment and rehabilitation.
That's when
she and her family found out just how far Horan's prayer chain
had stretched. Hundreds of cards, letters and e-mails began
pouring into the family's home in the tiny village of South
Nutfield, outside of London.
"We learned
the extent of what had happened when Alice started getting cards
from people all over America," Anne Mowatt said. "They'd say,
'I'm a friend of Dan's.. We were praying for Alice.' We've saved
them at home.
There are
stacks of letters, boxes and boxes of messages from people she
doesn't know. People still e-mail and ask how Alice is doing."
Mowatt suffered
short-term memory loss because of the accident. But that's fine
with her. "I don't want to remember a car hitting me. So it's
a blooming blessing," she said. But she wanted to learn more
about her close call. So this week her parents returned with
her to Los Angeles to meet and thank Horan and the doctors and
nurses who saved her life.
"I think
they were surprised to see me. They were hugging and kissing
me," Alice Mowatt said.
Her reunion
with Horan was also joyful. "I want to say thank you to the
people who prayed. I want them to know they made a difference,"
she said. "Dan is the best blooming cop in the world.
It's touching,
all the things that people in this city did for me. Doctors,
nurses, policemen, firemen, ambulance men. I had no idea how
badly I was hurt."
Horan said
Alice Mowatt needed all the help she could get. "I'm not a philosopher
or theologian, but this time something happened.
People with
injuries identical to Alice's have died in that same emergency
room and ICU," he said. "To see her walking now and enjoying
life is amazing." |