Dublin People

Annual Service of Remembrance & Thanksgiving for organ donors – RTE Sunday

Participants at the IKA's 37th Annual Service of Rembrance & Thanksgiving Aoife Murray, a liver recipient from Clonsilla and James Reynolds from Tallght who received a kidney transplant in 2009

Thousands of organ donor families and grateful transplant recipients will tune in at home and abroad to watch the Irish Kidney Association’s third virtual and 37th Annual Service of Remembrance & Thanksgiving.

The inter-faith Service was pre-recorded by Kairos Communications at Newman University Church, St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, for broadcast on RTÉ One and RTÉ Radio 1 Extra (LW252) on Sunday, 30th October at 11am.

The Irish Kidney Association is asking the public to tune into RTÉ and actively participate in this years’ virtual Service, including the symbolic Service of Light ceremony.

It is hoped that in households the length and breadth of the country, and beyond, a candle will be lit in memory of deceased donors who gave the gift of life.

For many organ donor families this unique annual Service has become an anniversary to remember their loved ones, and for transplant recipients, the opportunity to honour and give thanks for the wonderful ‘gift of life’ they have received.

Prior to the global pandemic, the annual event attracted a physical congregation of close to 2,000 people.

For the past three years the Service has been pre-recorded with a small gathering of participants due to safety issues around Covid-19, particularly for transplant recipients and other vulnerable people.

Rev Gary Chamberland Archbishop of Dublin and Glendalough, Michael Jackson and Rev John Kelly at the IKA’s 37th Annual Service of Remembrance and Thanksgiving
Picture Conor McCabe Photography.

When the first pre-recorded ‘virtual’ Service was held in 2020, a total of 64,000 households nationwide tuned in to watch its first viewing on RTÉ and it was streamed in 24 other countries.

Last year after the Service broadcast there was an uplift in donor card requests, with a 43% increase in average weekly requests.

Twelve families of deceased organ donors participated in the filming of this year’s ‘virtual’ Service, to remember their loved ones who became organ donors following their untimely deaths.

Nine grateful transplant recipients who received different deceased donors’ organs (including heart, lung, liver, kidney, and pancreas) also participated.

They included a five-year-old twin boy who received a kidney transplant this year, a lung transplant grandmother in her late 60s, a 45-year-old mother who has received the gift of life three times in her lifetime, and another mother who is enjoying the successful longevity of a kidney transplant she received 32 years ago.

The Service, an occasion for both sadness and joy, includes clergy, humanists, as well as organ transplant recipients, organ donor families, and medical professionals involved in organ donation and transplantation.

Music and song are interspersed between poignant symbolic processions and meaningful scripture, reflections and expressions of gratitude, selflessness, and faith in humanity.

Since its inception 37 years ago, the Service has become a hugely important event in the calendar of members of the organ donation and transplant community.

The confidential database for organ donor families is held by Organ Donation Transplant Ireland (ODTI).

The Book of Remembrance, a ‘Roll of Honour’, has been an integral part of the Service since its inception with the names of organ and tissue donors carefully inscribed by calligrapher Annette Daly from Glenageary, Co Dublin for the past 37 years.

A letter by President of Ireland Michael D. Higgins, who is patron to the Irish Kidney Association, is read aloud at the Service by Rebecca Maher, from Castleknock, Dublin, the mother of deceased organ donor infant Matilda Quinn who passed away in 2015.

In an extract from the President’s message, Rebecca reads, “I join you all in expressing my support and thanksgiving for the great gift of organ transplantation, which has transformed and enriched so many lives – allowing new possibilities and new opportunities for recipients and their loved ones”.

Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin & Glendalough Dr. Michael Jackson gives the Homily and Rev. John Kelly reads the Gospel on behalf of the Catholic Archbishop of Dublin Dermot Farrell.

Chief Celebrant is Rev. Gary Chamberland, Newman University Church.

Revered Soprano Dr. Sharon Lyons fulfills the role of Cantor with her beautiful singing supported by talented Musical Director Dominique Cunningham who directs members of the Newman University Church choir, the Vocare Ensemble.

The first and second readings at the Service are delivered by Ms. Dilly Little, Surgical Director, National Kidney Transplant Programme, Beaumont Hospital, and Consultant Paediatric Nephrologist Prof. Atif Awan, CHI Temple Street. Other members of the medical profession taking part are Bernie Nohilly, an organ donation nurse, and Prof. Jim Egan, Director, Organ Donation Transplant Ireland (ODTI) and Consultant Respiratory & Transplant Physician at The Mater Misericordiae University Hospital.

Narrating throughout the Service is kidney transplant recipient Eddie Flood, the newly appointed national honorary chairman of the Irish Kidney Association, from Killucan, Co Westmeath.

Following the Service broadcast on RTÉ One and RTÉ Radio One Extra (LW252) at 11am on Sunday, 30th October, it will be available to watch on the Irish Kidney Association’s website www.ika.ie

Individuals who wish to support organ donation are encouraged to Share their Wishes with their family and keep the reminders of their decision available by carrying the organ donor card, permitting Code 115 to be included on their driver’s licence or having the ‘digital organ donor card’ App on their smartphone.

Organ Donor Cards can be requested by visiting the IKA website www.ika.ie/get-a-donor-card or to your phone, phoning the Irish Kidney Association on 01 6205306 or Free text the word DONOR to 50050.

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