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Mikhail Gorbachev: ‘My beloved Raisa believed in helping sick children… this is what she would have wanted’
Mikhail Gorbachev: ‘My beloved Raisa believed in helping sick children… this is what she would have wanted’
For nearly five decades, one person was by my side — my wife Raisa. We were never bored and always happy and in love, though we rarely talked about it, preferring to cherish our mutual respect and affection. Today her death, and the suffering that preceded it, still haunts me: How is it that I was unable to save her?
It was in 1951, six years after the end of the Second World War and two years after she enrolled as a philosophy student at Moscow State University, that I met Raisa Titorenko.
For nearly five decades, one person was by my side — my wife Raisa. We were never bored and always happy and in love, though we rarely talked about it, preferring to cherish our mutual respect and affection. Today her death, and the suffering that preceded it, still haunts me: How is it that I was unable to save her?
It was in 1951, six years after the end of the Second World War and two years after she enrolled as a philosophy student at Moscow State University, that I met Raisa Titorenko.
It was with this feeling in mind that, well over a decade ago now, I decided to set up the Raisa Gorbachev Foundation with my friends Alexander and Evgeny Lebedev. Our aim was simple: to raise money for a cause that Raisa, an activist and campaigner until her last breath, always believed in: helping sick children.
The suffering or death of children is an unbearable horror that no just world can tolerate. We have worked very hard for many years to rid the world of this sadness. The Foundation has raised more than £10 million in London, much of it given to Marie Curie. We have also raised millions for the Raisa Gorbachev Memorial Institute for Children’s Hematology and Transplantation in St Petersburg.
The staff and medical team there perform daily miracles of the kind that one can also witness at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London, and the Louis Dundas Centre for Children’s Palliative Care that is affiliated to it. That is why I have decided to donate a remaining £100,000 to these causes, split 50/50 between GOSH and the centre named after Raisa in St Petersburg.
I know, having read of the amazing response of you readers to this newspaper’s Give to GOSH campaign, that like my late wife you want to help reduce the suffering of children. This £100,000 may seem a small amount but to the parents of those suffering children which it will help, it is nothing of the sort.
I commend this newspaper on its great campaign and hope we can continue to work together to save children affected by cancer.
I know it is what Raisa would have wanted us to do.
