Healing a Wounded Heart

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By Katy Newton and Sean Connelley, Los Angeles Times

Since 1998, Marichia Simcik Arese’s Spiral Foundation has raised more than $1.6 million selling handmade items fashioned by disabled youth in Hue. The proceeds finance rehabilitation, job training and surgeries for Vietnamese suffering from congenital defects believed to be linked to the spraying of Agent Orange during the Vietnam War. Neither U.S. nor Vietnamese authorities accept that dioxin in Agent Orange is behind the high incidence of birth defects, which include cleft palate, spina bifida and heart defects, found in villages sprayed by Agent Orange. But Arese and her Vietnamese counterpart, Dr. Nguyen Viet Nhan, are not waiting. They are raising money to treat as many of the disabled youth of Vietnam as possible, regardless of the cause of the disability.

“Healing a Wounded Heart” was published as a multimedia package on the Los Angeles Times website on April 9, 2011. The multimedia package was introduced with a text story by Bob Pool in the print edition of the newspaper.

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About Sean Connelley and Katy Newton

At the time of the Vietnam Reporting Project, Sean Connelley was a photo editor/multimedia producer for the Los Angeles Times, responsible for developing a stronger online presence for the Los Angeles Times Visual Journalism Department. Utilizing various Web technologies, he created and designed interactive projects and media applications to showcase the staff's product. In 2008, Katy Newton joined a newly formed crew of video journalists hired to produce original character-driven stories for Los Angeles Times online. She has six years of experience producing award-winning videos and interactive stories for newspaper websites. In addition, she has five years of experience working in San Francisco’s documentary film and commercial industry.

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