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The hearts of humans and pigs, God made them all

by Owei Lakemfa
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‘A drowning human being will clutch to anything, even a  straw to survive; given the option of dying without a heart transplant or surviving even if the heart transplanted is that of a pig, almost all rational human beings will prefer the heart of a pig. Having such transplant does not make the recipient a pig; that is more behavioural’

DAVID Bennett, 57, an American from Maryland  on Friday January 7, 2022   underwent  surgery; the first human being to receive  a pig heart transplant.  It was a highly experimental operation and there are no guarantees   that the genetically modified pig heart will work for him. But the only option available for him  was death and he was not in a hurry for Judgement Day. On the eve of the transplant,  Bennett said:  “It was either die or do this transplant. I want to live. I know it’s a shot in the dark, but it’s my last choice.” The seven-hour surgery at a  Baltimore hospital was performed by  Dr Bartley Griffith.

Two days after the transplant, Bennett, although still connected  to a heart-lung machine,  was breathing on his own. The  transplant proved  that  a modified animal heart can be welcome in a human without an immediate rejection. The doctors, learning from the 1984  baboon heart transplant on a dying infant, Baby Fae,    said  they removed a sugar in the pig’s heart  cells  to stop an  hyper-fast organ rejection.  Baby Fae had survived only for  21 days.

Essentially, the human heart which is the size of a clenched fist,  is a muscle pumping blood to all parts of the body, thereby providing it with  oxygen and nutrients. It is also  part of the system that controls the blood pressure and  heartbeat.

 Medicinenet  explains that: “The heart is a pump, usually beating about 60 to 100 times per minute. With each heartbeat, the heart sends blood throughout our bodies, carrying oxygen to every cell. After delivering the oxygen, the blood returns to the heart. The heart then sends the blood to the lungs to pick up more oxygen.” In other words, the heart is life.

Yes, the heart is personal to each human, but sometimes it needs a replacement which hitherto had been with another  human heart.

Perhaps the  person with the longest heart transplant experience is  Cheri Latzke Lemmer who got a new human heart at 24 in  1981, went back to work and  40 years later, is still alive.

The race to get an alternative for  human heart transplant  is basically due to  lack of donors; many people, even when terminally ill, prefer taking their hearts with them to the grave.  At any time, thousands of  human beings are   waiting for a transplant and at least a quarter of them die while on the queue. Not all who get the transplant survive as they may suffer rejection due to  the  immune system, displaying xenophobic traits by seeing  the new heart as foreign,  and attacking it. Again, after transplant, there can also be graft failure  or the  narrowing of the arteries supplying the heart.

Also, heart transplant can be unaffordable for many. For instance in Nigeria, a heart transplant may cost  between N16-20  million. A Nigerian  worker on the monthly national minimum wage of  N30,000, assuming he spends no Kobo from his wages and pays no taxes or bills, will need to work for half a century to be able to afford a transplant. Yet in the public service, the maximum he can work is 35 years. So, for the Nigerian masses and the middle class, a  serious heart problem is nothing but a death sentence. But their chances of a heart transplant might have become brighter because in  the long run, the modified heart of a pig may be easily available and much more affordable. It might also be  better received by the immune system.

To discuss the propriety or morality  of receiving the  heart of a pig,  is like blaming the victim. As the German playwright  Bertolt Brecht (1898–1956) was won’t to argue; we are not talking  in the name of  morality, but in that of its victims. A drowning human being will clutch to anything, even a  straw to survive; given the option of dying without a heart transplant or surviving even if the heart transplanted is that of a pig, almost all rational human beings will prefer the heart of a pig. Having such transplant does not make the recipient a pig; that is more behavioural.

Even without a pig heart transplant, some humans behave like pigs. I recall that for decades  before the Black Lives  Matter Movement, radical Black activists who reject the racism that was, or is, the American establishment, called the United States  policemen, pigs or use the word ‘pig’  as a synonym for the policeman.   Some even use explicit racist terms like  ‘White pigs’

There are those who believe  the heart is the soul and spirit of the human. Hence when they say  a person has a kind heart, it means he is a good person.  So,  given the fact that we tend to be quite  religious, the question arises, will a person with a pig heart transplant make heaven?   I do not need to ask the disjointed   Mummy G.O of Nigeria, an expert on Heaven Affairs who claims to be familiar with heaven and knows those who will make it and those who will not. But I know that the make of the heart of the candidates for Hell or Heaven, whether natural or transplanted, will not count in their  Grade Point Average, GPA.

Scripturally, I do not know if the  pig is unclean. But my conviction on this is  guided by the experiences of Apostle Peter. He  was hungry and while his food was being prepared, he  fell into a trance in which  he was shown all sorts of animals, birds and reptiles. Then, a  voice came to him: “ Rise, Peter; kill and eat.” But Peter said: “ No, Lord; for I have never eaten anything  that is common or unclean.” But the voice came again: “Do not call anything unclean  that God has made clean.” Peter experienced this three times. (Acts: 9-16)

The Apostles  emphasised  that  God is the  maker of heaven and earth. In 1848,  the great Anglo-Irish hymn writer and poet  Cecil Frances  Alexander who is also famous for writing  the Christmas carol ‘Once in Royal David’s City’ taught this creationist view of God to young children in one  of the most beautiful and captivating hymns ever written titled ‘All Things Bright and Beautiful.’ In it she asserted:   “All things bright and beautiful, All creatures great and small, All things wise and wonderful,  The Lord God made them all…He gave us eyes to see them, And lips that we might tell,  How great is God Almighty, Who has made all things well.”

If you agree, then in a question of life or death, you are unlikely to accept the heart of a human being but reject the heart of a pig, for God made them  all.

*Lakemfa writes from Abuja

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