Caricature that Mei-chan with intractable disease wanted to deliver 06:47 on May 30th

There is a clown group called Clini Crown that interacts with the children who are hospitalized and delivers a smile. Due to the influence of the new coronavirus, I was not able to go to the hospital and stopped working, but I decided to expand my new activities with the caricatures sent by the deceased girl.

The caricature was delivered by the mother of a 5-year-old girl named Tame-chan, who died this March.

Mei-chan had a heart illness, which is designated as an intractable disease called left fundus formation syndrome, and spent most of her time in the hospital since she was born.

Mei-chan, who can't go out, loves Clini Crown, who comes to the hospital and plays with me and plays musical instruments, and when I met him, he was so happy and hardened.

A letter from her mother attached to the caricature said, "Mei departed in the air at 1:45 on March 20. Due to the new corona, I could not see Mei for 8 days (because my life was dangerous). I had a phone call to come because I am doing a heart massage, and I had a reunion after a long time, '' and the appearance of a 5-year-old child fighting against illness without being able to see his family was revealed. It was

It was the last time that Tai-chan passed away to meet Clini Crown in February, and the portrait was left unpainted after saying "I'll give it myself!".

The round red nose and big eyes of the Clini Crown I met were drawn, and when I turned over the portrait, I wrote down "Thank you" with a red crayon on the back.

In her letter, her mother, Miyuki, said, “Please accept Mei's feelings. I had been watching the movie (of Clinicrown) for a long time. I am really glad that I met Clinicrown. It has made my hospital life bloom, please keep entertaining many children in the future. "

The NPO Japan Clinic Crown Association stopped visiting the hospital around February this year, but in response to the delivered caricature and hope from the medical field, efforts to interact with the child on the web, Clini Crown We put a lot of effort into delivering the video of, and decided to deliver a new smile.

Eriko Kumagai, Executive Director of the Japan Clinic Crown Association, said, “We would like to provide support that we can do now so that children who are anxious without being able to meet their parents can smile like children.”