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哥伦布、匹兹堡及各地消息
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On 5/24 Fri (Memorial Day weekend),
the film “Sight” will be released in
theaters across the U.S. and Canada,
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On 5/24 Fri (Memorial
Day weekend), the film “Sight” will be released in theaters across
the U.S. and Canada, by Angel Studios (which released “Sound of
Freedom”)! Dr. Ming Wang
A Common Ground Seeker
Focusing on Science
Through the Lens of Faith
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Dr. Ming Wang,
Harvard & MIT (MD); PhD,co-founder, Common Ground Network
The film “Sight”, featuring Greg
Kinnear, is based on the autobiography of Dr. Ming Wang, Harvard &
MIT (MD, magna cum laude); PhD (laser physics). The movie includes
the fascinating story of the invention of the amniotic membrane
contact lens, which has now been used in nearly every nation of the
world by thousands of eye doctors, and has helped millions of
patients to have their eyesight restored. Dr. Wang is a Christian,
philanthropist, world-renowned surgeon, and co-founder of the Common
Ground Network;however, he remembers his previous life as an
atheist, during which he subsisted on his family’s income of $15 a
month. He recalls what it was like for him to suffer and have no
hope. |
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In 1974, as a
14-year-old 9th grader, just like millions others, Wang had to leave
school with no hope of ever being able to return. Attempting to
avoid deportation to labor camps by getting a job with the
government’s song-and-dance propaganda troupe, Wang learned to play
the erhu--a Chinese violin--and practiced dancing. In 1976, the
Cultural Revolution ended, and the government reopened universities.
To attend college, Wang had to re-enter school and jump from 9th to
12th grade, having never studied in the 10th-12th grades.
Furthermore, he had to compete against other 12th graders for a 1%
chance of getting into college. His parents advised him to do this
since there was no guarantee that the government would not shut down
the schools again! Too poor to make copies of the review study
questions, his parents hand-wrote them onto any piece of paper they
could find and drilled Wang 19-21 hours a day. He studied
around-the-clock, became one of only four 12th graders from his
province to be admitted into college, and was accepted into the
prestigious University of Science and Technology of China.
In college, a visiting American professor who was impressed by
Wang’s persistence and tenaciousness helped him secure a teaching
assistantship at the University of Maryland; so on Feb 3, 1982, Wang
stepped off a plane in Washington, D.C. with only $50, a student
visa, and a Chinese-English dictionary. He worked hard, earned two
doctorate degrees--one in laser physics and one in medicine--and
graduated magna cum laude with the highest honors from Harvard
Medical School and MIT.
Wang came to Nashville in 1997 as the founding director of
Vanderbilt Laser Sight Center and founded the internationally-known
Wang Vision Institute in 2002. He performed the world’s first laser
artifcial cornea implantation and over 55,000 procedures (including
on over 4,000 doctors). Wang published an article in the
world-renowned journal “Nature,” as well as more than 100 other
scientifc papers and 10 textbooks. He holds several U.S. patents for
his invention of biotechnologies to restore sight. Wang was chosen
to be NPR’s Philanthropist of the Year, and received the Honor Award
from the American Academy of Ophthalmology and the Lifetime
Achievement Award from the Association of Chinese American
Physicians.
Wang founded a non-profit Wang Foundation for Sight Restoration,
which to date has helped patients from over 40 states in the U.S.
and 55 countries, with all sight restoration surgeries performed
free-of-charge. He was named the Kiwanis Nashvillian of the Year for
his lifelong dedication to helping blind orphan children from around
the world.
Wang is also passionate about another type of vision, i.e., helping
others to see that science and faith are friends, not foes.
While studying the human eye at Harvard Medical School and MIT, Wang
was confused and struggled to understand how the random events of
evolution could create such a complex structure such as the human
eye in such a short amount of time, so he asked a professor about
it. “The professor opened a window to the Lord in my heart,” Wang
says. “I began to understand that there is a Creator for everything,
so I became a Christian.”
Wang found himself at the center of today’s science vs. faith
conflict while researching ways to reduce corneal scarring in order
to restore sight after injury. He learned that while adult eyes
develop scars after injury leading to blindness, a fetus eye
actually does not scar. He wanted to understand how this scarless
process happens in a fetus so he could find ways to restore eyesight
for his adult injured patients. He needed to do fetal tissue
research but at the same time, he did not want to endanger
a fetus. He prayed for wisdom and felt God had led him to James 1:4
about perseverance, so he persevered, for nearly 20 years,
attempting to find a way to conduct scarless fetal wound healing
research but without hurting a fetus.
Finally his decades of hard work paid off, he and other scientists
found the solution. They discovered that a unique piece of
tissue—the amniotic membrane that surrounds the fetus--has the same
magical scarless healing property as the fetus. This membrane is
typically discarded with the placenta after birth.Wang began
collecting donated amniotic membranes, transplanting them onto
injured eyes, and found that the eyes can now indeed heal without
scar thereby preserving sight. This discovery led to his invention
of the amniotic membrane contact
lens, for which he obtained two U.S. patents. To date, the amniotic
membrane contact lens has been used by tens of thousands of eye
doctors throughout the world in nearly every nation, and millions
have had their eyesight restored.
To Wang, this medical breakthrough is an answer to his prayer.
He says that his years of hopelessness and darkness have enabled him
to emotionally connect with his patients, understand their
suffering, and be resolved to do whatever he can to help them.
Today, much of Wang’s pain from the past has been transformed into
joy. He was able to honor his parents by taking them into his home
to enjoy their sunset years. He played the erhu as a teenager in the
Cultural Revolution to avoid deportation, but now he plays it to
express his appreciation for God’s blessings. He also combined the
music and dance that he had to learn to survive in the past but now
has grown to love to create a fundraiser, aptly named the EyeBall,
which raises funds for the Wang Foundation for Sight Restoration.
Wang also has a heart for the people of China, for which 95% of its
1.4 billion citizens are atheists. The Wang Foundation for Christian
Outreach to China distributes Bibles there and pairs recipients with
Christian pen pals.
“Faith and science do have common ground,” states Wang. He believes
in the importance of seeking common ground among all of us as human
beings, an idea that was planted in him when he met the former U.S.
president Ronald Reagan in 1985. Wang co-founded the 501c(3)
non-profit, the Common Ground Network, with Dr. Rice Broocks.
Together they developed the common ground-seeking STEPS inspired by
the life of Christ,and published the “Common Ground Bible Study.” |
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Wang and his brother Yu (1974)
Wang grew up in Hangzhou, China. In 1966, the Cultural Revolution
caused the closure of all universities across the country. The
government deported the country’s youth to labor camps in rural
areas, and over the 10 years of the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976),
20 million youth were sent away to a lifetime of poverty and hard
labor.
Graduated from Harvard & MIT (MD, magna cum laude) with his
graduation thesis winning the firstplace honor (1991). Dr. Wang is
one of the few laser eye surgeons in the world today who holds a
doctorate degree in laser physics
Ballroom dance and Chinese violin erhu playing for “EyeBall”, a
charity event for Wang Foundation for Sight Restoration, which
drwang@wangvisioninstitute.com | www.drmingwang.com to date has
helped patients from over 40 states and 55 countries, with all sight
restoration surgeries performed free-of-charge.
Met with President Reagan at the White House (1985)
drwang@wangvisioninstitute.com | www.drmingwang.com |
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