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This is the story of that journey - one almost as difficult for this passionate, yet frustrated, surgeon to make as it had been for Joanne to fly 30 hours to undergo a life-saving treatment few doctors here had ever heard of. Difficult, because Dr. Andre Waismann came here to offer hope and, as he expected, walked into an initial storm of criticism and, at times, hostile attack from elements within the drug-treatment establishment.
But something else happened during his eight-day trip in July. Something that amazed even Andre Waismann. As word spread and as addicts and their families reached out to him, so too did a handful of medical professionals who took the time to meet the doctor and discuss his techniques.
Suddenly, the heroin issue in this country was never going to be the same again. Andre Waismann's message got through, and those same doctors are now readying themselves to fly to the Middle East to learn and eventually trial his procedures back in Australia later this year.
What you are about to read should make you feel proud and angry but, more importantly, excited - and hopeful.
Joanne Frare's story of triumph was just the beginning. It was the birth of an idea that has become an avalanche - the reality that more than 100,000 Australian mothers, fathers, sons and daughters who are lost to heroin can now come home.
A bold, dedicated and inspiring man called Dr. Andre Waismann will be leading them.
THE MOMENT he landed in Sydney, Andre Waismann knew this trip was perhaps "the most significant event" in his ongoing war against heroin addiction and against medical establishments that treat users as losers.
"You know, I feel in my heart this will be different", he told me as he strode into the TV spotlights hovering in the international arrivals terminal.
Most were there, not for his visit, but for the arrival on the same flight of the bodies of two Australians who perished in the bridge collapse at the Jewish Olympics (the 15th Maccabian Games) in Tel-Aviv, Israel.
Journalist Tony Barnao (left) Joanne Frare and Dr. Andre Waismann.
"The whole journey I thought of them lying alone below me in the hold", he confided. "And it seemed almost as if my reason for coming here, to offer hope, had new meaning, that I might be giving something back to a country that had lost its loved-ones so tragically in my country."
Andre Waismann is an insightful, intelligent man. He is also impatient, irreverent and moves like a whirlwind - too often headlong into raging controversy and rigid academia.
"I have no time for fools or ignorance," he said, more than once, during his week-long campaign to open the eyes, ears and hearts of Australians to the reality that heroin is not invincible.
"I am no genius - just a doctor who is tired of seeing heroin addicts tossed onto the scrap heap or fed government-supplied drugs [methadone] to keep them under control, simply to keep us safe from them."
The day he arrived, a newspaper splashed the photograph of a mother on heroin - sprawled in the gutter with her four-year-old son sitting next to her. Public outrage led police to pledge to take children away from mums who use heroin in the streets.
Andre Waismann shook his head in despair and asked was this the best we could do to help these families - tear them apart? He had just discharged four more Australians from his Tel-Aviv clinic before flying to Australia. And since Joanne Frare's treatment, more than 25 other Australians have followed suit. All are healthy, most are home, and to a man - and woman - they are no longer addicted to the curse that is heroin.
"But I do not want you to send me your addicts", he said. "Send me your doctors instead. Let me show them what I do, and then, if they say I am a fraud, what have you lost?
"Make your politicians put this treatment where it belongs - in the hands of medical doctors. Put it in the public health system, free of charge.
"Heroin addiction is a medical condition, a central nervous system disorder that is reversible.
"These people are not mad, deranged or with so-called addictive personalities. They are trapped by a body and mind that constantly crave opiates. They can be healed - without methadone, without psychological counseling and without being locked away in rehabilitation centers. Believe me, the 3000 patients I have treated all know the truth."
Andre Waismann repeated these words during his week of media appearances, meetings with health officials and in-depth discussions with a handful of doctors, neurologists and anesthetists.
One team, from a major public hospital in Sydney, is now readying itself to trial his so-called accelerated opiate detoxification cure.
Ironically, it was the word "cure" that inflamed most of the initial hostility against him. Who was this blow-in surgeon from Israel, claiming heroin addiction was able to be overcome and mass methadone programs were an expensive mistake?
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