HEALTH & FITNESS Forever Connected Kidney donor knew he was "the one" to overcome recipient's rare condition. Keri Guten Cohen Story Development Editor had concerns about being physically and emotionally strong enough to handle the surgery. "Art told me, `With my kidney, I'll give you the strength. I'm strong enough for both of us;" Josie recalled. Art, who owns Tuffy Auto Service Centers in Southfield, Walled Lake and Waterford, earned a black belt in karate and works out regularly. "In my mind, I'm a tough Yid, kind of fearless!' A lthough each is married, Josie Carney and Art Rott are beshert (meant for each other) — they just didn't know it until he gave her one of his kidneys and saved her life. "I feel there's this unconditional connec- tion, that I'll always be there for him and him for me she said. "There's no doubt about it. Now we are forever connected!' The connection started with their sons, Maxx Carney, 18, and Josh Rott, 19, who became good friends through Temple Israel in West Bloomfield. Their families became friendly, too, but they never real- ized how close they would become. Just one week after the families were together at a 2005 Halloween party at the Carney's home in Waterford, Josie collapsed without warning into a coma from sudden renal failure. She spent more than a month in intensive care at William Beaumont Hospital Royal Oak and started dialysis treatment while still comatose. In March 2006, she was approved by doctors at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor for a living donor transplant. But finding a suitable match was compli- cated because Josie's 0-positive blood had a rare 96-percent rejection rate. "As family and friends came forward to test, I knew it would take a miracle to find a match:' Josie said. Art, 49, of West Bloomfield tested at U- M, but was eliminated because of Josie's high rejection rate. No match was found. Meanwhile, Josie's health was slipping away and she was becoming weaker each day. The Carneys had a hospice care work- er visit their home; the clergy at Temple Israel made a special "Mi Shebeirach" [prayer for healing] tape for them. And Maxx spent more and more time with the Rotts, especially during Josie's trips for testing at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., where a high-risk transplant team would go ahead with transplantation if a match could be found. Josie's rejection rate had improved somewhat during the past several months, and. Mayo was willing to re-test and recon- sider prospective donors who had been eliminated a year earlier. At dinner one night with the Carneys, Recipient Josie Carney and donor Art Rott are working on a book about their experiences with kidney transplantation. after hearing of Josie's dire circumstances, Art blurted out, "I will take the test. I will be one. I will give her my kidney" "My wife kicked me under the table and said I was embarrassing;' Art said. "I said, will not be quiet. You will see I will be the one — Josie will get my kidney.' I just knew. "That night, my right kidney was killing me," Art said. "I woke up Sunday morning and told my wife they were taking that one. Julie said, `You don't even know if you're a match, let alone what kidney! She even went on the Internet and found that they usually take the left because it's closer to the heart and less vascular." Finally, after both Art and Josie sent blood and tissue tests three times, they went together to Mayo the week of March 13, 2007, and were approved together. "I told Josie, 'Pack your bags, we're going to Mayo, babe Art said. But Josie Miraculous Match After a private prayer service at Temple Israel, the families, including Ryan Rott, 16, and Josie's husband, Mark, and daugh- ter Robin Murphy, 30, headed to the Mayo Clinic for the surgeries. Josie's May 2 transplant took 51/2 hours and Art's kidney — the right one — worked immediately. She is checked twice a week and there's zero rejection rate. "What a miracle," said Josie, 51, who came home from Mayo in early June. "Art knew from the start he was the one in 900 who could match. He is a giving, lov- ing and kind-hearted person. To give a living organ is such a selfless gift to save a life." Art's father, David Rott, 79, a handball champion in the Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, lost a kidney to cancer 33 years ago. "He inspired me Art said. "I asked him about it and he said, `Son, you are abso- lutely doing the right thing. Nothing to talk about.' I knew I would be fine. I'm in better shape than before surgery. Everyone needs to donate a kidney — you feel good in your heart and physically." Now the two are working diligently once a week on a book about their experience so they can help others. "A lot of people don't get it and ask why donate," Art said. "There's no greater honor or privilege in the world than being able to save another human being's life. And it's not as big a deal as you think. More than 20,000 Americans die annually waiting for an organ. "I asked a Lubavitch rabbi if it's OK to donate a body part and he told me it was the greatest mitzvah of all because if you save one person you save the world. I'm saving the world one person at a time." Ll More on living organ donation page 24 tune 28 • 2007 23