After spending ten years in a comatose state, a young Italian man named
Maximiliano Tresoldi woke up on Christmas of 2000 to dry the tears of
his mother, Lucrecia.
In an interview with CNA, Lucrecia recounted how Maximiliano – Max to
his friends – was only 20 years old when he was injured in a car
accident on Aug. 15, 1991.
He was diagnosed by doctors as paralyzed “with no chance of recovery,” she said.
Over nine years later on Dec. 28, 2000, Lucrecia tucked Max into bed as
she had each night since he came home from the hospital.
Overwhelmed with depression and sadness, she didn’t follow her usual
routine of taking his hand to make the sign of the cross.
“I just can’t do any more tonight, I don’t want to pray or anything,” she told him.
However, Lucrecia said, “the sign of the cross was really his
salvation,” and at that moment Max found the strength to console his
mother.
He raised his hand and made the sign of the cross himself. Then he gave her a hug.
Lucrecia said it was the best Christmas gift of her life and that after
that encounter, Max began to externalize his feelings and emotions.
The first words Max told his mother after waking up were, “I am happy, I
am happy to be with you,” she remembered, adding that he “has always
been happy despite his paralysis.”
Further shocking Lucrecia, Max said he was aware of everything during
his coma and that he even knew the exchange rate between Italian liras
and the euro.
His mother is sure that God has a plan for him: to remind the world
that handicapped persons have a right to a life of dignity, that they
are a source of life and should be loved and respected.
She noted that Max was born on Sept. 8 – the feast of the Nativity of
Mary – and his car accident happened on Aug.15, the feast of the
Assumption.
Lucrecia said the first miracle God worked in her was to help her
accept what was happening right away and to put her son in the Lord’s
hands.
“On the day of the accident, I told Our Lady: 'On Aug. 15 my son was in
your hands. You had him born on Sept. 8 even though he was supposed to
be born a month later, and I don’t know what plans you have for him, but
I put him in your hands,” Lucrecia said.
“Just give me the strength to move forward and accept all this.”
She reflected that she had always been a fragile woman, but that the faith is what kept her close to her family.
“For this reason this is the strength that we have to give to all the
families who are experiencing this terrible tragedy and tell them, 'Do
not be afraid,'” she said.
Lucrecia has recounted Max’s entire story in a new book entitled, “E
addeso vado al Max,” which she co-wrote with Italian journalists Lucia
Bellaspiga and Pino Ciociola. The book received the 2012 Woman in Life
literary award.
Max received his own award: a ceramic sculpture by artist Gianni Celano
Giannici representing the same hand that he raised to make the sign of
cross after ten years in a coma.
On June 2 of this year, Max met Pope Benedict XVI in Milan and gave him a signed copy of the book.