Make-A-Wish helps 6-year-old be a pirate for a day

Summary

When the Lady Washington pulled into Portland for the Rose Festival last week, Joshua Brenneman was there, sailing under his new pirate name 'Red Dog' Brenneman. The 6-year-old has a form of cancer called Ewing's Sarcoma.

Story Published: Jun 5, 2007 at 8:06 PM PDT

Story Updated: Oct 11, 2007 at 8:34 PM PDT

Make-A-Wish helps 6-year-old be a pirate for a day

PORTLAND, Ore. - Earlier this year, KATU's telethon for the Make-A-Wish Foundation helped raise $33,000 and more than 400,000 frequent flier miles to help fulfill the wishes of kids like 6-year-old Joshua Brenneman, who wanted nothing more than to be a pirate.

Joshua has a form of cancer called Ewing's Sarcoma and is among the thousands of children each year who have wishes granted by the Make-A-Wish Foundation.

Steven Black, a local man who reenacts pirate scenes, heard about Joshua's wish on the radio.

"One of the names that was on the list was "and here's young Josh, who wants a pirate fantasy adventure," at which point my wife looked at me, slapped me across the arm and said "you call them right now."

So when the Lady Washington pulled into Portland for the Rose Festival last week, Joshua was there, sailing under his new pirate name 'Red Dog' Brenneman.  His family went along as well.

"It's for the whole family and Joshua has four big sisters and they also struggle and go through the journey along with you and it was just wonderful to have the creative genius of Make-A-Wish and the crew of the Lady Washington and the pirates - everyone just totally got on board and made it something very, very special for the whole family," said Joshua's father, Don Brenneman.

Once docked at the WaMu Waterfront Village, Joshua's pirate crew helped lead him on a search for buried treasure. 

The Executive Director of the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Oregon said Joshua's adventure is the kind of wish you can make come true.

"It's time, treasure and talent," said Andrew Asato.  "Volunteering your time, airline miles, hotel points and volunteering as a wish granter."

Joshua said it was his wish come true. "I was really interested in doing it and I liked the pirates a lot," he said.

Gov. Ted Kulongoski declared Tuesday 'Make-A-Wish Day' in Oregon to signify the state's commitment to Destination Joy, a nationwide effort by Make-A-Wish to help grant the wishes of 100,000 kids across the country.

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