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Kids & Family

Sisters Make a Difference to Help Kids Fighting Cancer

Sisters Make a Difference to Help Kids Fighting Cancer

Samantha (age 4) and Mallory (age 7) are making the holidays a bit brighter for children fighting cancer. The two Orland Park sisters are shown here delivering the toys they purchased to the Treasure Chest Foundation’s Orland Park warehouse.
Samantha (age 4) and Mallory (age 7) are making the holidays a bit brighter for children fighting cancer. The two Orland Park sisters are shown here delivering the toys they purchased to the Treasure Chest Foundation’s Orland Park warehouse.

The spirit of the season has inspired two Orland Park sisters to reach into their hearts and their pockets to help children and teens fighting cancer. Mallory Meyer (age 7) and Samantha Meyer (age 4) shopped to purchase toys for the Pediatric Oncology Treasure Chest Foundation, a non-profit organization that provides a toy, gift or gift certificate as a means of comforting children and teens diagnosed with cancer.

The Meyer sisters set sail to area stores where they purchased gifts including talking babies, talking cars and talking teapots to name a few of the toys. When asked about supporting the Treasure Chest Foundation, Katie Meyer mother of Mallory and Samantha said, “We are lucky to be home this Christmas season. Not all kids will be home for the holidays, and some will be hospitalized.”

“It brought me joy to see kids helping kids. We are so pleased to have the support of the Meyer sisters,” said an appreciative Colleen Kisel, Founder of the Treasure Chest Foundation. “Their generosity will help brighten the holidays for so many brave children facing the adversity of battling cancer.”

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The POTCF is a unique organization whose services impact more than 14,600 young cancer patients in 61cancer treatment centers in 20 states across the nation and in the District of Columbia. Nowhere else in the nation does such a program exist. Colleen Kisel founded the organization in 1996 after her then seven-year-old son Martin had been diagnosed with leukemia in 1993. Ms. Kisel discovered that giving her son a toy after each procedure provided a calming distraction from his pain, noting that when children are diagnosed with cancer their world soon becomes filled with doctors, nurses, chemotherapy drugs, surgeries and seemingly endless painful procedures. Martin celebrated his 27th anniversary of remission from the disease in March of 2020.

If you would like further information about the Treasure Chest Foundation, please contact Colleen Kisel at 708-687-TOYS (8697) or visit the Foundation’s web site at www.treasurechest.org.

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