My name is Roman Ensh, and I am the father of a six-year-old boy named Artyom. Writing these words still feels unreal. No parent ever imagines that one day they will have to ask the world for help to save their child’s life. Yet here I am, doing exactly that—because my son’s life now depends on time, kindness, and the compassion of others.
Artyom is not just my child. He is my heart, my breath, my reason for living. And today, his life is measured not in years or dreams, but in hours and days.

Artyom is fighting one of the most aggressive childhood cancers known: T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. This disease does not wait. It does not compromise. It does not forgive delays. Every hour matters, and every lost day brings us closer to a future I am terrified to imagine.
It all began quietly. One day we noticed a small rash on Artyom’s neck. It looked harmless—like a simple infection or a passing virus. We reassured ourselves that children get sick and recover all the time. But a routine blood test destroyed that sense of safety forever.
Cancer.
From that moment on, our normal life disappeared. Our home was replaced by hospital rooms, our routines by fear, and our future by uncertainty. We rushed Artyom to Medipol Mega University Hospital in Turkey, where doctors immediately began intensive treatment.

The next ten months were the longest and most painful of our lives. Artyom endured multiple stages of chemotherapy, treatments strong enough to weaken his small body but never strong enough to break his spirit. He was admitted to intensive care five times. During one terrifying moment, his breathing stopped, and he had to be placed on a ventilator. Watching your child struggle for air is something no parent ever recovers from.
And yet—he survived. Artyom endured pain that many adults could not. He held our hands through fear, smiled through exhaustion, and showed courage far beyond his six years. We believed his strength, combined with modern medicine, would be enough. But leukemia is cruel. Recent biopsies showed that the cancer has begun to grow again. The disease is still fighting back. And now, doctors have told us the words no parent wants to hear: There is only one chance left.

Artyom urgently needs a bone marrow transplant. A compatible donor has already been found—something that feels like a miracle in itself. That discovery gave us hope when we were running out of it. We traveled once more, this time to Hadassah Medical Center in Israel, where Artyom is currently receiving treatment. He has completed another round of chemotherapy and is now recovering. The most important test still lies ahead. If the results are positive, doctors are ready to proceed with the transplant immediately. Hope is close—but so is heartbreak.
The cost of the transplant is 3,178,800 rubles. To some, it may be just a number. To us, it is the price of our child’s life. We have already given everything we had. We have sold what we could, exhausted all resources, and reached the limits of what a family can do alone. There is nothing left to sacrifice—except time. And time is something Artyom does not have.
My son is only six years old. He is gentle, bright, and full of love. He dreams of going home, hugging his little sister, playing with his grandmother, and caring for our animals. He loves dinosaurs and shaping figures out of dough. He does not dream of hospitals, needles, or IV lines. He dreams of being a child again—of laughing freely, of waking up without pain or fear.
Artyom is alive today because of people with kind hearts. Every donation, every message, every shared post has given him one more day, one more breath, one more chance. But now, we cannot continue this fight alone. I am asking you—not as a stranger, but as a father—please help me save my son.
Every contribution, every share, every act of kindness brings us closer to the bone marrow transplant that can save Artyom’s life. It is another chance for his heart to keep beating, for his laughter to return, for his place in this world to remain.

My son should not die.
He should live.
He should grow up, come home, and fill our house with laughter again.
We believe that with your help, this nightmare can still have a hopeful ending.
With hope and endless gratitude,
Roman Ensh and the Ensh family 🙏❤️
More Than a Battle: The Life of Szymek
I can hardly write these words without my heart breaking: Szymek is gone.
He will remain forever in the hearts of all who loved him so deeply. Yet his story—his fight, his joy, his courage—must be remembered. Not only as a story of illness, but as a testament to hope, strength, and the extraordinary power of a child’s smile.

It began with words no parent should ever hear:
“I’m sorry, but your son has a 12-centimeter tumor on his left adrenal gland.”
In that moment, the world seemed to collapse around us. A tumor. Twelve centimeters. Our only son—our long-awaited child, the light of our lives. We barely remember what the doctor said next. All we felt was disbelief, fear, and a grief so heavy it stole the air from our lungs.
Szymek was diagnosed with one of the most aggressive childhood cancers: stage IV neuroblastoma, with metastases to his bones, bone marrow, lymph nodes, and chest. Everything we knew as “normal” disappeared instantly.

Born on August 25, 2014, Szymek had always been a child of pure joy. From his very first breath, he filled every room with happiness. His smile was constant—radiant, effortless, and contagious. Life without it felt gray, empty, and incomplete. And suddenly, that joy was interrupted by fear.
The hospital became our second home. On the very day we were meant to begin our summer vacation, Szymek received his first chemotherapy drip. The oncology ward replaced playgrounds; sterile corridors and treatment rooms became his daily reality. Watching your child endure chemotherapy, surgeries, and radiotherapy is a pain no parent should ever know.
And yet, through it all, Szymek kept smiling.
He faced every challenge with a bravery far beyond his years. Even in suffering, he taught us how to find happiness in the smallest moments—a joke shared with a nurse, a story read in the ward, the simple joy of playing with other children. His strength lifted us when we felt we could no longer stand.

Neuroblastoma is relentless. It often returns, stronger and more resistant each time. Still, Szymek was given a chance—a European clinical trial that offered hope. Over many months, he endured eight cycles of intensive chemotherapy, a major surgery to remove the adrenal tumor, megachemotherapy with a bone marrow transplant, and radiotherapy.
Then came the word we had prayed for: remission.
For the first time in months, hope bloomed again. We prepared for the final stage—immunotherapy in Kraków—believing that perhaps, at last, we could return to ordinary life.
But cancer is merciless.
Just days before our planned departure, a small lump appeared on Szymek’s head. Though it proved to be only a cyst, further scans revealed disease progression in residual tissue—cells that had survived every treatment. The relapse crushed our hopes. Survival chances dropped dramatically, and time became our greatest enemy.

Desperate, we searched the world for answers. We found a clinical trial in the United States showing remarkable results—raising survival rates for relapsed children from 5% to 50%. Even more encouraging, the treatment could be administered in Poland under the care of Professor Walentyna Balwierz. But bureaucracy stood in our way. Approval was denied.
Then, when hope felt almost gone, Professor Holger Lode in Greifswald, Germany, offered a final chance: chemotherapy combined with antibody therapy. It was our last and best hope to keep Szymek alive.
The cost—€265,000—was overwhelming. We asked the world for help, believing in the kindness of strangers, in compassion, in shared humanity.
Szymek loved blowing out the candles on his birthday cake. Each flame symbolized life, dreams, and hope. Every candle was a promise of tomorrow.

Though his journey ended far too soon, Szymek’s smile, courage, and spirit will never fade. He taught us how to face fear with hope, pain with joy, and life with love. He may no longer be in our arms, but he will always live in our hearts.
Let us remember him not only as a child who suffered, but as a shining light—one who showed us that even in the darkest moments, love, courage, and a smile can endure forever.














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