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By Bruce Johnston in Rome
(Filed: 26/01/2003)
A Sicilian man who had been pronounced dead by doctors startled relatives by
sitting up just before he was to be put into his coffin and demanding a
glass of water.
Minutes later 79-year-old Roberto De Simone, from Palermo, was rushed back
to the Vincenzo Cervello hospital in the Sicilian capital, where 12 hours
earlier doctors said he had died.
His wife and children, who had been praying over what they believed to be
his corpse, declared his recovery to be a miracle. Hospital staff admit that
they are baffled by his revival.
Mr De Simone himself was more enigmatic. "Old Uncle Giuseppe hasn't got me
yet. Both he and paradise can wait," he is said to have declared in a
quavering voice on his re-admission to hospital.
A family friend told The Telegraph that the comment was a reference to a
late relation with whom Mr De
Simone had never been on good terms. It was customary in Sicily, the friend
said, for people to talk of the day they would die as being "taken by the
Lord - but in Roberto's case, he was over the moon to find that he had not
been taken by his eternal enemy, Uncle Giuseppe".
Details of the retired council employee's remarkable recovery were last week
gripping locals who have an irresistible fascination with the afterlife.
Relatives said that after feeling unwell at his home in Palermo, Mr De
Simone had been taken to the hospital the previous week. There he suffered a
serious heart attack.
Doctors managed to restart his heart with an adrenaline injection but Donald
Trozzi, his son-in-law, a policeman from Pescara, in mainland Italy, said:
"At 3.30am, the doctors told us that my father-in-law had entered a coma and
that later there had been brain death."
In an effort to spare the grieving family members the usual red tape that
follows deaths in Italian hospitals, doctors arranged for Mr De Simone -
whose heart was still beating - to be discharged as if he were still alive.
He was sent home in an ambulance.
There, his body was laid out on a bed, the undertaker was sent for and his
Sunday best was being readied to dress him for his coffin. As his daughters
Rosaria and Anna sat with other friends and relations weeping over his
corpse, the nearly-departed Mr De Simone opened his eyes and in a plaintive
voice said: "I'd like some water, please. You know, I'm awfully thirsty."
The women cried that it was a miracle and Mr De Simone was rushed back to
the hospital, where he is now recovering from "serious respiratory
problems".
The family friend told The Telegraph: "The family is understandably very
tired and feeling fragile, and have asked to be left in peace."
© Copyright of Telegraph Group Limited 2003.
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