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"Their story began with a knock at the door and a gift of bottled water," writes The Hamilton Spectator's reporter Natalie Paddon. "It has become about so much more — a 65-year-old Afghan man and a 29-year-old Canadian man sharing meals, religion, culture, respect and now, almost unbelievably, a kidney."
There is loving thy neighbour in the symbolic sense, and then there is unconditional neighbourly love. It is the essence of Natalie's story about Ghulam Akbar Momand and Andy Clutton.
Host Jon Wells in conversation with Natalie and Andy.
By The Hamilton Spectator5
11 ratings
"Their story began with a knock at the door and a gift of bottled water," writes The Hamilton Spectator's reporter Natalie Paddon. "It has become about so much more — a 65-year-old Afghan man and a 29-year-old Canadian man sharing meals, religion, culture, respect and now, almost unbelievably, a kidney."
There is loving thy neighbour in the symbolic sense, and then there is unconditional neighbourly love. It is the essence of Natalie's story about Ghulam Akbar Momand and Andy Clutton.
Host Jon Wells in conversation with Natalie and Andy.