Maria Magdalena Olympic silver medal auctioned

 

Poland’s Maria Magdalena Andrejczyk celebrates her silver medal in the javelin throw at the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo on Aug. 7. She auctioned the medal to help fund heart surgery for an 8-month-old; the buyer decided to let her keep it.

Polish javelin thrower Maria Andrejczyk auctions silver medal to pay for baby’s lifesaving heart surgery.

A Polish Olympian has auctioned her silver medal from the Tokyo Games to raise money for an eight-month-old baby’s heart surgery.

Maria Andrejczyk, a 25-year-old javelin thrower, overcame a shoulder injury and bone cancer to compete this year Tokyo olympic.

“I didn’t spend long thinking about this,” she said. “It was the first fundraiser I came across and I knew it was the right one.”

Milosz’s family has been appealing for funds to pay for an operation in Stanford, California, saying they have run out of viable options in Poland.

If the infant does not get the surgery soon, his parents said he could die.

When she launched the fundraiser on Facebook, Ms Andrejczyk said half of the 1.5 million zloty (£280,000) needed had already been crowd funded by the family and she wanted to raise the other half.

She started the auction off at 200,000 zloty (£37,000), with people commenting on her social media post to place bids.

Zabka, a popular convenience store chain in Poland, eventually won the medal.

Its donation and further contributions surpassed the £140,000-mark she had hoped for.

The athlete said: “The winner, and at the same time, the company I will be eternally grateful to, is the company Zabka.

“It is with the greatest pleasure that I give you, Zabka, this medal, which for me is a symbol of struggle, faith and the pursuit of dreams despite many odds.

“I hope that for you it will be a symbol of the life we fought for together.” The company insisted she keep the medal.

“We were moved by the beautiful and extremely noble gesture of our Olympian,” a spokesperson said, adding: “We have decided that the silver medal from Tokyo will stay with Mrs. Maria.”

She said she will be “eternally grateful” to the company, adding: “I have no words to express how happy I am.”

As of Thursday evening, Milosz’s fundraising page is at 99.58% of its target.