Cancer-stricken Vietnam war vet gets dying wishes: to be baptised and go fishing one last time

Vietnam vet Connie Willhite catches a fish on his last fishing trip. (Carl Vinson VA Medical Center)

"Baptise me and let me go fishing one last time."

These were the two final wishes of former U.S. Navy serviceman Connie Willhite, a 69-year-old veteran who served during the Vietnam war and who was stricken with cancer with only days to live.

The staff at the Carl Vinson Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Dublin, Georgia were only too happy to grant his dying wishes, Breitbart reports.

Willhite told the staff that he wanted to be baptised so he could "cross over" to the next life.

The hospital's chaplain had no trouble in performing the baptism ceremony in Willhite's room.

However, the fishing trip, presented some challenge to the hospital's staff. Willhite was stuck on his bed because of his advanced colon cancer, and could not get up to fish.

But Greg Senters, a social worker at the hospital, found a way to fulfil Willhite's second dying wish. He arranged for a mobile motorised hospital bed for the veteran so he could fish from the lake located behind the hospice unit at the VA center, KTLA reported.

"There's nothing like fishing. Even when they're not biting, it's still a good day to be outside," Willhite told KSLA moments before the fishing trip. "I know I'm dying and the cancer is going to get me, but as long as I can go, I want to fish."

He said it would be alright even if he would not be able to catch any fish.

But to his delight, he did catch a few fish.

Senters assisted Willhite in casting his fishing rod.

"I'll never forget the look on his face... Seeing Mr. Willhite achieve success in his final days was more than gratifying, it's a memory that I'll always cherish," he said. "Moments like that make me proud to be in social work and to serve veterans."

Three days after his fishing trip, Willhite died peacefully in his bed.

News
Cuts to government grants are having 'huge impact' on church buildings and local communities
Cuts to government grants are having 'huge impact' on church buildings and local communities

Many churches are in the corridor of uncertainty thanks to grant limits

Church of Scotland opposition to assisted suicide 'under review'
Church of Scotland opposition to assisted suicide 'under review'

Will the Church of Scotland change its traditional view following the Scottish Parliament's vote?

Christians pray as Westminster debates assisted suicide
Christians pray as Westminster debates assisted suicide

Christians are praying that more MPs will be persuaded to reject Kim Leadbeater's assisted suicide bill when it is debated again the House of Commons on Friday. 

Assisted suicide: Scotland’s shame
Assisted suicide: Scotland’s shame

Increasingly Western societies, as they turn away from their Christian roots, become cultures of death.