Bilal Sharif had the surgery Thursday at the Cohen Children's Medical Center in New York, but was asleep Friday when Maj. Glenn Battschinger came to see him before leaving for a yearlong deployment in Africa, the Scranton Times-Tribune in Pennsylvania reported yesterday.
"I was getting ready to say 'so long' and he kind of opened his eyes," Battschinger said. "I gave him a hug and a kiss and said, 'I'll see you when I see you.'"
Dempsey said the surgery "set the stage for him to be a normal, healthy boy in every way."
Despite his medical condition, Bilal worked alongside his father making bricks in Afghanistan before Battschinger intervened more than a year ago and made corrective surgery a possibility.
"You can't even imagine how happy I am," Battschinger told the newspaper.
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