Beloved teacher gets 3rd chance at life with 2nd kidney transplant

By Cate Cauguiran

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    HOFFMAN ESTATES, Illinois (WLS) — A suburban school teacher and her students are celebrating her new chance at life.

There was a warm welcome in Hoffman Estates into a new chapter of life – a chapter Katie Pappas was uncertain she would ever be able to write.

ABC7 Chicago first met Pappas six months ago. She learned she had gone into kidney failure for the second time after already having gone through a transplant surgery nearly a decade ago.

“They said, ‘With everything your body has been through… you’ve already had a transplant you don’t have seven years to wait. And you need to find a living donor,'” Pappas said.

On Wednesday, ABC7 was introduced to Katie 3.0.

After months grueling through dialysis, the beloved District U-46 teacher’s community desperately rallied for help. She got the call she’d been waiting for.

“[A] person who is a stranger to me and was deemed a wonderful candidate, just not for me, agreed to give their kidney to anyone so I would get one in return,” Pappas said.

The anonymous donor agreed to be part of a swap program to save her life and others. Last Thursday, on a red-eye flight from California, Pappas’ living donor kidney arrived, and so did her third chance at life.

On Wednesday, she celebrated her first week in her new life, surrounded by family, friends and current and former students

“I was crying when I first found that out, because I was just so happy that she gets a third chance on life,” former student Janice Poe said.

“Even when she had her hardest days, she always had a smile on her face,” Timber Trails Elementary School student Liana Kolovos said.

The Timber Trails Elementary School teacher also being celebrated for yet another contribution to her district: naming U-46’s newest school in Elgin.

Katie, with the help of her students, submitted the name Legacy Middle School just weeks before her transplant surgery.

“It’s an invitation for every kid that walks in the building to challenge themselves,” Pappas said. “What is your legacy going to be? What are you going to leave behind?”

Appropriate for the teacher who, already, through her fight to live has created a legacy herself, one she says she owes to the anonymous generosity of strangers.

“To everyone involved, thank you isn’t enough,” Pappas said. “And I plan on living the rest of my life like my donors watching, like all of them are watching. And I’m not going to let them down.”

This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate partner and does not contain original CNN reporting.

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