When Zola Tomic asked her mother Brittani before going to gymnastics one day, they hadn’t been talking about God at the time, so Brittani was surprised by the question, “When can I see God again?”.
The six-year-old girl needed him, but he was there for her. Tomic Zola had a routine procedure to have her tonsils removed. Prior to entering her mother’s bedroom while heavily bleeding, everything was fine.
The young girl had been bleeding for more than ten days. Then God was about to die, and Zola saw it. Until the moment she uttered the breath-taking sentence, “When can I see God again?,” the family was unaware of the encounter.
Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS), a rare disease, was not known to Zola’s family prior to her tragic incident. Zola’s mother claimed that the pregnancy was considered to be high risk. The experts thought it was just a coincidence, though, because the markers did not correspond to trisomy 18 or down syndrome.
As a result of numerous health issues throughout her upbringing, the doctors discovered that Zola’s tonsils were too big and might be affecting how she breathes. After learning this information, the parents decided to have the procedure because they thought it would make all of their problems go away.
After her close call with death, Zola began discussing her miraculous moment more candidly. On the night she was about to pass away, God had thanked Zola for becoming his friend. Brittani clarifies that while she was in the hospital, she never lost consciousness.
This young girl had experienced God as a consoling force. Zola’s terrifying health incident caused the family’s Christian beliefs to drastically change. To spread the word about the girl’s condition, the family later founded a non-profit organization.