Notas del episodio
Some revolutions don’t arrive with applause. They arrive as a whisper. A pause. A quiet decision no one else is watching.
In 1939, American hospitals had rules—clear ones. If you were bleeding, they helped you. If you were sick with pneumonia, they treated you. But if alcohol was your disease, the door stayed shut.
Until one small woman chose to open it.
At a hospital in Akron, Ohio, a soft-spoken nun working the admissions desk made a choice that would change history. Sister Ignatia Gavin didn’t have power, status, or permission—but she had conviction. When a doctor asked her to bend the rules for a suffering alcoholic, she didn’t argue. She didn’t hesitate.
She said yes.
That single yes created the first hospital-based treatment for alcoholism, helped launch Alcoholics Anonymous into the world, and gave thousands o ...