Foundations and medical team unite for urgent heart operation
8 July 2025
Baby Kendreya Pillay seemed like any newborn – until her tiny chest began rising and falling rapidly, and she quickly grew tired.
Born in October 2024 to Paroosha Naidoo and Kevin Pillay in Chatsworth, Durban, Kendreya’s dad remembers those early days vividly: “Her stomach would sink with every breath, like her little body was working overtime just to breathe.”
As the weeks passed, Kendreya’s breathing worsened. Kevin juggled night shifts, driving Paroosha and Kendreya between hospital appointments and tests. He would often sleep in the car while mother and baby waited to see the doctors and get the necessary medical tests done.
Then came the devastating diagnosis – a large hole in the heart was affecting Baby Kendreya’s blood flow. “Her heart couldn’t pump properly, causing fluid to build up in her lungs. That’s why her tummy caved in when she tried to breathe,” Kevin explains.
Surgery was initially scheduled for March 2025, when Kendreya would be six months old, but this was not to be, and it was unclear when a new date for surgery could be arranged in the public sector. The dedicated team of doctors at Inkosi Albert Luthuli Hospital did everything they could to help, but the resources at government hospitals are simply not able to keep up with the desperate need for such specialised procedures.
“It broke our hearts as the doctors had warned us that after eight or nine months, surgery becomes much riskier. Time was running out,” Kevin says.
Cardiothoracic surgeon and founder of the Young Hearts Africa Foundation, Dr Wilhelm Lichtenberg, has made it his life’s purpose to reach children with life-threatening heart defects like Kendreya’s before it is too late. Since its inception in 2023, the foundation has helped 30 children.




