The Star Malaysia

From disabled to designer

Czech boy with Asperger’s finds peace – and money – in drawing maps

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CERNOSICE (Czech Republic): The toy cars, double-deckers, stuffed toys and pillows on his bed are meticulous­ly ordered into neat rows, but Matej Hosek still inspects his room with a frown, looking for shortcomin­gs.

He pushes one car back by a millimetre with satisfacti­on, then opens a folder with dozens of transport maps he has drawn as part of his battle with autism.

Diagnosed with severe Asperger syndrome, the 13-year-old bespectacl­ed boy has found peace and order in sophistica­ted maps of his own making.

Not only that – they have also turned him into a fashion designer of sorts.

“I guess this is something God has given him in exchange for what he has taken away from him,” says Matej’s mother Michaela Hoskova.

Matej was a noisy child, “crying 23 hours a day”, she says, recalling their life in a Prague block of flats where neighbours regularly banged on their walls or, worse, left scratches on their cars.

The family, which includes Matej’s little sister Sofia, moved to a house in Cernosice, a small town just southwest of Prague, where Matej “could cry as loud as he wished”. Then he discovered maps.

“People used to kick us out of trams because he was yelling all the time. Then one day, on a tram, I gave him a map to read, I don’t even know where I got it. And he calmed down,” says Hoskova.

Matej started to ask for tram and undergroun­d rides to check if the transport maps were correct.

He started to copy maps, including his favourite, the London Undergroun­d, which he knows by heart, before drawing his own.

“With some cities, he said their system had no logic so he started to re-draw the plans,” says Hoskova, a former journalist.

Officially diagnosed with Asperger syndrome at age 10, Matej gradually started coming to terms with his condition.

“Children with Asperger syndrome have a problem with verbal communicat­ion. When they see things in a picture, they become easier to understand,” says Lenka Michalikov­a, an adviser to autistic people.

“Structure and visualisat­ion serve as an anchor in their uncertaint­y. They offer predictabi­lity, a clue.”

Inspired by a film about the Christian Dior fashion house, Matej once wrapped one of his maps around a mannequin standing in the living room as decoration.

“I’m a big fashion fan, and I said, ‘Matej, this is not bad at all’,” says Hoskova.

Her magazine at the time partnered with Prague Fashion Week and Matej soon found his undergroun­d design shown on the catwalk at a Prague department store in autumn 2016.

The clothes were sold and the income went to the AutTalk fund helping children with autism.

Building on the success, the Hoseks have started a small family company selling clothes and other items such as backpacks, cups and mobile phone cases with Matej’s undergroun­d designs.

Part of the income will go towards treatment for autistic children, said Matej’s father Martin, adding that he would like the company to expand abroad one day.

 ?? — AFP ?? Mapping his future: Matej showing a map that he designed, in his bedroom in the village of Cernosice, Czech Republic. (Inset) A worker of OP Tiger Factory showing a T-shirt with a printed map designed by Matej.
— AFP Mapping his future: Matej showing a map that he designed, in his bedroom in the village of Cernosice, Czech Republic. (Inset) A worker of OP Tiger Factory showing a T-shirt with a printed map designed by Matej.
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