Baby steps for refugee child born without legs
The 8-year-old Syrian girl, quietly crying in an Istanbul clinic, was overwhelmed by the new set of prosthetic legs she had just received and taken aback by the cameras pointed at her by journalists attending the fitting.
Maya Meri has been in the spotlight since images of her plight hit social media last month. She was filmed in a camp for the displaced in Syria’s northwestern Idlib province, walking around on contraptions her father made from tuna cans, plastic tubes and fabric.
‘‘I thought of doing something that would protect her while on the ground from stones and other things, so I made these limbs for her,’’ said her father, Mohammed.
Maya was born without legs because of a condition called congenital amputation.
Her story moved one Turkish prosthetics specialist to reach out to Turkey’s largest humanitarian organisation, which evacuated her from Syria.
Maya is now in Istanbul with her father, who shares the same disability.
Last Thursday, as journalists looked on, prosthetics specialist Mehmet Zeki Culcu took off Maya’s makeshift legs. He first wrapped her limbs in protective layers of fabric and then placed her in temporary prosthetics.
Camera shutters clicked as Culcu lifted Maya up and she stood in her purple and pink sneakers, which looked a few sizes too big.
Originally from Aleppo province, the Meri family had to move to escape the fighting.
‘‘We fled to an area that has not witnessed bombardment but it was difficult to live there in a tent on a mountain,’’ said Mohammed, who has five other children still in Syria with their mother.
In the Idlib camp, Maya and her father had to crawl on bare earth to get anywhere. He said the little girl would be in pain because of the rugged terrain as she made her way to school.
His homemade prosthetics allowed her to move about more easily, and helped her learn how to balance, shortening a two-week process to a single day when she was fitted with her new legs.
Culcu, who took on her case probono, thinks that it will take about 21⁄2-months for the young girl’s new limbs to be fully fitted.
‘‘If Maya continues to learn so fast and be so enthusiastic, it might be completed in a shorter time,’’ he added.
Maya practices taking steps with the aid of a walker. In time, Culcu said her trial socket prosthetics will be lengthened with a knee joint and then extended below the knee.
She grimaces with pain after an hour with her synthetic limbs but the technicians said that was to be expected and worked to adjust them.
Culcu said Maya had become a ‘‘child symbol’’ and he hoped the world would be moved by her plight to put an end to the civil war in Syria.