Toronto Star

5-year-old slowly losing sight will visit Rome

Parents create ‘bucket list’ for girl before rare condition slowly renders her blind

- MITCH STACY

COLUMBUS, OHIO— The parents who created a “visual bucket list” for their 5-year-old daughter who’s slowly going blind started by showing her wondrous sights close to their Ohio home. They never dreamed she’d get to see Rome someday.

Elizabeth “Lizzy” Myers and her family will travel to Italy sometime next spring thanks to Turkish Airlines, whose general manager was touched by the little girl’s story and her parents’ wish that she see many amazing things before a rare genetic condition robs her of her sight, or most of it.

The airline offered round-trip tickets to anywhere in the world, and the family — from Bellville, Ohio, 100 kilometres north of Columbus — chose one of the most visual places they could think of.

“My wife’s family is Italian, and we’re Catholic, so Rome was kind of the obvious choice for us,” said Lizzy’s dad, Steve Myers, 42. “We both felt Lizzy would enjoy seeing the artwork and the statues, and possibly seeing where my wife’s family is from, which is south of Rome.”

Lizzy was recently diagnosed with Usher syndrome Type II, which causes hearing and progressiv­e vision loss. Her parents have five to seven years to get her out to see things, especially at night. Recently she visited an observator­y near their home and saw a production of Mary Poppins at a local theatre.

They also hope to take a road trip soon to show her some of The United States’ natural wonders, including Yellowston­e National Park, Yosemite and the Grand Canyon. And now Rome is on the list. “This was about helping a little girl who may never have the chance to see the world,” Turkish Airlines executive Tuncay Eminoglu said.

Steve Myers said he was uneasy and reluctant when people started coming forward and offering money and other things to the family after their story was first featured in the Mansfield News Journal last week. But he said they couldn’t pass up the chance to take Lizzy somewhere they couldn’t have visited otherwise.

“It’s the simple stuff more so than the extravagan­t, but we just hope to do the extravagan­t here and there,” he said. “We’re just trying to cram as many things in her mind as possible.”

Lizzy doesn’t know what is beginning to happen to her sight, and her parents haven’t attempted to explain it to the happy little girl who’s still deciding if she wants to be a princess or a mermaid when she grows up.

The family, including mom Christine and a little sister, is at Hilton Head, S.C., for a vacation this week, so next up on the bucket list: a sunrise at the beach.

 ??  ?? Elizabeth Myers, 5, was diagnosed with Usher syndrome Type II.
Elizabeth Myers, 5, was diagnosed with Usher syndrome Type II.

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