| I
met many courageous landmine survivors during the years I spent with
Jesuit Refugee Service in Africa. Many of their faces came back to me
as I read Patricia?s plea to take ? again - positive action in the
Campaign to Ban Landmines. I have already told this story in Servir,
the magazine of JRS, September 2003. But I tell it again, as a message
of what should never have happened, and what should not happen again. |
Not
so long ago Americo Sawandi was living in Jamba, Angola, and enrolled
in first grade -just one more ordinary football-loving boy.
He
told us the story. Americo was returning from the fields with his
father near the Kwando River, in the direction of Mavinga. His father
was walking ahead when Americo deviated some metres from the path,
detonating the mine that shat-tered and crushed his left leg. All that
he remembers is a very loud noise as he lost consciousness. Americo's
fa-ther immediately cleaned the wound with warm salt wa-ter, tied the
leg with his trousers and carried his son on his back, looking for a
hospital. At first, the father was reluc-tant to cross into Zambia, but
the unavailability of medical care in Angola spurred his decision to
cross the Kwando River. He crossed the river by canoe and reached
Kaunga-mashi, Zambia two days later. Father and son were fortunate to
get a lift from the police or the military, and eventually to reach
Senanga District Hospital. The doctor immediately performed an
amputation above the knee, and saved Americo's life.
Americo
was discharged from the hospital on November 16th and now lives in
Nangweshi Refugee Camp with his father, but has not seen his mother
since the day of the accident. He had to spend one month recovering at
the Health Centre.
When his wounds healed, JRS began to
accompany him as he learned to walk with the aid of crutches, and
prepared him to be fitted with a prosthesis in the future. It seems
that Americo has good prospects for a full recovery, thanks to prompt
assistance from those who helped him, to the medical care he received,
and to his father who rarely left him unattended. Now he has learned to
walk with crutches, and has been measured for a prosthesis. He is the
youngest beneficiary, alas, of the JRS programme in Nangweshi, where
amputees and land mine survivors learn to make and repair prostheses
for others in the same condition.
Americo says "the new
leg is too heavy". He prefers the crutches because at least he can play
and move around quite speedily. When he is among friends, he feels like
a 'normal' boy. "My best friend is Celestino, because he helps my
father to carry water for me to bathe", he men-tioned with a big smile.
He likes Maths and would like to be a teacher or a doctor one day. For
the moment, he is an intelligent and resilient youth who seems to be
blessed with the coping skills necessary to overcome his disability,
full of hope for the future. He inspires everybody around him with the
powerful message that a disability, or any problem, for that matter, is
not the end of life.
Lolín Menéndez rscj
International Community, Rome