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May 2008 |
Gift of Self-Reliance
For a teenage veteran of
Uganda's civil war, a $10,000 prosthetic arm
means getting his life back.
By Carolyn Davis
Inquirer Staff Writer
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Prosthetist
Angelo
Russello
prepares
Ronald
Okello's
amputated
limb for
a cast
which
will be
used in
making
his new
prosthetic
arm.
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The doctor was
telling the teenage war veteran from Uganda that he could
alternate between two attachments to his new prosthetic arm: a
hook or a hand.
The hook "doesn't look as beautiful," said Alberto Esquenazi,
the physician who leads MossRehab's Regional Amputee Center and
who also wears a prosthetic arm. "But you can do more with a
hook."
Ronald Okello, 18,
wasn't buying it. But he certainly wasn't arguing either. There
were just too many new possibilities to explore.
"Will I be able to
write, to wash - what about [cleaning] my uniform?" Okello said.
"I want to ride a bike."
The teenager should
be able to wash himself better and clean his school uniform,
Esquenazi answered, but not write so well. And the bike depended
on whether Okello could ride one before he lost his arm.
It's been a long
ordeal for Okello, who said he was abducted into a rebel Ugandan
militia at age 9 and forced to fight for four years until he
lost his arm. He recalled watching a fellow soldier hack his
father to death.
Now, with the help of
a Philadelphia philanthropist and aid groups, Okello is set to
return today to Uganda in east Africa with a new, $10,000
prosthetic right arm and memories of a bustling America unlike
any place he imagined.
Helping Okello,
though, isn't as simple as it might appear. His arm is expected
to last about five years if it isn't damaged or worn out sooner.
And there's no guarantee he will get a replacement. The euphoria
he feels now could turn to anguish later if he can't get more
care.
But that seemed far
from his mind as he was being fitted with his prosthesis at
MossRehab in Elkins Park. Okello has discovered his new arm
helps him balance better when playing soccer. And he's already
imagining what he will say to his friends at school about
laundry: " 'No more begging you guys to wash, because I can do
it myself.' "
Okello, an ethnic
Acholi, was born in the midst of a bitter, 21-year civil war.
The conflict dates from 1986 when current President Yoweri
Museveni's army ousted the first Acholi president, Tito Okello
(no relation).
Acholis launched
rebel movements, including the Lord's Resistance Army, led by
the mercurial Joseph Kony, famed in part for vowing to rule by
the Ten Commandments.
When Acholis rejected
Kony as a leader, he turned on them, filling his ranks by
abducting children as young as 9. Personal accounts and
independent reports document how boys were forced to be soldiers
and made to kill. Girls became soldiers too; they also were
given to commanders and serially raped.
Rebels and the
government have largely stopped fighting since another attempt
at peace began in 2006.
But both sides have
done great harm. During the war, an estimated 66,000 children
were kidnapped, and 200,000 from the Acholi and Lango groups
have died. While statistics are sparse on the number of
amputees, help is rare. Twenty children received some kind of
prosthesis in 2007 at a clinic in the region around Gulu, a
large town in northern Uganda, said the Association of
Volunteers in International Service.
Okello was 9 years
old in 2000 when his mother sent him on a four-hour trek to the
market to buy soap. Rebels emerged from bushes on a dirt road
and captured him.
At first, Okello
cooked and fetched firewood; later he was given an AK-47.
He is tight-lipped
about how many times he killed someone, but he said he was in
firefights often. "Sometimes we fought the whole day, from
morning to morning," he said.
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Ronald Okello,
18, (right) with Alberto Esquenazi, director of
MossRehab's Regional Amputee Center, who also has a
prosthetic arm. Okello was reluctant to have a hook. |
In 2001, he saw his
older brother, Ochen, another abductee, in a fellow rebel unit,
but Okello does not know where he is now.
The next year, during
an attack on his home village, rebel leaders ordered Okello to
slay a man they did not realize was his father. Okello said he
refused, but had to watch another boy hack his father to death
with a machete.
The following day in
yet another battle, Okello said, he shot the rebel who killed
his father. No one saw him do it, he said.
After four years,
Okello took a bullet in his right arm during a skirmish with
government soldiers.
"I did not even know
they shot me," he said.
He realized it after
a few minutes, and rolled under a tree, bleeding heavily, until
the rebels fled and army soldiers found him. They took him to a
nearby hospital in the town of Kitgum, where his arm was
amputated. Like many kidnapped children who are freed from the
rebels, he announced his name on the radio. His mother heard him
and came to the hospital to get him.
In 2006, Stephen
Shames, a freelance photographer in Brooklyn, met Okello when
the foundation bearing his name held an art workshop for
children in Uganda. Okello, who lags behind at school, is the
first person the Shames Foundation has brought here for
treatment.
Shames, who worked at
The Inquirer from 1986 to 1991, was impressed with Okello and
enrolled him with a Ugandan nonprofit partner, Concern for the
Future, which helps orphans and war victims. Okello now attends
a good boarding school in the Ugandan capital of Kampala; his
school and living fees are sponsored by Philadelphia
philanthropist Lynne Honickman, who met Okello a week ago for
the first time.
Esquenazi, MossRehab
and a local firm, Allied Orthotics & Prosthesis L.L.C.,
donated their services. A fund started by a MossRehab
patient paid other costs. The total medical expenses were about
$18,000, according to MossRehab's parent, the Albert Einstein
Healthcare Network.
Angelo Russello, a
certified prosthetist with Allied, was at MossRehab nearly
three weeks ago to measure Okello's partial right arm.
Okello's amputation
was done slightly below the elbow, leaving him with barely an
inch of his lower arm.
"This is actually
unusual for what we see," Russello said, gently cupping Okello's
stump in his hands. "A piece of the bone is still left in his
arm," he said. "This pressure, that hurts a little bit?"
Okello winced. "Yeah,
just there," he answered with the stutter he has had since
birth.
It's unusual for a
young person in the United States to need an arm, said Howard
Brand, Allied's owner. The children at Moss generally lose lower
limbs due to disease. When an upper limb is gone, it's mainly
because of a blood vessel problem or a trauma, such as an
accident.
Moss delivered 320
prostheses last year. Only eight were for patients under the age
of 18. That's because children often don't survive a trauma that
claims a limb.
Esquenazi, who uses a
prosthetic arm with a hook, was the next to examine Okello. The
doctor had once dreamed of being a surgeon, but a chemical
accident claimed part of his arm. Now he is noted for his work
in physical medicine and rehabilitation.
The doctor told
Okello he would get two "terminal devices" - a metal hook and a
mechanical hand covered with a urethane glove - to attach to the
wrist of his prosthetic arm. With training, Okello should be
able to switch back and forth.
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Okello adjusts
his prosthetic arm. He has already discovered some
benefits: His new arm helps him balance better when
he plays soccer. |
Esquenazi gave Okello
a high-quality, but basic, arm that might be easier to repair in
Uganda if it breaks.
What happens when
Okello needs another one in about five years is unclear.
"If he needs a new
prosthesis, we'll do the best we can," Shames said. "But I can't
make an absolute guarantee."
Sustainability is
just one of the challenges of taking someone, especially a child
from an impoverished country, for treatment here.
As with clothes or
shoes, children outgrow their prostheses. Will there be someone
near home to repair or replace it?
Questions such as
these mean many relief workers prefer to build a system
delivering care rather than treating one person, said Wendy
Batson, U.S. director for the nonprofit Handicap International.
While she is happy
for an individual child to get care in the United States, Batson
said victims should be treated in or near their home countries
to maximize resources.
"It's not from being
cold-hearted. It's because of hard practicalities," Batson said.
"You end up breaking hearts" if a child gets used to the
benefits of a prosthesis and has that taken away.
Okello was not
pondering moral questions as he spoke almost two weeks ago to
students at Lower Merion's Welsh Valley Middle School about life
in northern Uganda.
Stammering slightly
and moving from foot to foot, he told them about being abducted,
and about one man he was compelled to kill.
It was in the
evening, he said. The rebels found an old man and wanted Okello
and others to kill him.
"I wouldn't" was his
initial reaction. "But rebels said they would kill me if I
didn't - so I did," he said.
The auditorium was
silent as he spoke. One young man who seemed to be sleeping
earlier was wide awake at that point.
Okello later talked
about his future. Although he is in Uganda's equivalent of ninth
grade, his motto is "No excuses" and he dreams of becoming a
lawyer and maybe writing a book. He envisions doing all this
with his new right arm with a hand at the end, not a hook.
"The hook is good for
the old people, but not for the boys. Girls would turn away," he
said with a smile.
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Ronald Okello's Story
On the Web
More about Ronald
Okello's experiences as a child of war, and the foundations that
have stepped in:http://go.philly.com/health
How you can help
Donations to assist
Ugandan children may be made via the Web site at left, or by
mail addressed to:
Stephen Shames
Foundation
328 Flatbush Ave.
#198
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11238
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Contact staff writer Carolyn Davis
at 215-854-4214 or cdavis@phillynews.com.
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