Goto main content

Syria: Seeing my daughter recover gives me hope for my country

Emergency Rehabilitation
Jordan Syria

Huda, 5, was injured in an air strike in Syria, in June 2016.  Despite a traumatic brain injury and a fractured leg, the little girl is making a swift recovery thanks to the support of Handicap International. The organisation’s assistance to Syrian refugees in Jordan is supported by the European Commission Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection service (ECHO).

Huda plays with Handicap International staff Abood and Salam as part of a rehabilitation session.

Huda plays with Handicap International staff Abood and Salam as part of a rehabilitation session. | © G. Vandendalen / Handicap International

Three generations of the same family gather in their living room to greet Salam, physiotherapist, and Abood, social worker, when they arrive at Huda’s home. Handicap International’s team is here to provide her with physiotherapy treatment.

Soon the little girl joins the rest of the family and snuggles up to her mother. Huda’s hair is gradually growing back but you can still see the huge scar on the left side of her head. She’s just five years old, born at the start of the conflict in Syria. She was spared the violence of war, until last June.

“We had two houses in Syria, side by side,” says Ghada, Huda’s mother. “One day, my daughter was walking from one house to the other when a bomb fell a hundred metres from her.”

“Huda was rushed to the nearest clinic, but her injuries were so serious that we were told she needed to be treated in Jordan. Her brain had come part way out of her skull and she had a large wound on her leg. My daughter and I were transported to the other side of the border. And I immediately tried to get in touch with my family here.”

Some of Ghada’s and Huda’s family members had already taken refuge in Jordan several years before, and they opened their home to them when they left hospital. 

Huda’s uncle, Mohammad, recounts: “Our relatives told us that my niece had had an accident in Syria and that she was being treated here. We rushed to the hospital and it was obvious that she and her mother would come and live with us when they would be discharged.” Fourteen people now live in their house.

Today she's running everywhere!

Huda has been followed up by Handicap International since she left hospital. “This is the second time we visit her,” explains Salam, physiotherapist. “She’s making progress very quickly because her wound isn’t very deep. When I last saw her, she couldn’t move her hand or leg and she couldn’t speak either.Look at her today, she’s running everywhere!”

In fact, Huda doesn’t seem to be able to keep still and loves doing the exercises suggested by the organisation’s team.

It’s hard to imagine that, just a few weeks ago, the doctors didn’t hold out much hope for Huda. Some even thought that she would never be able to walk again, and recommended she use a wheelchair. Today, the little girl seems to have got back her happy-go-lucky attitude and love for life.

“She really loves playing,” explains Ghada as she looks affectionately at her daughter. “This is the age when children start to socialise,” adds Abood. “So she likes taking part in the sessions with us.”

As the physiotherapy session gets underway, Huda’s mother confides in Handicap International’s team. Her husband and youngest son are still in Syria, and she would like them all to be together. She also hopes that her daughter, like her country, will 'get better soon'. “Seeing my daughter recover gives me hope,” she says.

You can make a difference
Please donate to our Syria appeal now

Huda reaches for objects during a rehabiliation session
© G. Vandendalen / Handicap International

Date published: 16/08/16

COUNTRIES

Where we work

Read more

Together, we nurture hope
© HI
Emergency Health

Together, we nurture hope

Psychologist Nataliia has been working in Ukraine for Humanity & Inclusion for a year. On the fourth anniversary of the start of the conflict, she describes the current situation for ordinary people displaced from their homes on the frontline who are now living in new areas which are still far from safe, with unexploded ordnances and other dangers. She says they are exhausted and discouraged. But there are positives.

HI helps earthquake victims in the Philippines regain their independence
© M. Liberato / HI
Emergency Rehabilitation

HI helps earthquake victims in the Philippines regain their independence

Memoración and Vena were forced to spend their nights in precarious conditions. Humanity & Inclusion provided them with proper sleeping facilities, mobility devices, and rehabilitation care.

Six years, six prostheses: in Cambodia, HI stands alongside Sreyka
© S. Rae / HI
Rehabilitation

Six years, six prostheses: in Cambodia, HI stands alongside Sreyka

For six years, Sreyka has been visiting the Kampong Cham physical rehabilitation centre on a regular basis. As she is growing quickly, Humanity & Inclusion's teams regularly make her a new prosthesis.

FOLLOW US