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Hero therapist gives hope to Afghan disabled

Posted: Thursday, December 25, 2008 1:00 AM
Filed Under:

 KABUL, Afghanistan – Alberto Cairo describes himself as moody, temperamental, impatient and pushy. But to the disabled patients he has treated for 19 years at the Red Cross Rehabilitation Center – most of them victims of violence in this war-torn country – he is an angel of mercy.

"If you see someone coming here depressed, and you see if after a few minutes he’s a little less depressed, and then after a few days he’s even better,  and then he starts smiling again – that’s a huge reward," Cairo said. "What can you expect, more than that?" he asked.

In a back corner of the Red Cross center’s male ward, 12-year-old Mohammed smiled broadly as Cairo walked over to him. Mohammed was sitting with his younger brother, Ahmad, on the edge of a cot. His one good foot, shod in a torn shoe, dangled down.

Image: A young patient at the Red Cross Rehabilitation Center in Kabul, Afghanistan.
VIDEO: 'Angel of mercy' gives hope to Afghan disabled
"Look at him," Cairo said to me. "Sometimes he uses his prostheses and sometimes he doesn’t. He’s a naughty boy, but no one at home is really taking care of him," he said.

The lanky Cairo inspected the stump of Mohammed’s amputated leg and affectionately ruffled his younger brother’s hair before moving on through the ward, dashing in and out of the center’s therapy rooms in his mid-length Red Cross smock.

The gray-haired Italian lawyer turned physiotherapist, teased and scolded the male patients in fluent Dari, their native language. He hugged the kids and then bicycled over to the female area to chat with the women. Cairo, 51, seemed to be everywhere at once, the driving force at the clinic, which is the largest orthopedic center in the world for disabled persons. 

‘A place of hope’
"When you lose your leg, you don’t only lose your leg, you lose your heart, your mind, you feel nothing," he said.

It was not in Cairo’s plan to come to Afghanistan. He was hired by the Red Cross to go to Africa but then two weeks before his departure, they told him it would not be Africa, but Afghanistan instead. He was so surprised, he recalled, that he thought of only one question to ask: What would the weather be like so he would know how to pack? That was 19 years ago.

"It’s very rewarding, this work," Cairo said. "If I give something, I get back so much that I’m the one who gets a lot from them," he said.

Image: Cairo, right, meets with patients at the Red Cross Rehabilitation Center in Kabul.
Carol Grisanti / NBC News
Alberto Cairo, right, meets with patients at the Red Cross Rehabilitation Center in Kabul.

Cairo has kept the clinic up and running through half a dozen Afghan governments – from the communists to warring warlords to the Taliban. Unfortunately the near constant warfare in Afghanistan since the Soviets invaded in 1980 has left a diverse pool of patients in need of prostheses. 

"When they come to us they are patients – sometimes with big turbans or military uniforms or long beards – but they are patients," he said.

At this sprawling center in the heart of Kabul, I marveled as the men, women and children – struggling to walk on prostheses or hobbling about on crutches – still managed to smile. I was amazed to see disabled employees push amputees in wheelchairs and acknowledge me with a big grin and a warm "hello." Even the clinic’s mascot, a black male dog named Susie, extended his left paw in greeting while gracefully balancing on his two remaining good legs.

The goal: social reintegration
"It’s a place where people start again," Cairo told me. "It’s difficult with a lot of problems, but it’s a place of hope," he said. "That’s what I wish to communicate to everybody."

But, Cairo insisted, physical rehabilitation alone is not enough. The final aim is social reintegration: to help the disabled feel alive again with education, trade skills and a job.

"It’s very important to put them back into society with a role. You can give all the legs you want, if you don’t do this it’s nothing," he said. "That’s the way to give them dignity."

Cairo wanted the center to be an example, so he created jobs. Ninety-nine percent of the 320 employees at the center are disabled, working as therapists and clerks helping more than 300 patients who come in everday for treatment or as craftsmen making artificial limbs, wheelchairs and crutches.

It’s a form of "positive discrimination," says Cairo. "It’s a center of disabled people working for disabled people," he said.

VIDEO: Alberto Cairo describes his work in his own words

Patients turned craftsmen 
In a workroom next to the garden, 46-year-old Abdul Wahab was screwing the foot of an artificial leg onto the rest of the prostheses. His bench was cluttered with tools and prostheses parts; one artificial leg, already finished, had a sneaker and gray sock fitted and attached.

Wahab, a former soldier in the Afghan army, lost his leg in a landmine accident 15 years ago during the Afghan civil war. He came to the clinic for treatment and afterwards Cairo arranged for vocational training and a job. He said he feels almost normal now and owes everything to Cairo.

At the center, the former patients turned craftsmen produce 15,000 artificial legs a year. Others have learned to make copies of western-designed wheelchairs; to import a wheelchair would cost $500, but a homemade Afghan one costs $150 as well as providing jobs and teaching a trade.

"Maybe in the future we can even export," Cairo said. "Who knows; this is the next step," he added.

Image: Patients at the Red Cross Rehabilitation Center in Kabul, Afghanistan.
Carol Grisanti / NBC News
Patients at the Red Cross Rehabilitation Center in Kabul, Afghanistan.

Cairo sees even further benefits. His current pet project is to advance micro-credit loans of up to $600 to patients who are interested in starting a small business of their own. The results have been good, Cairo explained that 6,000 people have been able to take advantage of the Red Cross financing program in Kabul alone.

"I go to see them in the bazaar," he said. "Now they are sitting beside the desk or inside a shop and they are businessmen. It’s dignity again."

"The happiness is huge, huge, huge," he added.

"There is so much to do. It would be criminal – it would be selfish – to leave. I want to stay," he said.

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Comments

What a wonderful story.  Thank you for sharing it.
Cairo is a man of humanity not just an angle of mercy.  He is an excellent example for  human beings
in how to care for others especially their personal mental well being!!!!  Thank God for HIM!!!!
GOD BLESS YOU ALBERTO. IF ONLY WE HAD A MILLION LIKE YOU IN THE USA...
Cairo is a man of humanity not just an angle of mercy.  He is an excellent example for  human beings
in how to care for others especially their personal mental well being!!!!  Thank God for HIM!!!!
now this is hope, love and devotion without a reason to reward... a man with a mission of compassion and love of humanity and a drive to overcome obsticles is much more potentent than a man that carries a will of destruction of life...
God bless this man for his heart and dedication!
Making a difference in others life! Priceless!
That  si  total magic. Alberto sounds like a tall Mother teresa.
im very impressed by the effort ofalberto cairo he is really God m also too much eager to help peoples but this world is selfish n i need u peoples support to live my life i m a emotional girl who cannot see the peoples pain i feel living if i do help to others please do mail me
Wow that man is truly unique. We need more people like him around the world. Me and the family were just talking about how no one will even stop to help someone who has broken down anymore. My uncle even had two cops pass him while he was broke down on the road without even looking his way. And this guy stays in Afghanistan for 19 years helping people out for 19 years. He puts us all to shame. It's good to know there are still people out there like that.
Extremely moving. A glimmer of hope in a country wracked by war.
i've seen a little of what war does because of my job in the military and to have someone who's as dedicated to helping people and who cares so much is so meaningful so spectacular that my hats off to them. you find some people who care but not care that much. war tears apart at the fabric of life and family. destroyes a lot of what we hold dear to us. i couldnt imagine what it must be like to see war like these people have but to have dedication to folks who have lost so much due to war to get some of their life back is the best feeling. keep up the wonderful job
This is an amazing side of humankind that we need to read about to remind us that not all hope is lost.

Happiness is giving not receiving, he is right.
Wow, I'm so blessed in America.God bless that little boy.
Thank you for the wonderful work you are doing.  God bless your efforts to help so many deserving people.
This gentleman has found the true meaning for life on it's highest level.  
Remember, if you cannot do anything else in life, at least be genuinely nice to people. (An uncle who moved to the US from Lebanon years ago, and treated my aunt so wonderfully, told my family this was what his father told him as he grew up.)
It was wonderful to read about Cairo - the Angel Therapist. He is bringing people together irrespective of religeon, race and age. If more people follow his suit more people would come closure and sense of humanity would prevail and differences  between people, nations and religeon would go away. The belief that all human beings are created by God and that all are linked together would make the world peaceful and better place to live.
The Man is a Gem, depression can be just as crippling as losing the limb itself and this man is making the dark pit of Sadness shallower. Well done and keep up the good work.
Wonderful story! Everyone can give something in life :) We all can. I will make Alberto Cairo "Giver of the Day" on my website.
Forget the NBA, the Hollywood celebrities, the millionaires....Mr. Cairo is the REAL hero.  

May God bless you and keep you safe and healthy Mr. Cairo.
This man is a godsend.
The world could go do with more like him a gift giver not a taker.
Almost 4 years ago, I was shot in the head by a "friend" with a gambling problem she hoped to solve by stealing from me.  I know what these people are going through and this man is truly a blessing.  The pain and injury, the rehab, and trying to make sense out of what happened and what to do about it the rest of your life is almost more than you can bear.  Just knowing you have someone who will listen while you cry . . . someone who will be there to help you move on because--yes, you can move on.  I wish I could help--even from where I am in California.  Life can still be worth living . . . it's often difficult . . . but it can even be good, just not the same.  I wish him all the success in the world . . . he is truly making a positive difference.
Yes! Yes! Yes! and Yes!  People helping people.  Praise God!
Bless you. The world is a better place because of you. Keep up the good works.
Wow.  What an awesome person.  An example of love and comassion.  What a great role model for people everywhere.  A gift from God.
How great to read of what's right in the world!
awesome, that is great that he is doing this for these people i hope that he does as much good as is possible :)
Beautiful.
Another Saint  Thats Great. If people could only understand that,thats all God wants from us.This could be a better world. Love one another. That is the foundation of the ten commandments.  
This is a very good example of selfless-living and the rewards received back are immeasurable. This is what I wanted my life to be about, helping others heal, not just physical healing, but the life-spark, the dignity healing...but I lost my way, lost my self-confidence, self-esteem..and deal with a multitude of minor physical handicaps and suffer with anxiety, agorophobia, health care phobia and have PTSD - all of which affects my being productive or holding a job; and I don't feel like I am helpful to anyone and I really miss that!
What a great guy!  Why can't the rest of us be like that?  I know we can, but it's so sad that we aren't.  Thanks for that article; it helps to learn of good things and good people.
THIS, this is why I give to the Red Cross and Salvation Army directly! This man and so many people in these organizations fully engage in every crisis they touch, both here and abroad to help in all forms of human suffering and injury. If you are going to donate before the 31st-get your tax break here! Know that your money is going to something bigger than even just the person helped, but to his or her community as a whole.
thought this was interesting - dad
Wonderful!!!!  To give life and dignity back to these injured so they can give back to society.  It is a HUGE SHAME that we don't do more of this in our country..Unfortunately we as Americans have become $$$$ hungry, and if it does not produce bigger cars, homes etc. then it is not worth doing.... To be unselfish as he is....I would be 500% behind cloning Cairo...  Thank you!!!
We had heard about Mr. Cairo on the news the other night. What a remarkable man! People will always prefer a 'hand-up' rather than a 'hand-out' and that is what he is doing. I don't believe in celestial angels but I do believe in the angels we see around us everyday. Mr. Cairo certainly is one of the big ones!
WOW! This is a great example of 'WHOLISTIC' health care. I wish more of America's agencies could integrate the other necessary aspects of healing into their health care programs.
Cairo is an inspiration - thank you for finding this story and for recognising his work. We hear only hopelessness usually from Afghanistan. What a terrible toll landmines take on a people - we must find a way to destroy those that remain and work to ban them completely. I am sure they hurt far more civilians than military.
What a fantastic story about a wonderful man who now give hope to amputees so they can walk, work, and help others in Afghanistan.  To give them hope for their future is a gift no one can buy in any currency. Alberto Cairo will be in my prayers for continued success, and hopefully will receive support from many others in various ways.  I need to know where contributions might be sent for his work.
hello,
I was deeply moved by the story of Dr Alberto Cairo.
Can I have the clinic's mailing address so I can send him a card of thanks?
Thank you
sincerely
Ashlee Old
Great work, I am always looking what I find about Alberto on the web, wondering how he survived all these years of war

Regards from Germany
I wish everyone's this strong, brave and selfless!! In a world that looks a bit bleak with all the war and economic crisis, he is a ray of hope. I pray that he will be able to achieve whatever he wants to achive there!!
Another inspirational story about an extraordinary human being in a depressingly inhuman situation! Thanks for this wonderful story.
I was surprised to learn that the Red Cross was behind such endevors. How wounderful. It really makes me feel good about mankind that there are people like Cairo. We always hear about the bad. God Bless
Still good people left in the world, and we as Americans have done a terrible job the last 8 years of showing we are the nation, with the "big heart".
What a wonderfl ray of hope.  In Sierra Leone I saw so many people missing legs or arms trying to walk on the potholed dirt streets that I would not even ride in a Jeep.  It's an impossible situation. God bless this man.  And as for the micro-loans, these have been given elsewhere to women (India perhaps?)to start businesses and have been amazingly successful.  This is the very type of aid that can make a difference.  I hope some people in the new administration will look at this and act accordingly.
THANK YOU ALBERTO
WHAT YOU DO FOR HUMANITY IS BRAVE AND PRICELESS.
WE HAVE MORE DESTRUCTION IN THIS WORLD AND LESS CONSTRUCTION. YOU ARE ONE OF THEM WHO IS DOING SOMETHIS CONSTRUCTIVE. I AM GLAD TO SEE PHYSICAL THERAPIST GETTING SOME MEDIA ATTENTION.
Mr. Cairo's work in Afghanistan is exemplary. The world would be better with more people like Mr. Cairo.
Alberto Cairo deserves commendation for doing the right thing; it is so much easier to do nothing or look away.  Also, it is refreshing to see an article that mentions joy and gratitude, not to mention the plug for that most sensible idea: micro credit.  With enough Alberto Cairo's the world would be a far better place.
This story is so moving. It´s sad that so much information on the state of this part of the world are not covered more often. These are poor people who get caught over and over again in the cross fire.  I am upset that people still resume to war and violence and are not able to talk to one another about issues. How can anyone justify the toddler with an amputated leg? The chaos in a country such as Afganistan is just an example of the conflict of politics and ideals and a disrespect for communities that have had to survive everyone trying to put it in their convinient¨boxes¨. I hope war and violence ends in every corner of this world and that the victims are given all the chances possible to recover.


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