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UNICEF: Armenia: My Son, Mikhail

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  • UNICEF: Armenia: My Son, Mikhail

    ARMENIA: MY SON, MIKHAIL
    By Onnik Krikorian

    United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)
    Oct 5 2005

    TAVOUSH, Armenia, 5 October 2005 - When Mikhail Simonyan's mother,
    Rouzana, noticed that her son was having trouble walking, she thought
    the three-year-old had simply taken a bit of fall, and thought nothing
    more of it. But a trip to the doctor proved her wrong: it seemed that
    Mikhail had contracted measles and the infection had spread to his
    inner ear. The infection caused by his bout of measles had spread to
    the muscles that keep his spinal cord straight.

    His mother was devastated by the news. "It wasn't until I approached
    various non-governmental organizations and public organizations [to
    ask for advice and help] that I began to come to terms with Mikhail's
    condition," she says.

    "I met many children who were able to live with their disabilities,
    some of whom were in a worse situation than my son. This somehow
    filled me with hope that there was a way for Mikhail to live with his
    disability as well. I gave this hope to my child and told him there
    would be a day when he would be able to walk normally. Together,
    we're still living with this hope."

    Mikhail, now seven, is getting help and remains full of hope that
    someday he will walk again. He attends a UNICEF-supported centre
    called the 'Bridge of Hope', which operates also with a community
    administrative centre, Vulnerable Families in Ijevan. These centres
    play a critical role in bridging the gaps in services for children
    with disabilities and their families.

    To date over 300 children with disabilities have been assisted by
    the centres.

    "The establishment of alternative services offered by community
    centres is a way forward for these children to become fully-fledged
    members of their communities," says Naira Avetisyan, UNICEF's Child
    Protection Officer in Armenia.

    "This is why these community centres are perceived by the government
    as a strategic model for the integration of children with disabilities
    into society and into mainstream education. They are acknowledged as
    the alternative to institutionalization," she adds.

    A day in the life

    Mikhail's daily routine is far from easy, but thanks to Bridge of
    Hope, he has managed to attain a certain degree of control over his
    own life. In the morning he washes and dresses himself before eating
    breakfast and then sets off for school.

    Ijevan is one of the most scenic towns in Armenia, but it is also
    the most difficult for those with disabilities to live in.

    "Ijevan was not designed for disabled people," says his mother.

    "There are no ramps, and public transport is a problem. If it's
    raining, it's almost impossible to take him to school and in the
    winter when there's a lot of snow, it takes much longer. A journey
    that should take 30 minutes instead takes fifty."

    After school Mikhail goes to the Bridge of Hope Centre to receive
    rehabilitative therapy, learn computer skills, to play - he likes
    art classes where he can draw - and interact with both children with
    disabilities and those without.

    Mikhail says that he likes mathematics and wants to become an
    astronaut.

    He wants to go to university when he gets older, and while most
    children in Armenia might draw pictures of their homes or the biblical
    Mount Ararat, Mikhail has won prizes for his chalk drawings of the
    solar system.

    Centres like those established by Bridge of Hope and can help make
    lives of those with disabilities better, but unfortunately, prejudice
    still exists in society.

    "The community is very helpful," says Mikhail's mother. "In school
    they care about him, although, of course, there are some children who
    still don't understand. He explains to these children that he was sick,
    that he is now going to a rehabilitation centre, and that very soon,
    he will be walking just like them. And because he's still young,
    he doesn't go out alone and so he's spared a lot of problems."
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