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Home > Sierra Leone's amputees: A refugee in Chicago
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Sierra Leone's amputees: A refugee in Chicago
BY MATT RUSLING, MEDILL NEWS SERVICE After a decade long war, many of Sierra Leone's war wounded still slog through life, depending on handouts for survival. These two companion stories contrast the life of one amputee who has made it to the U.S. with the lives of his counterparts - disabled people who are left struggling for survival in his native Sierra Leone. Photos by Matt Rusling and Florent Blanc On a basketball court in Rogers Park on the North side of Chicago, Victor Saidu, 32, looks up and takes a shot. Whoosh! Nothing but net. On any court in urban America, that would not elicit even a yawn - except that Saidu is shooting with two stubs where his hands used to be. Saidu is a victim of the civil war in Sierra Leone, which was known for its particular brand of barbarity, perpetrated by the Revolutionary United Front, a rebel group that used amputation as a means to terrorize the public. The conflict, which ended in 2002, displaced two million people, or one third of the population.
Shooting for the sky:At age 20, Saidu was captured by RUF rebels, who lopped off both his hands with a machete before sending him off with a note hung around his neck bearing a warning to any potential opposition. His ear was also cut off that day by a child soldier about twelve years old, he said. That was just the start of his troubles. Four years later, Saidu joined the swell of refugees scrambling to leave the city as the RUF descended on Freetown, raping and killing randomly. The civilian death toll was more than six thousand. "The entire nation was moving out, even the government," he said, recalling the day he left Freetown amid thunderous explosions and crack of machine gun fire. The smell of smoke permeated the air, he said. "I was crying when I left," he said. "I was leaving everything, I was leaving my home. You cannot take nothing with you. You are going to a different land but you don't know where you are going," he said. The walk to Guinea, Sierra Leone's northern neighbor in western Africa, took two weeks, he said. He slept in bushes by the roadside and wondered every day how he, his wife and two children aged four and six would eat. Once he made it to Guinea, he was incarcerated for two weeks by Guinean authorities seeking payment, he said. When he arrived at the Sierra Leone embassy, he was told to go home. But in a serendipitous twist, Saidu's escape from Freetown marked the start of his journey to the United States, where he would live a life eons apart from the hopelessness that awaits so many amputees in his home county (See companion story). Following his refusal to be placed in a refugee camp in Guinea that was constantly under attack, he was placed in a shelter. His application for placement in Australia was rejected, he suspects, because immigration authorities considered his disability an economic drain. "It wasn't easy," he said of the refugee placement process that took two years to unfold. With Sierra Leoneans coming in droves, helping refugees immigrate to the West was the least of authorities' concerns, Saidu recalled. But Saidu kept pushing. "You have to know you're right," he said. "You have to be stubborn." Finally, he was able to convince a UN protection officer to help place him in the United States. He arrived in Chicago in March 2000. "It was great and wonderful," he recalled. "They treated me with respect and dignity." Work for refugees in the U.S. Saidu's refugee status entitled him to a range of government services, such as physical rehabilitation and two prosthetics to replace his missing hands. The government also sent him to an employment agency, which trained him in janitorial work, box shelving, computers and interpersonal skills, such as how to navigate through a job interview in a foreign culture. He was also sent to a driving school for the physically challenged. In addition to a full-time job filing documents at U.S. Customs from 7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m, he works evenings stacking chairs, clearing dishes and setting up tables at a coffee shop. "I'm working round the clock...working to support my family," he said. Still, hard work beats no work at all, he said. "I can't imagine if I were back home," he said. "I couldn't beg because I would feel like a child. I want to provide for my family myself." Indeed, Wendy Batson, spokeswoman for Handicapped International, a non-government organization, said that amputees in Sierra Leone have difficulty finding any employment at all. "If I was back home I'm not gonna live like this," he said of his two-story row home on a tree-lined residential street, a palace compared to the dirt-paved streets of Freetown that are home to so many amputees making a living by begging. Alie Kabba, executive director and president of the Sierra Leone Community Association of Chicagoland, an organization that helps refugees settle into Chicago's estimated 1000-member Sierra Leonean community, said refugees are still trickling in after five years of peace. Like Saidu, many in this small but tight-knit Chicago community have been through the war. "Many adults have witnessed atrocities," Kabba said."We have had people in the community whose hands were chopped off and they were already disabled." For these refugees, "job placement is a major problem," he said. The approved ceiling for refugee arrivals in the U.S. stands at 20,000, according to the African Refugee Network. But actual arrivals from Africa totaled only 18,182 in 2006, the last available figure. While Sierra Leonean refugees have made their home in a number of countries, the United States, Gambia, the UK, the Netherlands, Guinea, Nigeria and France comprise their main destinations, according to the United Nations High Commission for Refugees. The US accepted 6,745 Sierra Leonean refugees in 2005, according to the latest statistics from UNHCR. War disabled in Sierra Leone War in the West African country has produced 20,000 disabled, who occupy the bottom rung of the economic ladder, according to Handicapped International. With many begging by day and sleeping on Freetown's market tables by night, Handicapped International said their life span could be lower than the country's average of 41 years. Seventy percent of Sierra Leone's population is living below the poverty line and only 35 percent are literate, according to the CIA Factbook. War disabled are bedeviled by psychological problems as a result of their trauma and many prefer not to return to their home villages, the site of their victimization, said Victor Gegebe, project officer in the psychological unit of Handicapped International's Freetown office. Many are also marginalized by their communities, which have backward attitudes toward the handicapped, equating their trauma with witchcraft and evil spirits. Back in his living room, Saidu holds a can of soda to his chest with his stump and pushes it up to his mouth to take a sip. "My dream was not for them to pay me money but to make my life better." Saidu looks over a collection of photos of amputees that I brought from a recent trip to Sierra Leone. "It's not enough," he said of what Sierra Leone's government does for amputees there, his big smile fading. Sadly looking on: Victor Saidu, |
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Anne Kasprzak says:
Hi, I am a junior at Hinsdale Central high school and am writing a research paper on the civil war in Sierra Leone and am in search of a primary source. I just stumbled upon your articles on immigrants from Sierra Leone living as amputee/war victims in America and was wondering if you could put me in contact through phone or email with them so I may ask a few questions to get a first hand look on the war as well as one without the bias of an outsider. Thank you so much for you time.
Hi Ann, I didn't see your message until today. If you still need help, please email me at rusling.matthew@gmail.com