Tsunami Survivors Find New Start

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Young Tsunami Survivors Find New Start At Shriners Hospitals (NAPSA)—When the Indian Ocean tsunami crashed ashore on December 26, 2004, many things ee were lost. Homes were swept away, belongings gone forever. Hundreds of thousands of people lost their lives in the disaster. And many of those who survived, including children, literally lost a part of themselves. Seven-year-old Tara Aulia and 11-year-old Hamdani survived the tsunamithat ripped through their villages in Indonesia’s Aceh province, but along with their homes and family members, both children lost a limb. Despite the horrors Tara and Hamdani experienced and the steep odds they faced at obtaining proper medical care, they had reason to celebrate less than a year later. Both children were given a new start and new prosthetics at Shriners Hospitals for Children — Philadelphia. Tara, whose right leg had to be amputated when it became infected from an injury sustained during the tsunami, immediately adjusted to her prosthesis. “It’s wonderful to see a child adapt as well as she has so quickly,” said Jeff Eichhorn, director of orthotics and prosthetics at the Philadelphia hospital. “She will be able to do anything.” Hamdani was playing soccer when the tsunami swept him away. He grabbed onto a boat, and as he clung forhis life with his left arm, an uprooted tree surged past, severing his right arm above the elbow. Tara and Hamdani cameto the Philadelphia hospital through the Global Medical Relief Fund, a charitable organization that provides transportation to the United At Shriners Hospital For Children —Philadelphia, young survivors of the tsunami are receiving the spe- cialized care they need. States and housing to children injured by war, natural disaster or illness. With the help of Shriners Hospitals, which, as always, provided all services at no charge to the children or their families, Tara and Hamdani have been given a newstart. “Without this help, I don’t know what she would do, how she would live,” said Tara’s father, Sulaiman Aulia. For more information on Shriners network of 22 hospitals that provide medical care and services totally free of charge to children with orthopedic problems, burnsand spinal cord injuries, visit the Website at www.shrinershq.org or write to: Shriners International Headquarters, Public Relations Dept., 2900 Rocky Point Dr., Tampa, FL 33607. Treatmentis pro- vided to children under 18 without regard to race, religion or relationship to a Shriner. If you know a child Shriners can help, call (800) 237-5055 in the United States or (800) 361-7256 in Canada.