
Help Rami
Hi, my name is Gloria and along with my school friends since we were little kids we are fundraising to help little Rami.
"Once upon a time"... there was a lovely family somewhere in Gaza. The mother, Aisha, was a very brave and excellent nurse; the father, Ahmed, was a mechanical engineer who had studied in Torino (Italy) at Politecnico. He was working for an important plumbing european company.
Both parents were living well: they had two 10 years old twins and little 6 years old Rahman, now called "Rami".
When the rockets fell, Rami was outside, playing football with a cardbox in the courtyard. His condo was destroyed and his family, including his uncle and grandparents, lost their lives!
Rami was rescued under the debris after 48 hours by the volunteers of Emergency. He was still alive by miracle but he has lost his left hand.
Thanks to a journalist also wounded, a neighbor family friend, Rami managed to make it to Marseille despite she had difficulties in coping with her own stress, a foreign language and all.
The journalist had many friends and she was helped by Cecilia Sacchi to take Rami with her to Italy. Cecilia speaks some Arabic, but Rami remembered some Italian and English words taught by his Dad. He loves spaghetti and football and he is an adorable child.
As friends, we have collected primary needs; he has been attended to at Children Hospital free of charge and he is now almost out of a bad pneumonia, but he still has some collateral infections.
He was (and still is) literally in need of everything. Despite discounts and free consultations, the expenses for his first hand prothesis in Budrio (Bologna, Italy) are very high.
This crowdfunding aims to support Rami with a new artificial hand and to see him growing far from war, death and brutality.
If you are a parent, a grandparent or simply a "human being", we guess that even a minimum donation of ten euros (10) would do.
Thanks in advance from the "ex-Children" of primary Brasile School in Rome, Italy!
We believe that "a drop is just a drop but many drops make an ocean". (Mother Teresa)