At first glance, 14-year-old Roqaya looks just like many other teenage girls her age. She’s sitting on the sofa, busily tapping away on a smart phone, scrolling through her Facebook feed. She’s wearing trendy jeans and trainers.
She could be a teenager anywhere. In fact, she’s in a village in northern Jordan, just a couple of miles or so from the border with Syria. She’s one of the more than 600,000 Syrian refugees in Jordan.
When she talks, she’s slightly giggly at first; again, so far, so normal. But when you realize what she’s talking about, and what happened to her, it’s remarkable that she’s so composed and confident.
It’s remarkable that she’s even here.
Watch Roqaya tell her story
Video: Abbie Trayler-Smth / Panos
“My mum and I were at home, talking on the phone, when a shell exploded nearby”, she says quietly.
“Mum was killed and I was injured”.
“I lost consciousness, and when I woke up I was in hospital here in Jordan.”
Roqaya’s matter-of-fact recounting of what happened makes it sound ordinary. She’d actually been very seriously wounded. Both of her legs had to be amputated at the knee. She didn’t know if she’d ever be able to walk again. She was evacuated across the nearby border into northern Jordan.
Not long after she‘d had initial treatment in a Jordan hospital, she was referred to Humanity & Inclusion, which is supported by UK aid.
HI physical therapists visited her in hospital and started supporting her recovery, providing physical therapy sessions and arranging custom-made artificial limb legs for her.
© Abbie Trayler Smith/Panos for DFID
Now, less than a year later, she’s walking independently again.
“I was afraid I wouldn’t be able to walk again at first”, says Roqaya.
“And then, when I first received my new legs, I was afraid they were too heavy for me.
“But I have a strong personality, and I can walk normally now. I just want to walk, work and do everything as I used to do in Syria before the accident.”