Showing posts with label Wheelchairs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wheelchairs. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 28, 2017

The Perfect Gift - a Wheelchair for a Moroccan Child


This festive season why not help change a child's life? The gift of a wheelchair, or a donation towards one, will make a profound difference, not only to the child but to the family and community


Red goes faster is an amazing organisation that supplies all terrain, adaptable wheelchairs for children Red goes faster was founded in Marrakech by Michelle Hank and Brahim Tigharmin and has a team of volunteers from Australia, Morocco, Canada and Italy.

Red goes faster has joined with an Australian based not for profit organisation in Perth - Wheelchairs for kids Australia who build and supply awesome all terrain, adaptable wheelchairs for children.

Why do we need wheelchairs for kids in Morocco?

Mothers often carry their disabled children on their back and when they become too big they are unable to leave the house. Many of these disabled children never go outside, don't go to school, feel isolated and see their small world within the confines of their house looking up from a mattress which leads to further mental and physical complications .

Desperate for mobility many kids are put into umbrella strollers or second hand adult wheelchairs that are too big and not secure and can cause more harm than good.

So far Red goes faster have gifted around 322 wheelchairs to Moroccan children with their second shipment of 154 new, flat packed wheelchairs and spare parts arriving in Casablanca in July, 2017.

Michelle Hank and Brahim Tigharmin

In April 2016 Red goes faster sponsored an Occupational Therapist from Australia to run a four day training session in Marrakesh. Training is ongoing and practical to ensure World Health Organisation standards are met when fitting these fully adaptable, all terrain wheelchairs. 7 new volunteers were trained in Marrakesh - September 2017 and another training will be held in Essaouira, January 2018.

These wheelchairs are fitted ​according to World Health Organisation standards, usually in the family home which means neighbours, family members and sometimes others in the village become involved. Each chair takes around 3 to 4 hours to fit so the child feels ​safe, ​secure and comfortable. During this fitting process, the parents are taught how to adjust the chair and are left with a tool kit to make changes as the child grows. Each child is also given a gift pack with a knitted blanket, soft toy and ball which keeps them occupied while they are being measured and the chair adjusted.

After receiving these bright sporty wheelchairs the kid's social status is raised and they become 'little stars' in their community. Neighbours and kids often knock on the door, wanting to take them out and push their wheelchairs.


The next challenge is to raise enough money to pay for the next shipment of 164 wheelchairs to Casablanca. The wheelchairs are distributed to kids all over Morocco. It is not always easy to deliver the wheelchairs to their excited owners as some of the villages are situated high in the Atlas Mountains and need to be carried by donkeys. Wheelchairs have also been fitted in remote villages in the Sahara.


You can help

Red goes faster are now looking for sponsorship or donations to help with the costs of the next shipment. Freight from Perth to Morocco and then the distribution within Morocco.

Sponsor one child's wheelchair for $250. Donations as little as $5 helps a lot. Donate time, money or expertise to help them.

If you would like to become involved please email mishhank@gmail.com

Find out more on Facebook

You can donate here: Red goes faster

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Tuesday, March 06, 2012

Wheelchairs and Morocco's Medinas - Making Tourist Spots Accessible


While many travelers with mobility issues decide visiting Morocco is not viable, they should reconsider, says the founder of a new company dedicated to making visitors in wheelchairs feel welcome. Derek Workman reports for The View from Fez.
Marrakech's famous Jmaa el Fna

“Which would you prefer, a limited experience or no experience at all?” The question is put to me by Daniella Johnson while we’re taking a coffee on the terrace of the Café de France, watching the goings on in the beautiful chaos that is Jmaa el Fna, North Africa’s most exotic and vibrant square, the heart and soul of Marrakech.

She has a point. Just because the cobbles in the Medina, the one-thousand year old centre of the historic city might bounce a wheelchair around, the clamour of the merchants in their long, hooded djelabas selling their wares from dolls house-sized shops might slightly confuse someone with limited hearing, or the rapid change from bright sunlight to almost Stygian gloom could disorientate a visually impaired person for a while, is that any reason not to visit one of the most exotic destinations in Africa, and one of the safest? And apart from that, Morocco is far more than ancient alleyways and the hubbub of sandal sellers.

American-born Johnson has been touring the towns and cities of southern Morocco since June of 2011, researching hotels, museums, tourist venues, shops, and sites for the fledgling travel company, Morocco Accessible Travel, which goes live with its first holidays in Spring this year. Trained as a nurse, she lived for a while in France, before discovering Fez, Morocco’s ancient capital, and one of the country’s four imperial cities. Possibly the most beautiful city in the Maghreb, Fez isn’t particularly friendly for people with motor impairment, being built in a valley surround by hills, so when New York-based Experience It! Tours, the parent company of MAT, asked Johonson if she would develop a new travel company specialising in holidays for disabled people, Marrakech was the obvious choice, as the city is almost completely flat.

Taking to the streets of Marrakech by wheelchair
“When I was trying to work out what I wanted for MAT, using the term ‘disabled people’ seemed quite harsh, so when I visit hotels or tour venues I use the terms ‘barrier-free travel’ or ‘travel for people with unique needs’, because they are much more inclusive. A ramp at the entrance to a museum is equally as useful for a family with a push chair, or an elderly person who needs to use some form of walking aid, as it is for a wheelchair user. Put that ramp in place to remove the barrier of having to climb a set of stairs and you suddenly open up your hotel or venue to a much broader audience, which is as much a benefit for local people as it is for visitors.”

We finish our coffee and take a walk across Jmaa el Fna, beginning at a music shop blaring out Moroccan disco music. I switch on my small recorder and we walk slowly; past the storytellers regaling the audience with their lyrical chant, the wail of a snake charmer’s flute, a monkey man who tries to put his chattering animal on my shoulder, the clashing of the small hand cymbals and insistent drum beat of the gnaou musicians, the cries of hawkers selling toys, the jingling of coins in the hand of the cigarette seller, and the babble of Arabic, French, Berber and a hundred and one different languages. When I listen to it later it sounds as if I’m tuning a radio in Africa, passing through the waves with each sound ebbing and flowing as I change stations. The scent of smoke and barbequed food fills the air as the al fresco stalls that make Jmaa el Fna the largest open-air restaurant in the world begin setting up. A hint of incense, a whispy aroma of jasmine and freshly squeezed orange juice, with the occasional rustic whiff of horse dung as a calache trots by; all blend together to create an exotic perfume.

“I’m really encouraged by the reaction I’ve had, particularly from hotel owners. The fact is that often it simply hasn’t occurred to them to think of disabled people as a tourism ‘market’, if you care to use that term, or that with a few simple changes they can make their hotels and venues easily accessible. In many ways it’s probably because of the culture of Morocco. Moroccans get very little state help for disabled people, so they are used to dealing with any difficulties within the family. Because of that they are very supportive of what I’m trying to do.”

A first time visitor to Fez navigates the souks
One of the charms of a visit to Marrakech is a stay in a riad in the Medina, one of the original houses where life revolves around an inner courtyard garden. Most have roof-top terraces with views across to the city to the peaks of the High Atlas Mountains in the distance. The large riads often have swimming pools on the terrace. Unfortunately, stairways are usually quite narrow and dark, with steps of uneven heights and no handrails, making access to the terraces sometimes quite difficult.

“A few of the riads have elevators, but the truth is that if someone with any sort of motor problems wants to visit Marrakech then I would advise them to stay in a hotel,” says Johnson.

But that’s no hardship. Marrakech is overflowing with hotels of all levels, from the basic somewhere-to-lay-your-head to the glory of La Mamounia, the gem of Marrakech hotels, that recently reopened after a $176 million refurbishment.

On a recent visit to the Ben Youssef Maderssa, the 14th-century Islamic college, the largest in Morocco and one of Marrakech’s most visited monuments, Johnson came across a group of wheelchairs users and their helpers.

“It was such a surprise, but even though they could only visit the ground floor rooms everyone was so happy to have been able to see this beautiful and important monument. But one of the things that moved me most was they all said that anything is possible, we can do it.

“Things will change slowly, it’s the nature of what happens here, but they are changing. There is very little adapted transport available at the moment, although a new red tour bus service recently started, which has wheelchair access and you can get on and off at various points around the city. You may find that access or facilities for disabled people are more limited than you might find elsewhere, but if you can accept some limitations, Morocco is a wonderful country to visit. There are the mountains, the dessert, the ocean, and some beautiful cities. But one of the best reasons to visit the country are the Moroccans themselves. They are a delightful and charming people who will go out of their way to help.”

Morocco Accessible Travel will soon be launching their first Barrier Free holidays, but are happy to custom designed holidays in Morocco to suite individual needs. For more information visit. www.moroccoaccessibletravel.com

For any disabled person who is nervous about travelling to Morocco, take heart from Nancy and Nate Berger’s story HERE. 

Derek Workman is an English journalist living in Valencia City, Spain – although he admits to a love of Morocco and would love to up sticks and move here. To read more about life in Spain visit Spain Uncovered. Articles and books can also be found at Digital Paparazzi.

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