ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Alberto Cairo - Physiotherapist
Alberto Cairo leads the International Red Cross' orthopedic rehabilitation work in Afghanistan.

Why you should listen

Alberto Cairo is the head of the ICRC's orthopedic program in Afghanistan. He's spent the past two decades in this war-ravaged nation -- far from his native Italy -- helping an estimated 100,000 Afghan landmine and accident victims learn to find the strength within themselves to not only walk, but also to hope, again.

In a country where the disabled are generally given pity but no rights, Alberto found a way -- through micro-loans, positive discrimination schemes and home schooling -- to give tens of thousands of disabled Afghans a job and a sense of dignity and pride.

About him, John F. Burns wrote in the New York Times: "Afghans of all ethnic and political stripes, even the Taliban, seem likely to count Alberto Cairo as one foreigner who left the country better than he found it."

His diary, "Storie da Kabul," based on a series of stories he wrote for Italy's La Repubblica, has been published in Italian and in French.

More profile about the speaker
Alberto Cairo | Speaker | TED.com
TEDxRC2

Alberto Cairo: There are no scraps of men

Filmed:
983,356 views

Alberto Cairo's clinics in Afghanistan used to close down during active fighting. Now, they stay open. In this powerful talk, Cairo tells the moving story of why -- and how he found humanity and dignity in the midst of war.
- Physiotherapist
Alberto Cairo leads the International Red Cross' orthopedic rehabilitation work in Afghanistan. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:15
I've been in Afghanistan for 21 years.
0
0
2000
00:17
I work for the Red Cross
1
2000
3000
00:20
and I'm a physical therapist.
2
5000
3000
00:24
My job is to make arms and legs --
3
9000
3000
00:27
well it's not completely true.
4
12000
2000
00:29
We do more than that.
5
14000
2000
00:31
We provide the patients,
6
16000
2000
00:33
the Afghan disabled,
7
18000
2000
00:35
first with the physical rehabilitation
8
20000
3000
00:38
then with the social reintegration.
9
23000
3000
00:41
It's a very logical plan,
10
26000
3000
00:44
but it was not always like this.
11
29000
2000
00:46
For many years, we were just providing them
12
31000
2000
00:48
with artificial limbs.
13
33000
3000
00:51
It took quite many years
14
36000
2000
00:53
for the program to become what it is now.
15
38000
5000
00:58
Today, I would like to tell you a story,
16
43000
3000
01:01
the story of a big change,
17
46000
3000
01:04
and the story of the people
18
49000
2000
01:06
who made this change possible.
19
51000
2000
01:08
I arrived in Afghanistan
20
53000
2000
01:10
in 1990
21
55000
4000
01:14
to work in a hospital
22
59000
3000
01:17
for war victims.
23
62000
2000
01:19
And then, not only for war victims,
24
64000
2000
01:21
but it was for any kind of patient.
25
66000
3000
01:24
I was also working
26
69000
2000
01:26
in the orthopedic center, we call it.
27
71000
2000
01:28
This is the place where we make the legs.
28
73000
3000
01:31
At that time
29
76000
2000
01:33
I found myself
30
78000
2000
01:35
in a strange situation.
31
80000
2000
01:37
I felt not quite ready
32
82000
2000
01:39
for that job.
33
84000
2000
01:41
There was so much to learn.
34
86000
3000
01:44
There were so many things new to me.
35
89000
2000
01:46
But it was a terrific job.
36
91000
2000
01:48
But as soon as the fighting intensified,
37
93000
2000
01:50
the physical rehabilitation was suspended.
38
95000
3000
01:53
There were many other things to do.
39
98000
2000
01:55
So the orthopedic center was closed
40
100000
3000
01:58
because physical rehabilitation
41
103000
2000
02:00
was not considered a priority.
42
105000
4000
02:08
It was a strange sensation.
43
113000
3000
02:11
Anyway, you know every time I make this speech --
44
116000
3000
02:14
it's not the first time -- but it's an emotion.
45
119000
3000
02:17
It's something that comes out from the past.
46
122000
2000
02:19
It's 21 years,
47
124000
2000
02:21
but they are still all there.
48
126000
3000
02:24
Anyway, in 1992,
49
129000
3000
02:27
the Mujahideen took all Afghanistan.
50
132000
3000
02:30
And the orthopedic center was closed.
51
135000
3000
02:33
I was assigned to work for the homeless,
52
138000
3000
02:36
for the internally displaced people.
53
141000
3000
02:41
But one day, something happened.
54
146000
3000
02:45
I was coming back
55
150000
2000
02:47
from a big food distribution in a mosque
56
152000
3000
02:50
where tens and tens of people
57
155000
4000
02:54
were squatting in terrible conditions.
58
159000
4000
02:58
I wanted to go home. I was driving.
59
163000
3000
03:01
You know, when you want to forget,
60
166000
2000
03:03
you don't want to see things,
61
168000
2000
03:05
so you just want to go to your room, to lock yourself inside
62
170000
3000
03:08
and say, "That's enough."
63
173000
4000
03:12
A bomb fell not far from my car --
64
177000
3000
03:15
well, far enough, but big noise.
65
180000
3000
03:18
And everybody disappeared from the street.
66
183000
4000
03:22
The cars disappeared as well.
67
187000
3000
03:25
I ducked.
68
190000
2000
03:27
And only one figure
69
192000
2000
03:29
remained in the middle of the road.
70
194000
2000
03:31
It was a man in a wheelchair
71
196000
3000
03:34
desperately trying to move away.
72
199000
3000
03:37
Well I'm not a particularly brave person,
73
202000
2000
03:39
I have to confess it,
74
204000
2000
03:41
but I could not just ignore him.
75
206000
4000
03:45
So I stopped the car
76
210000
3000
03:48
and I went to help.
77
213000
3000
03:51
The man was without legs
78
216000
3000
03:54
and only with one arm.
79
219000
3000
03:57
Behind him there was a child, his son,
80
222000
3000
04:00
red in the face
81
225000
2000
04:02
in an effort to push the father.
82
227000
4000
04:06
So I took him into a safe place.
83
231000
3000
04:09
And I ask, "What are you doing out in the street
84
234000
4000
04:13
in this situation?"
85
238000
2000
04:15
"I work," he said.
86
240000
2000
04:17
I wondered, what work?
87
242000
3000
04:20
And then I ask an even more stupid question:
88
245000
3000
04:23
"Why don't you have the prostheses?
89
248000
2000
04:25
Why don't you have the artificial legs?"
90
250000
2000
04:27
And he said, "The Red Cross has closed."
91
252000
4000
04:31
Well without thinking, I told him
92
256000
3000
04:34
"Come tomorrow.
93
259000
2000
04:36
We will provide you with a pair of legs."
94
261000
4000
04:40
The man, his name was Mahmoud,
95
265000
3000
04:43
and the child, whose name was Rafi, left.
96
268000
4000
04:47
And then I said, "Oh, my God. What did I say?
97
272000
4000
04:51
The center is closed,
98
276000
2000
04:53
no staff around.
99
278000
2000
04:55
Maybe the machinery is broken.
100
280000
3000
04:58
Who is going to make the legs for him?"
101
283000
3000
05:01
So I hoped that he would not come.
102
286000
4000
05:05
This is the streets of Kabul
103
290000
3000
05:08
in those days.
104
293000
3000
05:11
So I said, "Well I will give him some money."
105
296000
3000
05:14
And so the following day,
106
299000
2000
05:16
I went to the orthopedic center.
107
301000
3000
05:19
And I spoke with a gatekeeper.
108
304000
4000
05:23
I was ready to tell him,
109
308000
2000
05:25
"Listen, if someone such-and-such comes tomorrow,
110
310000
3000
05:28
please tell him that it was a mistake.
111
313000
3000
05:31
Nothing can be done.
112
316000
2000
05:33
Give him some money."
113
318000
2000
05:35
But Mahmoud and his son were already there.
114
320000
2000
05:37
And they were not alone.
115
322000
2000
05:39
There were 15, maybe 20, people like him waiting.
116
324000
5000
05:44
And there was some staff too.
117
329000
4000
05:48
Among them there was my right-hand man,
118
333000
3000
05:51
Najmuddin.
119
336000
2000
05:53
And the gatekeeper told me,
120
338000
3000
05:56
"They come everyday to see if the center will open."
121
341000
4000
06:00
I said, "No.
122
345000
2000
06:02
We have to go away. We cannot stay here."
123
347000
2000
06:04
They were bombing -- not very close -- but you could hear the noise of the bombs.
124
349000
3000
06:07
So, "We cannot stay here, it's dangerous.
125
352000
3000
06:10
It's not a priority."
126
355000
2000
06:12
But Najmuddin told me, "Listen now, we're here."
127
357000
4000
06:16
At least we can start repairing the prostheses, the broken prostheses of the people
128
361000
3000
06:19
and maybe try to do something
129
364000
2000
06:21
for people like Mahmoud."
130
366000
2000
06:23
I said, "No, please. We cannot do that.
131
368000
3000
06:26
It's really dangerous.
132
371000
3000
06:29
We have other things to do."
133
374000
2000
06:31
But they insisted.
134
376000
2000
06:33
When you have 20 people
135
378000
2000
06:35
in front of you, looking at you
136
380000
2000
06:37
and you are the one who has to decide ...
137
382000
3000
06:40
So we started doing some repairs.
138
385000
3000
06:43
Also one of the physical therapists
139
388000
2000
06:45
reported that Mahmoud
140
390000
2000
06:47
could be provided with a leg,
141
392000
2000
06:49
but not immediately.
142
394000
2000
06:51
The legs were swollen
143
396000
2000
06:53
and the knees were stiff,
144
398000
2000
06:55
so he needed a long preparation.
145
400000
2000
06:57
Believe me, I was worried
146
402000
2000
06:59
because I was breaking the rules.
147
404000
2000
07:01
I was doing something
148
406000
2000
07:03
that I was not supposed to do.
149
408000
3000
07:06
In the evening,
150
411000
2000
07:08
I went to speak with the bosses at the headquarters,
151
413000
2000
07:10
and I told them -- I lied --
152
415000
2000
07:12
I told them, "Listen, we are going to start
153
417000
3000
07:15
a couple of hours per day,
154
420000
3000
07:18
just a few repairs."
155
423000
2000
07:20
Maybe some of them are here now.
156
425000
2000
07:22
(Laughter)
157
427000
3000
07:25
So we started.
158
430000
3000
07:28
I was working, I was going everyday
159
433000
3000
07:31
to work for the homeless.
160
436000
3000
07:34
And Najmuddin was staying there,
161
439000
2000
07:36
doing everything and reporting on the patients.
162
441000
2000
07:38
He was telling me, "Patients are coming."
163
443000
3000
07:41
We knew that many more patients
164
446000
2000
07:43
could not come, prevented by the fighting.
165
448000
3000
07:46
But people were coming.
166
451000
2000
07:48
And Mahmoud was coming every day.
167
453000
3000
07:51
And slowly, slowly
168
456000
2000
07:53
week after week
169
458000
2000
07:55
his legs were improving.
170
460000
3000
07:58
The stump or cast prosthesis was made,
171
463000
4000
08:02
and he was starting
172
467000
2000
08:04
the real physical rehabilitation.
173
469000
3000
08:07
He was coming every day,
174
472000
2000
08:09
crossing the front line.
175
474000
2000
08:11
A couple of times I crossed the front line
176
476000
2000
08:13
in the very place where Mahmoud and his son were crossing.
177
478000
3000
08:16
I tell you, it was something so sinister
178
481000
3000
08:19
that I was astonished he could do it every day.
179
484000
5000
08:24
But finally, the great day arrived.
180
489000
4000
08:28
Mahmoud was going to be discharged
181
493000
2000
08:30
with his new legs.
182
495000
2000
08:32
It was April, I remember,
183
497000
2000
08:34
a very beautiful day.
184
499000
2000
08:36
April in Kabul is beautiful,
185
501000
2000
08:38
full of roses, full of flowers.
186
503000
3000
08:41
We could not possibly stay indoors,
187
506000
3000
08:44
with all these sandbags at the windows.
188
509000
3000
08:47
Very sad, dark.
189
512000
3000
08:50
So we chose a small spot in the garden.
190
515000
3000
08:53
And Mahmoud put on his prostheses,
191
518000
3000
08:56
the other patients did the same,
192
521000
3000
08:59
and they started practicing
193
524000
2000
09:01
for the last time before being discharged.
194
526000
2000
09:03
Suddenly, they started fighting.
195
528000
2000
09:05
Two groups of Mujahideen started fighting.
196
530000
4000
09:09
We could hear in the air
197
534000
3000
09:12
the bullets passing.
198
537000
2000
09:14
So we dashed, all of us,
199
539000
2000
09:16
towards the shelter.
200
541000
3000
09:20
Mahmoud grabbed his son, I grabbed someone else.
201
545000
2000
09:22
Everybody was grabbing something.
202
547000
2000
09:24
And we ran.
203
549000
2000
09:26
You know, 50 meters can be a long distance
204
551000
2000
09:28
if you are totally exposed,
205
553000
2000
09:30
but we managed to reach the shelter.
206
555000
4000
09:34
Inside, all of us panting,
207
559000
3000
09:37
I sat a moment and I heard Rafi telling his father,
208
562000
4000
09:41
"Father, you can run faster than me."
209
566000
3000
09:44
(Laughter)
210
569000
2000
09:46
And Mahmoud, "Of course I can.
211
571000
3000
09:49
I can run, and now you can go to school.
212
574000
3000
09:52
No need of staying with me all the day
213
577000
3000
09:55
pushing my wheelchair."
214
580000
2000
09:57
Later on, we took them home.
215
582000
2000
09:59
And I will never forget
216
584000
2000
10:01
Mahmoud and his son walking together
217
586000
3000
10:04
pushing the empty wheelchair.
218
589000
3000
10:07
And then I understood,
219
592000
3000
10:10
physical rehabilitation is a priority.
220
595000
4000
10:14
Dignity cannot wait for better times.
221
599000
4000
10:19
From that day on, we never closed a single day.
222
604000
4000
10:24
Well sometimes we were suspended for a few hours,
223
609000
2000
10:26
but we never, we never closed it again.
224
611000
3000
10:31
I met Mahmoud one year later.
225
616000
2000
10:33
He was in good shape --
226
618000
4000
10:37
a bit thinner.
227
622000
3000
10:40
He needed to change his prostheses --
228
625000
3000
10:43
a new pair of prostheses.
229
628000
3000
10:46
I asked about his son.
230
631000
2000
10:48
He told me, "He's at school. He'd doing quite well."
231
633000
2000
10:50
But I understood he wanted to tell me something.
232
635000
4000
10:54
So I asked him, "What is that?"
233
639000
4000
10:58
He was sweating.
234
643000
2000
11:00
He was clearly embarrassed.
235
645000
4000
11:04
And he was standing in front of me,
236
649000
3000
11:07
his head down.
237
652000
3000
11:10
He said, "You have taught me to walk.
238
655000
4000
11:14
Thank you very much.
239
659000
3000
11:17
Now help me not to be a beggar anymore."
240
662000
4000
11:21
That was the job.
241
666000
2000
11:23
"My children are growing.
242
668000
3000
11:26
I feel ashamed.
243
671000
2000
11:28
I don't want them to be teased at school
244
673000
3000
11:31
by the other students."
245
676000
3000
11:34
I said, "Okay."
246
679000
2000
11:36
I thought, how much money do I have in my pocket?
247
681000
2000
11:38
Just to give him some money.
248
683000
2000
11:40
It was the easiest way.
249
685000
2000
11:42
He read my mind,
250
687000
2000
11:44
and he said, "I ask for a job."
251
689000
5000
11:50
And then he added something
252
695000
3000
11:53
I will never forget for the rest of my life.
253
698000
4000
11:57
He said, "I am a scrap of a man,
254
702000
6000
12:03
but if you help me,
255
708000
2000
12:05
I'm ready to do anything,
256
710000
3000
12:08
even if I have to crawl on the ground."
257
713000
4000
12:12
And then he sat down.
258
717000
2000
12:14
I sat down too with goosebumps everywhere.
259
719000
4000
12:22
Legless, with only one arm,
260
727000
4000
12:26
illiterate,
261
731000
3000
12:29
unskilled --
262
734000
3000
12:32
what job for him?
263
737000
4000
12:37
Najmuddin told me, "Well we have a vacancy
264
742000
3000
12:40
in the carpentry shop."
265
745000
2000
12:42
"What?" I said, "Stop."
266
747000
5000
12:47
"Well yes, we need to increase the production of feet.
267
752000
5000
12:52
We need to employ someone
268
757000
3000
12:55
to glue and to screw the sole of the feet.
269
760000
4000
12:59
We need to increase the production."
270
764000
3000
13:02
"Excuse me?"
271
767000
2000
13:04
I could not believe.
272
769000
4000
13:08
And then he said,
273
773000
3000
13:11
"No, we can modify the workbench
274
776000
3000
13:14
maybe to put a special stool,
275
779000
2000
13:16
a special anvil, special vice,
276
781000
4000
13:20
and maybe an electric screwdriver."
277
785000
2000
13:22
I said, "Listen, it's insane.
278
787000
3000
13:25
And it's even cruel to think of anything like this.
279
790000
3000
13:28
That's a production line and a very fast one.
280
793000
3000
13:31
It's cruel
281
796000
2000
13:33
to offer him a job
282
798000
2000
13:35
knowing that he's going to fail."
283
800000
5000
13:40
But with Najmuddin, we cannot discuss.
284
805000
4000
13:44
So the only things I could manage to obtain
285
809000
6000
13:50
was a kind of a compromise.
286
815000
4000
13:54
Only one week --
287
819000
2000
13:56
one week try and not a single day more.
288
821000
3000
13:59
One week later,
289
824000
2000
14:01
Mahmoud was the fastest in the production line.
290
826000
4000
14:05
I told Najmuddin, "That's a trick.
291
830000
3000
14:08
I can't believe it."
292
833000
2000
14:10
The production was up 20 percent.
293
835000
2000
14:12
"It's a trick, it's a trick," I said.
294
837000
3000
14:15
And then I asked for verification.
295
840000
2000
14:17
It was true.
296
842000
3000
14:20
The comment of Najmuddin was Mahmoud has something to prove.
297
845000
3000
14:23
I understood
298
848000
2000
14:25
that I was wrong again.
299
850000
3000
14:28
Mahmoud had looked taller.
300
853000
2000
14:30
I remember him sitting behind the workbench smiling.
301
855000
6000
14:36
He was a new man,
302
861000
3000
14:39
taller again.
303
864000
3000
14:42
Of course, I understood
304
867000
2000
14:44
that what made him stand tall --
305
869000
4000
14:48
yeah they were the legs, thank you very much --
306
873000
2000
14:50
but as a first step,
307
875000
3000
14:53
it was the dignity.
308
878000
2000
14:55
He has regained his full dignity
309
880000
3000
14:58
thanks to that job.
310
883000
2000
15:00
So of course, I understood.
311
885000
2000
15:02
And then we started a new policy --
312
887000
3000
15:05
a new policy completely different.
313
890000
2000
15:07
We decided to employ
314
892000
2000
15:09
as many disabled as possible
315
894000
2000
15:11
to train them in any possible job.
316
896000
2000
15:13
It became a policy of "positive discrimination,"
317
898000
3000
15:16
we call it now.
318
901000
3000
15:19
And you know what?
319
904000
2000
15:21
It's good for everybody.
320
906000
2000
15:23
Everybody benefits from that --
321
908000
3000
15:26
those employed, of course,
322
911000
2000
15:28
because they get a job
323
913000
2000
15:30
and dignity.
324
915000
2000
15:32
But also for the newcomers.
325
917000
2000
15:34
They are 7,000 every year --
326
919000
3000
15:37
people coming for the first time.
327
922000
2000
15:39
And you should see the faces of these people
328
924000
2000
15:41
when they realize that those assisting them are like them.
329
926000
3000
15:44
Sometimes you see them,
330
929000
2000
15:46
they look, "Oh."
331
931000
3000
15:49
And you see the faces.
332
934000
2000
15:51
And then the surprise turns into hope.
333
936000
5000
15:58
And it's easy for me as well to train someone
334
943000
3000
16:01
who has already passed through the experience of disability.
335
946000
3000
16:04
Poof, they learn much faster -- the motivation,
336
949000
4000
16:08
the empathy they can establish with the patient
337
953000
2000
16:10
is completely different, completely.
338
955000
3000
16:14
Scraps of men do not exist.
339
959000
3000
16:17
People like Mahmoud
340
962000
2000
16:19
are agents of change.
341
964000
3000
16:22
And when you start changing, you cannot stop.
342
967000
3000
16:25
So employing people, yes,
343
970000
2000
16:27
but also we started programming projects
344
972000
3000
16:30
of microfinance, education.
345
975000
2000
16:32
And when you start, you cannot stop.
346
977000
2000
16:34
So you do vocational training,
347
979000
2000
16:36
home education for those who cannot go to school.
348
981000
3000
16:39
Physical therapies can be done, not only in the orthopedic center,
349
984000
2000
16:41
but also in the houses of the people.
350
986000
2000
16:43
There is always a better way to do things.
351
988000
4000
16:47
That's Najmuddin, the one with the white coat.
352
992000
3000
16:50
Terrible Najmuddin, is that one.
353
995000
3000
16:53
I have learned a lot
354
998000
2000
16:55
from people like Najmuddin, Mahmoud, Rafi.
355
1000000
2000
16:57
They are my teachers.
356
1002000
2000
16:59
I have a wish, a big wish,
357
1004000
3000
17:02
that this way of working, this way of thinking,
358
1007000
3000
17:05
is going to be implemented in other countries.
359
1010000
3000
17:08
There are plenty of countries at war like Afghanistan.
360
1013000
4000
17:13
It is possible and it is not difficult.
361
1018000
3000
17:16
All we have to do
362
1021000
2000
17:18
is to listen to the people
363
1023000
3000
17:21
that we are supposed assist,
364
1026000
3000
17:24
to make them part
365
1029000
2000
17:26
of the decision-making process
366
1031000
3000
17:29
and then, of course, to adapt.
367
1034000
3000
17:32
This is my big wish.
368
1037000
3000
17:36
Well don't think that the changes in Afghanistan are over;
369
1041000
3000
17:39
not at all. We are going on.
370
1044000
2000
17:41
Recently we have just started a program,
371
1046000
3000
17:44
a sport program --
372
1049000
2000
17:46
basketball for wheelchair users.
373
1051000
2000
17:48
We transport the wheelchairs everywhere.
374
1053000
3000
17:51
We have several teams in the main part of Afghanistan.
375
1056000
3000
17:54
At the beginning,
376
1059000
2000
17:56
when Anajulina told me,
377
1061000
3000
17:59
"We would like to start it,"
378
1064000
2000
18:01
I hesitated.
379
1066000
2000
18:03
I said, "No," you can imagine.
380
1068000
2000
18:05
I said, "No, no, no, no, we can't."
381
1070000
2000
18:07
And then I asked the usual question:
382
1072000
2000
18:09
"Is it a priority?
383
1074000
2000
18:11
Is it really necessary?"
384
1076000
3000
18:14
Well now you should see me.
385
1079000
2000
18:16
I never miss a single training session.
386
1081000
3000
18:19
The night before a match I'm very nervous.
387
1084000
3000
18:22
And you should see me during the match.
388
1087000
4000
18:26
I shout like a true Italian.
389
1091000
3000
18:29
(Laughter)
390
1094000
3000
18:32
What's next? What is going to be the next change?
391
1097000
4000
18:36
Well I don't know yet,
392
1101000
2000
18:38
but I'm sure Najmuddin and his friends,
393
1103000
2000
18:40
they have it already in mind.
394
1105000
2000
18:42
That was my story. Thank you very much.
395
1107000
3000
18:45
(Applause)
396
1110000
11000

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Alberto Cairo - Physiotherapist
Alberto Cairo leads the International Red Cross' orthopedic rehabilitation work in Afghanistan.

Why you should listen

Alberto Cairo is the head of the ICRC's orthopedic program in Afghanistan. He's spent the past two decades in this war-ravaged nation -- far from his native Italy -- helping an estimated 100,000 Afghan landmine and accident victims learn to find the strength within themselves to not only walk, but also to hope, again.

In a country where the disabled are generally given pity but no rights, Alberto found a way -- through micro-loans, positive discrimination schemes and home schooling -- to give tens of thousands of disabled Afghans a job and a sense of dignity and pride.

About him, John F. Burns wrote in the New York Times: "Afghans of all ethnic and political stripes, even the Taliban, seem likely to count Alberto Cairo as one foreigner who left the country better than he found it."

His diary, "Storie da Kabul," based on a series of stories he wrote for Italy's La Repubblica, has been published in Italian and in French.

More profile about the speaker
Alberto Cairo | Speaker | TED.com