'How Canadian is that?' Syrian refugee learns to play sledge hockey
Just ten months after taking first steps on prosthetic leg, teen takes to the ice
A Syrian refugee who lost his leg before coming to Canada last fall with his family has developed a passion for a Canadian sport.
Omar Al Ziab, 15, was walking home from school in 2011 when a military vehicle ran him over, crushing his right leg and leaving his other leg badly injured.
In November of last year, he received a prosthetic leg just weeks after arriving in Canada. Now just nine months later, he's making new strides – on the ice.
"They told me, 'You can play, just try,' and I tried. When I played [sledge hockey] the first time it was so awesome and it's fun," said Al Ziab.
The teen was introduced to the sport by his sponsors when they put him in contact with Bill Muloin at the Society for Manitobans with Disabilities (SMD). They took Al Ziab to watch a practice and he was immediately interested in trying it out.
Muloin, who runs the camp, was thrilled.
"How Canadian is that? We are an adapted game of ice hockey no doubt about it, but it's still a Canadian game. For us to give him that flavour, just shortly after getting here, I like to think of that as a feather in our cap," Muloin said.
After getting him fitted for a sledge, they got him enrolled in SMD's sledge hockey camp. A group of 29 participants, ranging in age from 6 to 21, came together for the first time last week to learn and play the sport.
"Canada is the best," he said. "I feel happy. It's really nice. And I don't feel cold because on the sledge you don't stop.
"Hockey is new for me," he said. "We [don't] have hockey in my country. We have soccer."
"He's a natural sledge player. He's a natural athlete," he said.
Muloin said that while many of the camp participants have varying physical disabilities, Al Ziab came to camp without any experience with hockey at all and speaks very little English. Yet that hasn't slowed him down.
"He's an amazing kid. We take everything for granted here. We take our hockey rinks, our weather, our quiet, and our peace. We take everything for granted," said Muloin.
"I learned lots. I learned about hockey. And with my group I learned English more, because when you talk with more people speaking English, you learn more," he said.
Kamal Al Ziab, the teen's father, came to the final day of the sledge hockey camp with his wife and other children to watch his son play.
"It's a beautiful game, and Omar is interested in it. I hope one day he may become a professional in it. I hope he and all the other children in [the camp] will reach their full potential," he said in Arabic through translator Laila Chebib.
"[Canada] is his country [now]. And hopefully he will live here and make us proud," he said.
Omar is now enrolled to play in the SMD's winter league at the MTS Iceplex starting in September.
Finding common ground
The Al Ziab family was joined at the camp by their sponsors from Refuge Winnipeg. The Syrian family has a network of people helping them adjust to their new lives in Winnipeg. They also brought along another young Syrian refugee, who is just beginning his life in Canada.
Sarhan was brought to the sledge hockey game in hopes that Al Ziab could help him adjust to life in Canada and to show him that in spite of his injuries, there are still sports he can enjoy.
"I'm very happy with [Omar] because he's from Syria, and I'm from Syria," said Sarhan.
"We talk about his leg, and my leg," he said.
Sarhan says he may even follow in Al Ziab's footsteps and take up sledge hockey one day. Friday was Sarhan's first time ever seeing a hockey rink in person.
"It feels very good because I've seen a new thing," he said.