Rising and setting with the sun, Pakistan's 'solar kids' puzzle doctors
There are few who wait as wistfully for the sun as Shoaib, Rashid and Ilyas — three children hailing from a Balochistan village which is stunned by their mysterious illness.
Residents of Mian Kundi, a village some 15 kilometres from Quetta, the children aged one, nine and 13 are forced into stillness when it sets, and anxiously wait for it to come up again the next day.
At 4am, they rise with the first rays, filled with energy and life. As the sun travels west, their strength appears to deplete, and by the time it sets, they are completely paralysed.
According to the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (Pims) Chancellor Dr Javed Akram, theirs is the first reported case of such an illness across the world. “It is a challenging puzzle for medical science to solve,” Akram says: bodies synced to the movement of the sun.
Also read: Pims to take in three children suffering from rare disease
The naming
Hashim, a security guard at IT University Quetta, says his sons were born like this. It wasn’t an anomaly or habit formed later in life; from the very first day, he says their bodies appeared to be dependent on sunlight. When villagers heard about them, they were amazed, and they were christened ‘solar kids’.
But not all of his kids have earned that title. Hashim, who married his first cousin, have three more children -- two girls and a boy -- who have escaped the peculiar condition.
He says his town is disease-free, and all basic modern facilities like electricity, phone and gas are available. People live a healthy, normal life, as most places in the country. “We are not a backward village,” he clarifies, lest people attribute the roots of the disease back to his hometown.
They rise with the first rays, filled with energy and life. As the sun travels west, their strength appears to deplete.
When one observes them closely, the boys' daily activities appear normal. The children wake up early, sometimes before sunrise, and are energetic.
After attending classes at a seminary, they play cricket with their friends and spend time with their siblings. When they can, they help their father out with his part-time livestock farming, tending to the sheep and goats.
“They don’t really complain,” Hashim says, “They enjoy doing everything they are told to.”