The U.S. has approved a visa request for Alta Fixsler, a brain-damaged, 2-year-old Jewish girl in the U.K. at risk of being removed from life support by a hospital in Manchester against her family’s will, Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) announced Friday.
Alta’s family has been waging a public battle to keep her alive. Her mother is an Israeli citizen, and her father American. If Alta is unable to remain on life support in the U.K., the family is hoping to at least be able transport her to Israel or America for treatment.
Schumer sent a letter last week to Karen Pierce, the U.K. ambassador to the U.S., notifying Pierce that Schumer was working on obtaining citizenship documents for the young girl, and urging Pierce “that all health decisions that are against the wishes of ten family be suspended until the citizenship process is complete and Alta can travel to the U.S.”
On Friday, Schumer announced that the visa had been secured.
“All the Fixslers want is to follow their faith and get their little girl the best care in the process,” Schumer said in a statement Friday. “The images of little Alta make your heart melt, and to know just how much her parents love her inspires us to do all we can to ensure her best chance. Aside from this federal action of securing a visa, I also offer my most fervent prayers to her and her family.”
A U.K. court has ruled that the hospital may remove Alta from life support; the family is in the midst of appealing that ruling.
Rabbi Moshe Dovid Niederman of the UJO of Williamsburg, who has been lobbying U.S. government officials on behalf of the Fixslers, told Hamodia on Friday that he appreciates “Sen. Schumer and his staff working with us around the clock to help save Alta’s life by obtaining this visa through the U.S. Embassy in the U.K,” and that “we now appeal to the British Health Ministry: Please don’t block Alta’s chance to live.”
Rabbi Niederman said that a medical transport to the United States has been arranged through Jewish philanthropists, and would not cost the British government anything. Read more at Hamodia