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Girl losing sight to see pope as part of visual bucket list

Trisha Thomas (Associated Press)
Rome
Wed, April 6, 2016

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Girl losing sight to see pope as part of visual bucket list This Friday, Sept. 19, 2015 photo shows Elizabeth "Lizzy" Myers, left, being fitted for a microphone by a CBS sound man before taping a segment in Lucas, Ohio. Myers, a 5-year-old Ohio girl whose parents created a "visual bucket list" for her because she's slowly going blind is going to meet Pope Francis. Steve Myers told the Mansfield News Journal on Thursday, March 24, 2016, that his daughter Elizabeth "Lizzy" Myers is visiting the Vatican next week. (News Journal via AP/Jason J. Molyet)

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5-year-old American girl who suffers from a rare genetic disease that is gradually robbing her of her sight may get her wish to see Pope Francis.

Little Lizzy Myers and her family have special seats for Francis' Wednesday general audience. The Vatican visit caps off a week of touring that is part of the "visual bucket list" her parents have crafted to show Lizzy some of the wonders of the world while she can still see them.

So far, they've seen the statue of Julius Caesar, the Colosseum and the Roman Forum.

"If we had to leave today and go home, we would be very happy," said Lizzy's father, Steve Myers. "Well, I think Lizzy would still want to see the pope."

Lizzy doesn't know she suffers from Usher's Syndrome, which will take away her hearing and gradually make her blind. But her father said after Lizzy received the diagnosis "we realized that we have to do as much as we can to let her see as many wonderful things as possible."

In this photo taken Friday, April 1, 2016, Lizzy Myers from Bellville, Ohio, right, walks in front of Rome's ancient Colosseum, during a week-long visit to the city, that will end with her attending Pope Francis' general audience at the Vatican. (AP/Alessandra Tarantino)

The first item on their bucket list was the Warren Rupp observatory near their home, where Lizzy could look through a giant telescope at the moon and the stars.

Someone at the observatory invited a journalist and before the Myers knew it, Lizzy's story was all over the news and they were receiving generous offers to help them show her much more in the short time she has before her sight fails.

The general manager of Turkish Airlines was touched by Lizzy's story and round-trip tickets were offered to anywhere in the world. The family chose Rome.

Speaking to The Associated Press in the garden of their hotel in Rome as their daughters played behind them, Steve and Christine Myers said Lizzy had already adjusted well to the hearing aids she has to wear.

"I want her to live as normal a life as she can, now," said her mother. "There will come a time when we will have to tell her. I dread that day."

On Wednesday though, they are hoping for a glimpse of the pope, or maybe more. "We are hoping for a little special prayer or something for Lizzy and maybe a miracle will happen that way as well," said her father.

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