In 2017, a man named Mohamed Bzeek lived quietly in Los Angeles. To most people, he was just a kind, soft-spoken guy. But few knew what he really did.
Mohamed was a foster father - specializing in taking in terminally ill children that nobody else wanted.
He wasn't rich. He wasn't famous. He just had one rule: no child should die alone.
One of the children he cared for was a blind, paralyzed girl who couldn't speak. Most people were afraid to care for her. But Mohamed bathed her, fed her, and sat with her every day. Even when doctors said she wouldn't live long, he stayed.
When a reporter asked him why he kept doing it, he simply said, "They are human beings. They deserve love."
Mohamed was a foster father - specializing in taking in terminally ill children that nobody else wanted.
He wasn't rich. He wasn't famous. He just had one rule: no child should die alone.
One of the children he cared for was a blind, paralyzed girl who couldn't speak. Most people were afraid to care for her. But Mohamed bathed her, fed her, and sat with her every day. Even when doctors said she wouldn't live long, he stayed.
When a reporter asked him why he kept doing it, he simply said, "They are human beings. They deserve love."