<p>David Aguilar was five when he first discovered Lego, entering a world where it didn't matter he was missing his forearm, and four years later, he built his first prosthesis with it.</p>.<p>Now on the verge of finishing a degree in bioengineering, he dreams of working to help other children who, like him, were born different.</p>.<p>Aguilar was born without a right forearm as a result of Poland syndrome, a rare disorder which can cause severe abnormalities in the shoulder, arm or hand, but it has not stopped him from living his life.</p>.<p>Now 22, this Andorran student — who has been obsessed with robots since he was a child — has little free time: aside from finishing his degree, he gives motivational speeches, has written a book and taken part in an innovation conference run by NASA.</p>.<p>But getting here hasn't been easy and his face hardens as he recalls the years when building things with Lego was his only refuge from bullying.</p>.<p>"When I was a teenager, I carried on playing with Lego because it was a way of escaping the bullying, it really helped me ignore all the jibes I had to put up with every day," he told <em>AFP</em> at his university residence near Barcelona.</p>.<p>During his teens, he set up a YouTube channel calling himself "Hand Solo", a play on the name of smuggler-pilot hero Han Solo from the early "Star Wars" films.</p>.<p>Over the years, he fine-tuned his construction skills and by the age of 17, he had managed to create a fully-functioning Lego prosthetic that allowed him to do his first-ever pushups with two arms.</p>.<p>Since then, he has further refined his technique, proudly showing off his latest version, the MK5, which has a much more sleek robotic look and long pale-blue "fingers" which are activated by muscles operating a motorised pulley.</p>.<p>Long accustomed to life without his forearm, Aguilar doesn't use a prosthesis every day but he knows that many people do, and that it can cost many thousands of euros for the newest models.</p>.<p>"Since I made that first prosthesis, I realised that I had the power to help other people. And when I looked in the mirror and saw myself with two arms, I thought that other people really might need that too," he said.</p>.<p>After he was awarded the Guinness World Record for creating the first functional Lego prosthetic arm in 2017, news about Hand Solo's wizardry quickly spread.</p>.<p>Finding his story online earlier this year, Zaure Bektemissova decided to write him an email from her home in northeastern France.</p>.<p>Her son Beknur, she wrote, was eight-years-old and had no arms. The doctors couldn't make him a normal prosthesis and she was looking for help.</p>.<p>"Prosthetics are mostly standard, they are big and heavy, so for his spine it was not a good idea," she told <em>AFP</em> at her home in Strasbourg where the family has lived for two years since her husband took up a diplomatic post at the Kazakhstan consulate.</p>.<p>Aguilar promised to try and at the end of August, Bektemissova and her son drove 1,300 kilometres to Andorra, a tiny principality in the Pyrenees mountains, sandwiched between Spain and France, to meet him and try out the new prosthesis he'd made.</p>.<p>Made entirely of Lego, the lightweight device has a pincer-like grabble at the end which Beknur can control with a cord manipulated by his left foot.</p>.<p>"Now I can grab things with my hand, before I couldn't," beams Beknur, throwing a ball to his brother.</p>.<p>Having that extra bit of independence has really helped, his mum says.</p>.<p>"He can do a lot of things with it so his self-esteem is high now, compared to what was before," she smiles.</p>.<p>And the experience has inspired Aguilar.</p>.<p>"If I did it for Beknur, why not for any other boy or girl who's missing an arm or a leg or a foot?" he says, his eyes alight with ideas.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest DH videos here</strong></p>
<p>David Aguilar was five when he first discovered Lego, entering a world where it didn't matter he was missing his forearm, and four years later, he built his first prosthesis with it.</p>.<p>Now on the verge of finishing a degree in bioengineering, he dreams of working to help other children who, like him, were born different.</p>.<p>Aguilar was born without a right forearm as a result of Poland syndrome, a rare disorder which can cause severe abnormalities in the shoulder, arm or hand, but it has not stopped him from living his life.</p>.<p>Now 22, this Andorran student — who has been obsessed with robots since he was a child — has little free time: aside from finishing his degree, he gives motivational speeches, has written a book and taken part in an innovation conference run by NASA.</p>.<p>But getting here hasn't been easy and his face hardens as he recalls the years when building things with Lego was his only refuge from bullying.</p>.<p>"When I was a teenager, I carried on playing with Lego because it was a way of escaping the bullying, it really helped me ignore all the jibes I had to put up with every day," he told <em>AFP</em> at his university residence near Barcelona.</p>.<p>During his teens, he set up a YouTube channel calling himself "Hand Solo", a play on the name of smuggler-pilot hero Han Solo from the early "Star Wars" films.</p>.<p>Over the years, he fine-tuned his construction skills and by the age of 17, he had managed to create a fully-functioning Lego prosthetic that allowed him to do his first-ever pushups with two arms.</p>.<p>Since then, he has further refined his technique, proudly showing off his latest version, the MK5, which has a much more sleek robotic look and long pale-blue "fingers" which are activated by muscles operating a motorised pulley.</p>.<p>Long accustomed to life without his forearm, Aguilar doesn't use a prosthesis every day but he knows that many people do, and that it can cost many thousands of euros for the newest models.</p>.<p>"Since I made that first prosthesis, I realised that I had the power to help other people. And when I looked in the mirror and saw myself with two arms, I thought that other people really might need that too," he said.</p>.<p>After he was awarded the Guinness World Record for creating the first functional Lego prosthetic arm in 2017, news about Hand Solo's wizardry quickly spread.</p>.<p>Finding his story online earlier this year, Zaure Bektemissova decided to write him an email from her home in northeastern France.</p>.<p>Her son Beknur, she wrote, was eight-years-old and had no arms. The doctors couldn't make him a normal prosthesis and she was looking for help.</p>.<p>"Prosthetics are mostly standard, they are big and heavy, so for his spine it was not a good idea," she told <em>AFP</em> at her home in Strasbourg where the family has lived for two years since her husband took up a diplomatic post at the Kazakhstan consulate.</p>.<p>Aguilar promised to try and at the end of August, Bektemissova and her son drove 1,300 kilometres to Andorra, a tiny principality in the Pyrenees mountains, sandwiched between Spain and France, to meet him and try out the new prosthesis he'd made.</p>.<p>Made entirely of Lego, the lightweight device has a pincer-like grabble at the end which Beknur can control with a cord manipulated by his left foot.</p>.<p>"Now I can grab things with my hand, before I couldn't," beams Beknur, throwing a ball to his brother.</p>.<p>Having that extra bit of independence has really helped, his mum says.</p>.<p>"He can do a lot of things with it so his self-esteem is high now, compared to what was before," she smiles.</p>.<p>And the experience has inspired Aguilar.</p>.<p>"If I did it for Beknur, why not for any other boy or girl who's missing an arm or a leg or a foot?" he says, his eyes alight with ideas.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest DH videos here</strong></p>