Pistorius is in the news for other reasons today -- for killing his
girlfriend, supposedly assuming her to be a burgler. If anyone needed proof
that disabled people are normal human beings with as much of a random mix of
good and evil in them as their so-called able counterparts, there it is. 

Geetha
-----Original Message-----
From: AccessIndia [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of avinash shahi
Sent: 14 February 2013 18:04
To: accessindia
Subject: [AI] "You're not disabled by your disability but abled by your
abilities, said Pistorius

Pistorius: the inspirational 'Blade Runner'
AFP
Johannesburg, February 14, 2013First Published: 16:30 IST(14/2/2013) Last
Updated: 16:32 IST(14/2/2013)
http://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news/Africa/Pistorius-the-inspirational-
Blade-Runner/Article1-1011648.aspx
Oscar Pistorius is one of the world's most recognisable sportsmen and an
inspirational figure the world over after he became the first double-amputee
to compete at both the Olympics and Paralympics last year. The 26-year-old
was already a household name going into the 2012 Games in London, after he
made history by becoming the first amputee to run at the World Championships
in 2011, where he took silver with South Africa's 4x400m sprint team.

The Johannesburg-born runner had both legs amputated below the knee when he
was 11 months old after being born without lower leg bones.
But he played sports unhindered while growing up, switching to running after
fracturing a knee playing rugby.

"You're not disabled by your disabilities but abled by your abilities," he
told Athlete magazine in a 2011 interview.

His 2011 appearance came after a high-profile controversy about whether he
was even eligible to compete against able-bodied athletes, with some arguing
that his custom-built carbon-fibre running blades gave him an unfair
advantage.

He successfully appealed against an International Association of Athletics
Federations (IAAF) ban against him competing at the 2008 Beijing Olympics to
the Court of Abitration for Sport, although he ultimately failed to qualify.

It was at the Beijing Paralympics, though, where Pistorius supplanted his
compatriot, the swimmer Natalie Du Toit, as the most well-known disabled
athlete of all time, after he won all three main sprint events, the 100m,
200m and 400m.

He failed to retain all three of his titles in London, though, and was even
embroiled, ironically, in a dispute about the length of his rivals' running
blades, after he was beaten into silver by Brazil's Alan Oliveira in the
half-lap race.

Defeat in the blue riband 100m followed but Pistorius bounced back to take
gold with his South African team-mates in the 4x100m relay and storm to
victory in the individual 400m, sending the 80,000 Olympic Stadium crowd
wild.

However,  both Games were a relative failure in terms of performance for
Pistorius -- he also missed out on the Olympic final and was out of the
medals in the relay.

The defeats showed the rapid improvement of other Paralympic athletes, which
would help raise further the profile of the Games and its popularity, after
for so long being seen as just a sideshow after the Olympics, he argued.

"I think people are going to look back at this Paralympic Games and for the
first time really, truly believe that Paralympic sport is not just
inspirational, it's hardcore sport," he said as the Games closed in the
British capital.

"It's full of triumph, sometimes it has disappointment, but that's what we
look for in sport. We want it to be competitive and that's what it's been
about."

Such a comment was in keeping with Pistorius' philosophy in life and his
attitude towards his own disability, which has proved no bar to success.

At high school, he was so good that his personal fitness coach said she was
unaware for six months that he ran on prosthetic legs.

Off the track, Pistorius has a passion for motorbikes, adrenalin and
speed: four years ago he crashed his boat in a river south of Johannesburg,
breaking two ribs, an eye socket and his jaw.

He also once owned two white tigers but sold them to a zoo in Canada when
they became too big.

Last December, he ran against -- and beat -- Arab horse Maserati in a race
over 200m in the Qatari capital, Doha, and again saw his victory as a way of
challenging perceptions about disabilities around the World.


--
Avinash Shahi
MPhil Research Scholar
Centre for the Study of Law and Governance Jawaharlal Nehru University New
Delhi India

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