http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2008/919/li1.htm
23 - 29 October 2008
Issue No. 919
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875
Beautiful mind
Disability, as Nicholas Vujicic tells Enjy El-Naggar, is barely ever defined
correctly
Click to view caption
Vujicic lecturing at the Villiage of Hope; Adel Labib, governor of
Alexandria, Thabet, Vujicic and El-Baiadi
--
To Nicholas, or Nick Vujicic, disability is not usually understood right. To
him, disability is really "fear, guilt, the feeling that someone whom you can't
forgive hurt you, or being unable to achieve something you love." Born with
neither arms nor legs -- without any medical explanation -- 25-year-old Vujicic
was raised in Melbourne, Australia, to become a successful businessman in a
very short stretch of time, and a motivational speaker as well.
Having obtained a Bachelor's degree in financial planning and accounting,
Vujicic became director of Life Without Limbs, an organisation for the
physically disabled aimed at giving people living without limbs the motivation
and inspiration they need. He is also chairman of Attitude is Altitude, a
public speaking company. Both organisations were established to help Vujicic
deliver his message across world, with the support of his business- savvy
father and many others who believe in Nick's message, and in God.
Vujicic regularly travels internationally to speak to Christian congregations,
schools, and corporate meetings. He has spoken on four continents -- Africa,
Asia, Australia and North America. His goal is to go out and share his story
and his unique experience with others. His activities don't stop there. Indeed,
his first book, planned for completion by the end of 2009, is to be called No
Arms, No Legs, No Worries!
But life hasn't always been so rosy for Vujicic and his family. In fact it was
a gloomy day for his parents when he came to life. "If God is a god of love,
then why would He let something like this happen?" they wondered. Nick recalls
his parents' comments about his disability. But parental love being what it is,
he soon came to be accepted and loved. Meanwhile, Vujicic's life became tough
when he joined school. There he was rejected and bullied because of his
physical appearance. So great was his suffering that he attempted suicide at
the young age of eight. "I was surrounded by kids who kept teasing me and
putting me down," he remembers.
"When you face that every day, you start to hate life," Vujicic told Al-Ahram
Weekly. It was simply awful to experience the loneliness he did, excluded as he
was and unable to play with his classmates. He didn't know what he'd end up
with in the future, though he seemed certain he would have "no love, no job and
no family". But being brought up in a religious Christian environment -- as his
parents are lifelong Christians who inspired him with love and belief in God --
put him on the right track again, enabling him to come over his disability. "My
parents always believed in God, and my father always told me: 'Nick, don't
worry. God has the future all planned out,'" he said.
The turning point in Vujicic's life came as a result of an inspiring article
written by another physically disabled man. At 13, he read an article in a
newspaper about a man of disability in which he said that a disabled had the
power to encourage people in a way one could never imagine. "I had a choice,
either to try, or to give up. Basically, because of the strength God had given
me, and because I realised God will not leave me though he knows how much my
heart hurt, I chose to try," Vujicic said.
>From that day on, he forgot his disability forever, and even thanked God for
>his little "chicken bone" as he calls it -- one small foot with two toes
>protruding from his left thigh -- which helped him become independent and take
>care of all his personal needs, including shaving, brushing his teeth, combing
>his hair, dressing and taking care of his personal hygiene. He even gets
>around the house by jumping around and outside the house assisted by an
>electric wheelchair. For recreation, he enjoys swimming, fishing and playing
>football.
His current journey began when he hit 19 years of age, when he was invited to
lecture 300 students in Australia and a disabled girl sitting in the middle of
the room cried when she listened to his story. "I want to hug you and I love
you because no one has told me that I'm beautiful or that they love me," the
girl told Vujicic. That incident changed his life. Now, he could positively
impact people's lives, indeed make them think about things differently. "And
that's the greatest feeling one can have -- making others happy," he said.
When he started as a motivational speaker, Vujicic was inspired by Phil Toth, a
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