Friday 25 March 2016

The incredible story of China’s ‘Basketball Girl’ who has fought against all odds to be where she is today


A young Chinese girl's journey to create a future for herself, despite losing both legs in a tragic accident, has become the story that inspired thousands of disable people in China. Qian Hongyan, from Yunnan, south west China, made the headlines in 2005 when she was photographed 'walking' with the help of a basketball. Today, that same young woman is a champion swimmer with Paralympic dreams. In 2009, the determined girl became a national champion in the Chinese National Paralympics Swimming Competition.
A four-year-old Qian Hongyan had both of her legs amputated after getting into an accident in 2000 where she nearly lost her life. Her family were extremely impoverished. They farmed and produced silk for a meager living. Accord to People's Daily Online, with little resources available, her grandfather resorted to cutting up an old basketball to replace of her lower body. The little girl learnt to 'walk' on her hands by supporting her entire upper body using wooden pads with handles. She spent many years of her childhood being dubbed the 'Basketball Girl' by locals as a result.
More pictures after the cut




In 2005, Qian Hongyan's incredible hardship caught the widespread attention of Chinese, and later, international media. With the help and support of donations, she was given the chance to travel more than 1,600 miles to Beijing and be fitted with her first pair of legs. Every step of her journey became a newsworthy story that not only revealed a little of Qian Hongyan's life but also highlighted the plight of living with disability in China. In 2007, she was faced with the reality that her family simply did not have enough money to allow her to continue her education beyond the age of 11. She returned to Yunnan where she was encouraged to join South of the Cloud, a local swim team for people with disability and one of the first of its kind in China. Qian Hongyan's high amputation made swimming particularly difficult. Within a few years, she was winning gold medals at national competitions and had dreams of representing China in the Paralympics in London 2012. In 2009, Qian made headlines again by winning one gold medal and two silver medals in the Chinese National Paralympics Swimming Competition.
She revealed in a Xinhua profile of her in 2014 that she didn't have a concept of what a competition was when she told reporters that she wanted to be a Paralympian. Afterwards, she realised that the aspiration came too early and gave her too much pressure.


However, nothing is impossible for a willing heart. In September 2014, Qian won the 100m breaststroke final during the Yunnan Provincial Paralympic Games, which put her and her incredible life stories back in the spotlight, the DailyMail reports.
It seems that Qian has turned her eventful childhood into a life filled with inspiration and incredible strength. One that few in China could live to match. And one of determination.

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