Paralympics: high spirits one gold two silver and one brounch

Rare players of paralympic games 



The one who returns after winning these becomes a superhero.  In its script, real life superheroes show their skills on the playground.  Hurdle race in acoustics.  There are many obstacles in the life of the heroes, which they cross one by one to reach the finishing line and then become a part of the Paralympic Games, after the Tokyo Olympics-2020, it is now the turn of the Paralympics 2020, when the event will be held on 24 August.  When the opening ceremony took place, the actors were there for the entertainment, but Mr. "We have and we know how to fly was giving a special message to the world that this message came from among real life boy standards, so it was solid.  There was authenticity.  This message was for the rest of the people living in different countries with more than 15 percent disabled people.  Let us try to understand through the members of the Indian delegation what is the depth of the real challenges of the players involved in this event.



 Bhavnaben Patel won the silver medal at the Tokyo Paralympics.  Nishad Kumar also won silver and Vinod Kumar won bronze.  




When 34-year-old Bhavina from Vadnagar in Gujarat came here, her world ranking was 12, but in a reversal, this table tennis player has defeated three more seeded players so far.  When Bhavna was 12 months old, she got polio and later due to lack of regular treatment and exercise, her eyesight went down.  In the year 2004, her parents got her enrolled in the Blind People Association in Ahmedabad, Bhavina did a computer course and started playing table tennis.  She could not take part in the Rio Paralympics due to technical reasons, but she made history by qualifying for Tokyo, becoming the first Indian to qualify for table tennis in the Paralympic Games in the individual category.


 Tekchand made the best performance of his career in the shot put F-55, covering a distance of more than nine meters, Paralympics: high spirits


 it was not enough for the medal.  Tekchand, the real life juggler, is ready to move on from this defeat.  Tekchand, a resident of Rewari in Haryana, suffered an accident and then paralysis in 2005, after ten years in Upper, a friend of his told him about the possibilities in Para sports.  He won the bronze medal in shot put at the 2018 Para Asian Games.


 Tekchand won the silver in the same Para-Aclitics, this time Harvinder Singh was one and a half of the crowd of Indians, during today, both his legs stopped working properly.  2018 Asian Paralympics gold medalist Harvinder has high hopes in Tokyo Thirty-one-year-old Vivek Vikas lost his left leg in a road accident in 2017.  He engaged himself in archery at Guruku Prabhat Academy in Meerut in such a way that even leaving his job, in 2019, the match winner of Asia Para Archery is also in the running in Tokyo.  In 2009, he had fallen into a ditch along with his car, due to which the entire part below the waist stopped working.  Due to the treatment of Rakesh, a resident of Katra in Jammu, the whole family became helpless.  Rakesh also attempted suicide several times.  Eventually he started running a roadside shop, where a coach of Toraji caught sight of him.


 Every member in the 54-member Indian contingent at the Tokyo Paralympics is an example of inspiration and perseverance.  


Two of these have already left their mark and on whom the eyes of the country are fixed this time too, Mariyappan Thangavelu and Devendra Jhajharia.  Mariyappan is one of the three Indian players, whose name is to the credit of winning the gold medal in the Paralympics, this time in the men's high jump, he is expected to face a tough competition from his own country's Yarun Singh Bhato and Sharad Kumar.  Mariyappan, a gold medalist in Riis, had overcame death at the young age of five when a drunk bus driver nearly trampled him away.  Sharad Kumar was a victim of polio at the age of two, when he was given the wrong medicine, Varun Singh Bhati got polio at the age of six, at the Tokyo Olympics, if Neeraj Chopra of India was named in the javelin throw, then Devendra Jhajharia in the Paralympics.  Closer to flying more in the game: Devendra, 40, is the world champion and holds the current world record.  At the age of eight, he had to amputate his left hand due to electric shock.  Their courage gives us the message that if they can fly so high, then who has stopped us from taking two steps instead of stopping.

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