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"Determination
gives you the resolve to keep going in spite of the
roadblocks that lay before you" - and Ghanaian born
Emmanuel Ofosu Yeboah can attest to this. Born with a severely deformed
leg,
Emmanuel
was determined to show the people of Ghana that
those with disabilities are capable of great things.
So
he jumped on a bicycle and started an improbable,
Forrest Gump-like journey across his nation to prove
just that.
"I
see how people are treated in Ghana, and that's why I am
giving all my effort to this," said the 28-year-old man,
who was born without a shin bone. "I don't want to give
up. I don't want to give up."
Yeboah's goal has now gone global.
He was in California this
week to receive one of cable network ESPN's ESPY awards,
an honor given to courageous athletes that's named after
the late tennis star Arthur Ashe. Then he traveled to
Minnesota to prepare for Saturday's Life Time Fitness
Triathlon - where he will be responsible for the 25-mile
bike portion of the race for a relay team participating
in the event.
"It's been very good for me
to come here," Yeboah said. "The people in Ghana, they
can see how famous I am in the States. So many people
there are very appreciative of what I am doing."
The details of this story,
revealed through a soon-to-be-released documentary film
about his life, "Emmanuel's Gift," and a recent phone
interview with Yeboah, are nothing short of fascinating.
Ghana, a nation of about 20
million people on the continent's west coast, is
considered one of Africa's most enlightened countries as
the first to establish its independence and a democratic
government. But disabled people account for
approximately 10 percent of the population, and they are
generally shunned from society and resigned to a life of
begging on the streets.
Yeboah was born without the
lower part of his right leg, with a normal-sized foot
essentially dangling from his thigh instead of a knee.
Because of the disability,
his mother, Comfort, was advised to either kill him or
leave him in the forest to die. Because of the
disability, his father, Dickson, abandoned the family.
But Yeboah refused to accept such a cruel fate.
"His mission is to change
perceptions. He's the epitome of doing what you can with
limited resources," said Bob Babbit, a co-founder of the
California-based Challenged Athletes Foundation, which
provided Yeboah with the bicycle that jump-started his
quest three years ago.
Yeboah was making about $2
per day shining shoes, trying to provide a living for
him and his family members, when he learned about CAF's
grant program through a missionary in town. Praying to
God while he wrote his first letter to America, Yeboah
asked for a bike he could ride across the country - more
than 370 miles to disprove the stereotype about the
disabled.
After getting the hang of
this awkward activity - basically pedaling with his
healthy leg while his right foot rested on the frame -
Yeboah secured enough sponsors to begin his ride.
Skepticism hounded him, but the publicity picked up as
people began to realize he was serious - and successful.
Wearing a red, yellow and blue striped shirt, Yeboah
rolled through village after village as wide-eyed
children chased behind in awe and celebration.
The foundation later invited
him to the San Diego area for its annual 56-mile bike
ride in November 2002, his first trip outside of Ghana.
Soon after, in April 2003, he was fitted with a
prosthetic right leg. The next year, he shaved three
hours off his time in the same event.
These accomplishments have
been big enough in their own right, but Yeboah is not
keen on stopping. He has people to take care of back
home. One project on the horizon is the organization of
a wheelchair basketball team that will represent Ghana
at the 2008 Paralympic Games in Beijing.
"I believe that if it's not
coming from your heart, you give up," Yeboah said. "But
this is coming from your heart. You never give up."
Another part of his mission
is to secure governmental regulations that will protect
the rights of the disabled, something that's commonplace
in the United States but unprecedented in Ghana.
"I believe that I'm not
going to end it here," Yeboah said. "I'm going to
continue until the time that I will die." |
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