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UPDATED: September-5-2008  
Talent of Disabled People
Special events have been organized for disabled people to participate in
 

This year has been designated the International Year of the Disabled Person. China is paying special tribute to the achievements of its disabled citizens, many of whom have overcome handicaps to contribute to society. Further, this year, special events have been organized for disabled people to participate in.

Gao Shiqi, a famous author of popular science articles and adviser to the Chinese Association of Science and Technology, is a disabled person. In 1926 when he was studying medicine in the United States he cut a finger while operating on a guinea pig for encephalitis A. Thus he contracted the disease and became paralysed, lost his hearing and his speech became impaired. He was only 20 at that time but he had to rely on others for everyday life.

Gao Shiqi was determined to overcome his misfortune. He wrote from morning till night,although he could only write a few hundred characters a day. By 1937, he had written more than 100 popular science pieces and translated numerous foreign scientific articles into Chinese. Later, as his health deteriorated further, he could no longer write and had to dictate his articles to his secretary.

Since the founding of New China, Gao has continued to write. His most acclaimed writings include: Bacteria and Man,The Origin of Life, The Struggle Against Infectious Diseases, Earth, Our Mother and Scientific Poems. Now, at the age of 75, he has begun to write his memoirs. Gao Shiqi is just one of thousands of disabled persons in China who have full confidence in life.

Last April, an exhibition of calligraphy, painting and handicraft by disabled people was held in Nanjing. The artists' ages ranged from 11 to 81. On display were more than 500 works of calligraphy, painting, seal engraving, photography, carving, weaving, embroidery and kite-making.

A lacquerware screen decorated with pictures of traditional Chinese beauties, made by two deaf persons, Zhao Baoxiang and Cheng Guanghua, won high praise at the exhibit. Liu Dajiang, a deaf painter from Wuxi, proudly proclaimed: "We deaf people can make contributions to society." His 3-metre-wide traditional Chinese painting Spring at Taihu Lake was hung in the middle of the exhibition hall. Many visitors marvelled at the 14-year-old student who demonstrated his penmanship with his maimed wrist while onlookers crowded around. He had just won a second class prize in the national competition of calligraphy for young- sters. Similar exhibitions were also held in other cities including Shanghai, Qingdao and Shenyang.

A sports meet in Beijing reflected the life and abilities of disabled people from another angle. The competitions opened on April 15 and closed one and a half months later. The participants' ages ranged from 8 to 65. There were contests in basketball, table tennis, track and field events and Chinese chess.

Chess was the only event that blind people participated in.Six players were victorious in the first round, including Shao Zuofu, a second year student of the Mathmatics Department of the Beijing Teachers' University, and Chao Fuchun, a worker from one of Beijing's suburban counties. Shao, 29, is the only blind college student in Beijing. He said that playing chess helps him study maths. Chao is a flute player in Beijing's blind people's band.

Clubs for disabled people have been set up in many provinces and municipalities in China. Disabled people enjoy many activities in these recreation centres. Popular activities there include reading, table tennis, badminton, chess, cards, watching TV and listening to and playing music. Events are often organized by the centres and sometimes groups go to factories or the countryside to give performances.

China is also participating in some international events in the International Year of the Disabled Person: Ten paintings selected from about 700 have been sent to Japan for the World Exhibition of Paintings by Disabled Children. Included are The Cock by an armless 9year-old boy who holds the brush in his mouth and The Monkey King by 13-year-old Lin Fusheng who paints with a brush between his toes.

(Beijing Review p.30, No. 32, 1981)


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