By Sportswriters Cao Jainjie and Zhu Feng
BEIJING, Sept. 8 (Xinhua) -- Paralympic athlete Dong
Fuli is glowing when she recalls the June 1 Children's Day 32 years ago.
Basking in admiring stares of her schoolmates, the 7-year-old Dong, dressed in a red skirt made
by her mother, performed a solo dance at the center of a square in north Chinese
city Tangshan. "I have decided to be a dancer when I grow up," she told her
mother that night.
Grow up she will, dance she will never.
A catastrophic earthquake flattened Tangshan on July
28, 1976, killed Dong's father and took away her right leg. When she was 19, her
mother died.
"'Kid, you must be strong. Life is supposed to be fun
and you've only got one to live. Do what is best for you.' That was what my
mother told me before she died," Dong said.
"My mother's words are ringing in my ears all the
time. I'm happy to be alive and I'm happy to be a Paralympic athlete," she
added.
Dong took a job in the city's horticulture department
at the age of 21.
"My superiors and colleagues really cared about me.
They gave me easy work to do. I had regular income. Life was good. But I felt I
meant to be something," recalled Dong.
Dong met a wheelchair basketball player by chance and
the latter suggested she try sports because she looked physically strong.
Dong recommended herself to the Hebei wheelchair
tennis team and without much persuasion, she was accepted.
"My mom had said, 'Being perfect isn't an option of
life. Simply do the best you can do.' I am a hard worker like my mom. Guess
what? One month after I picked up the tennis racket, I won my first national
championship," said Dong.
In 1994, Dong represented China in the Far East and
South Pacific Games for the Disabled (FESPIC Games), picking a doubles silver
and a singles bronze. She claimed the singles gold in Japan Open in 2005 and the
doubles gold and singles silver in the 2006 FESPIC Games.
Dong has a 17-year-old daughter born to her first
husband, who was killed in a car accident in 2005. Her second husband Chen Yong
is a tennis coach.
"Despite back-to-back tragedies, I always look at the
bright side of life. Both my daughter and husband are very supportive of my
career," said Dong.
"I am very proud of my daughter. She has been a good
help in family chores since she was 6. And she is proud of me too. She never
feels embarrassed when she introduces me to her friends."
When a deadly earthquake hit southwest China's
Sichuan province on May 12, Dong was playing a tournament outside China.
"I was saddened when I heard the news," said Dong.
"Everything flashed back to my mind: collapsed buildings, amputated limbs, dead
bodies, grieving faces."
To the survivors of the quake, Guo said: "You must
trust yourself. Be strong. Be Happy. Live a happy life, not only for yourself,
but for the beloved ones who are no longer there."