By Zheng Jie
HONG KONG, Sept. 10 (Xinhua) -- Born without arms due
to thalidomide damage, German rider Bettina Eistel rode amazingly with horse
Fabuleux 5 at the Beijing Paralympic equestrian venue in Hong Kong's Shatin and
took a bronze.
Eistel, born in 1961, controls the reins with both
her mouth and her toes and has established dominance over the horse. The bronze
came from Grade III Individual Dressage contest in the on-going Beijing 2008
Paralympic Games.
In 2004 Athens Paralympics, Eistel won two silver and
a bronze medals.
Eistel is one of the many Para-Equestrian athletes
trying to fulfill their riding goals with a unique strength and
determination.
Yip Sui Hong of Hong Kong, 39, has difficulty in
using his legs because of cerebral palsy. The Grade Ia rider, the most severely
disabled, began riding with a visit to the local Riding for the Disabled
Association at the age of eight.
"My disability changed my life and I have accepted
it. I can try to be the best given my potential and talent," said Yip.
Yip said, "Most disabled people in Asia see
themselves as victims and I always thought it is not about the disability, it's
all about the mentality, the belief, the confidence."
Many Para-Equestrian athletes started riding as
able-bodied people, but various accidents left them paralyzed. They are trying
very hard to overcome misfortune and got back in the saddle. They believe in
their abilities despite their disabilities.
Philippa Johnson, a Grade IV rider, is South African
leading rider who won two silver medals at Athens 2004 - in the Individual
Championship and in Individual Freestyle. She also took home a silver and a
bronze from the World Para-Equestrian Dressage Championships in Hartpury,
England, 2007.
She was involved in a car accident in October 1998.
She was encouraged by her long-time family friend Katrina Puttick - now her
coach and the South African Team Manager - to return to riding.
Johnson's teammate Marion Milne rode as an
able-bodied athlete in Jumping and Dressage before her spine was injured by a
bullet in an attempted hijack when she was 17. The incident left her in a
wheelchair, but she was encouraged to get back in the saddle.
"That was a completely different experience. You
don't feel everything is the same as before the accident. So it was a huge step
to take and a very big challenge. I took a very long time just to find the
balance in my walk and it was a lot of work," Milne said.
Altogether, 73 riders from 28 countries and regions
are competing in the five-day Equestrian events of the Beijing 2008 Paralympic
Games at the Shatin Equestrian Venue in Hong Kong.