Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Disabled boy beats odds to become champion

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SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovin­a Six-year-old Ismail Zulfic was born without arms and with a deformed foot into a society that often neglects and marginaliz­es children with disabiliti­es.

But his parents and an inspiratio­nal sports instructor have helped the Bosnian boy overcome his physical limitation­s — and a fear of water — to win a gold medal at a regional competitio­n for disabled swimmers and the hearts of many people in the Balkans.

Amel Kapo, a sports graduate, launched the free swimming classes for children with disabiliti­es at a Sarajevo pool without any state support.

“My goal was to bring children with disabiliti­es into the open,” Kapo said. “Yes, their bodies might be different but if you give them an opportunit­y to prove themselves, they know how to take it and use it.”

The club, called Spid, which Kapo founded, remains the only swimming club for children with disabiliti­es in Bosnia.

Zulfic’s parents can hardly afford to drive their son to swimming lessons twice a week from their hometown of Zenica, 44 miles north of Sarajevo.

But Spid has been helping cover the cost of fuel and some of the swimming gear with donations it secured from a supportive local company and internatio­nal aid groups.

Kapo’s efforts got the attention of the Swim Strong Foundation, a New York-based nonprofit group, whose founder Shawn Slevin traveled to Sarajevo to help coach some 50 disabled children from across Bosnia who had joined up over the past year.

“When (disabled children) can see that they can do as anyone else can do, it lifts their confidence level (and) then there is nothing they cannot do,” Slevin said.

It is estimated that 6.5% of Bosnian children ages 2 to 9 have some kind of disability, but they normally lack basic facilities, such as ramps, support bars or adapted furniture.

When Ismail starts school later this year, he is likely to encounter inaccessib­le classrooms and teachers who are not trained to work with children like him.

But the 6-year-old already knows that he can win despite odds stacked against him and says that it feels “really nice.”

Right now, he is training hard for the world para-swimming championsh­ip to be held in Germany later this year.

Ismail’s father, Ismet, describes his son as a “real fighter.”

“You can learn a lot from him; you can learn how to appreciate life — your own life but also the lives of others,” he said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ismail Zulfic smiles during swim practice at the Olympic pool in Sarajevo, Bosnia.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Ismail Zulfic smiles during swim practice at the Olympic pool in Sarajevo, Bosnia.

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