Vancouver Sun

A MAN IN MOTION 25 YEARS LATER

Anniversar­y relay reaches finish line

- BY ZOE MCKNIGHT

More than two decades after the original Man in Motion tour came to a close, Rick Hansen still knows how to draw a crowd.

Surrounded by hundreds of onlookers, relay participan­ts jogging, walking and wheeling through the media crush, Rick Hansen ended his 273- day cross- country 25th Anniversar­y relay, arriving at the Terry Fox memorial at BC Place accompanie­d by B.C. Premier Christy Clark and Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robinson.

Red balloons, silver noisemaker­s and the distinctiv­e yellow jackets of the medal- bearers coloured the plaza as an emotional Hansen addressed the crowd.

“I’m filled with such joy, such gratitude and such inspiratio­n,” he said, rememberin­g the ups and downs of both the relay and the 1985- 1987 tour in which he wheeled around the world to raise money and awareness for spinal cord injury. He reminded supporters “there is so much work for all of us who are now in motion, a nation in motion, working one good turn at a time to remove barriers,” and work toward ending paralysis from illness or injury.

More than 7,000 participan­ts were chosen to pass the “baton,” a silver medal, from Cape Spear, Nfld. to Vancouver.

John and Joan Tennant were medal- bearers during the Granville Island leg of the tour Monday, but they’ve been involved in Hansen’s pursuits since the 1980s.

After hearing about “a chap who wants to go around the world in a wheelchair,” John, now 84, helped coordinate the Man in Motion tour from the Vancouver offices of the B. C. Sports Hall of Fame, where he was chairman of the board at the time.

His wife organized her friends to become “women in motion” volunteers.

The couple were at the relay finale.

“We thought we just had to come today and carry through with it,” said Joan.

Sonny Davis, 32, has been with the relay from the beginning as an endurance athlete, one of 17 who carried the medal on some long hauls between communitie­s. Davis, who has muscular dystrophy, was invited by the Rick Hansen Foundation to begin the relay in the Maritime provinces.

“I was given the golden opportunit­y to kick it off right from the beginning,” he said. Plus, he added, he got to meet Hansen, his childhood hero.

Hansen said young Canadians are uniquely poised to continue his “ultra- marathon of social change.”

Grade 5 student Maya Cudney presented the Man in Motion with a cheque for $ 5,250, which she raised by selling “hope rope” bracelets for $ 10 apiece online. Jeneece Edroff, 18, kept her wheelchair in line with Hansen’s during the last few blocks of the relay. And Amanda Magyar, 19, carried the medal its last 250 metres. She was honoured onstage for her Birthday Bags 4 Kids charity and involvemen­t with Girl Guides of Canada. “It’s fun, it’s crazy, it’s all emotions mixed in one,” she said.

“I’m really humbled, especially after being chosen by Rick himself.”

After the final ceremony, Hansen thanked Vancouver for becoming an accessible city, pointing to medical advances, infrastruc­ture like curb cuts, ramps and audible crosswalks, and the 2010 Olympics and Paralympic­s held here.

 ?? WARD PERRIN/ PNG ?? talks with Nathan Bragg on Robson Street as the 25th Anniversar­y Man in Motion Relay makes its way to Terry Fox Plaza on Tuesday.
WARD PERRIN/ PNG talks with Nathan Bragg on Robson Street as the 25th Anniversar­y Man in Motion Relay makes its way to Terry Fox Plaza on Tuesday.
 ?? WARD PERRIN/ PNG ?? Wheelchair marathoner Rick Hansen raises the arms of medal bearers Jeneece Edroff ( left) and Amanda Magyar on Vancouver’s Robson Street after a medal exchange during the 25th Anniversar­y Relay on Tuesday.
WARD PERRIN/ PNG Wheelchair marathoner Rick Hansen raises the arms of medal bearers Jeneece Edroff ( left) and Amanda Magyar on Vancouver’s Robson Street after a medal exchange during the 25th Anniversar­y Relay on Tuesday.
 ?? MORE PHOTOS OF THE ANNIVERSAR­Y RELAY AND LAST NIGHT’S TRIBUTE CONCERT AT VANCOUVERS­UN. COM ??
MORE PHOTOS OF THE ANNIVERSAR­Y RELAY AND LAST NIGHT’S TRIBUTE CONCERT AT VANCOUVERS­UN. COM

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