New Straits Times

WHEELCHAIR DANCERS FIND THEIR GROOVE

Wheelchair-dancing champion aims to change perception­s towards the disabled in China

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WHEN she lost a leg to cancer at the age of 10, Shao Yue never imagined she could learn to dance. Now, she’s a national wheelchair-dancing champion who hopes her story can help change perception­s of the disabled in China.

“People think we face a lot of difficulty going out... and need to rely entirely on others to survive,” said the 34-year-old winner of multiple competitio­ns.

“But we actually don’t need that much help. And we don’t need everyone to look at us as outsiders,” adds Shao, a mother who drives her daughter to school each day.

Despite gradually modernisin­g attitudes in China, people with disabiliti­es say they are still treated as outsiders.

Shao trains in Shanghai with a dance troupe comprising people with hearing or visual impairment­s, as well as dancers who use wheelchair­s.

The troupe aims to combat stigmas by giving disabled people a platform to express themselves through art.

“Some disabled people often feel trapped,” said Zhou Ziqiang, 38, a non-disabled dance instructor, who started training artistes with disabiliti­es in 2006.

“Once they join these groups, they can slowly open up and become

closer to society.”

In recent years, some local government­s have worked to increase the number of fitness programmes available to the disabled, and invested in building dedicated sporting facilities and training instructor­s.

Liu Huaiyu, 20, stayed near the back of the studio during a recent troupe practice session as he and his fellow dancers spun gracefully in their wheelchair­s to pulsating Chinese pop music.

Despite his shyness, Liu said dancing has helped bring him out of his shell.

“I used to be quite self-loathing. I didn’t like talking to people,” said Liu, who lost a leg in a car accident when he was 10.

“After dancing, I even go out sometimes for strolls now.”

Another team in their troupe made up of dancers with hearing impairment­s watched conductors at the front and back of the stage count out the beats of the routines on their fingers.

“Even though we can’t hear the music, we can still follow the beat,” said Chen Cen, 34, who was born without hearing but has danced since she was 6 years old.

“We put in a lot more work than people who can hear in order to complete a routine like this,” she signed.

She hopes more Chinese can recognise the “fighting spirit” required of disabled people — rather than viewing them as an “inconvenie­nce”, as she puts it.

For wheelchair dancer Shao, the most important thing is how she sees herself.

“I don’t despair just because I have a disability. I just have a different kind of life, and I can choose to live it in a more exciting way,” Chen added.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Wheelchair dancers from the Shanghai Oriental Pearl TV Tower Handicappe­d Art Troupe performing at Shanghai Disneyland on Dec 3, the Internatio­nal Day of Persons with Disabiliti­es.
AFP PIC Wheelchair dancers from the Shanghai Oriental Pearl TV Tower Handicappe­d Art Troupe performing at Shanghai Disneyland on Dec 3, the Internatio­nal Day of Persons with Disabiliti­es.

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