The Mercury

The Paralympic­s is about great people finding another way to do things

- Kevin McCallum

TCHAU, Rio. A goodbye that comes almost before I learnt how to say good morning properly. The Rio Paralympic­s have been different. A good different. They weren’t London, they weren’t Beijing, they were a bit of Athens and a wee bit of Sydney.

Uncertain, not entirely wanted and Rio couldn’t really afford them.

But they tried – oh, how they tried. And they just about got it right. They filled a lot of seats, but not all of them. They showed some of it on television, but not all of it. The opening ceremony was not broadcast live by Globo, the media giant. India did not carry any live Paralympic action.

South Africa probably got more live Paralympic­s coverage on the telly than Brazil did through SuperSport with two 24-hour channels. SuperSport reached the most countries with their coverage throughout Africa. Britain, too, gave the Games the respect they deserved on Channel 4.

The Paralympic­s is about respect.

Channel 4 got the tone of the Paralympic­s just right with their show, “The Last leg: Live from Rio”. Adam Hills, Alex Brooker and Josh Widdicombe are the hosts of a part-comedy, part-sports show that, essentiall­y, tells disabled jokes.

Some of the jokes, according to the Guardian, are borderline offensive (two of the hosts are disabled), and while they claim they are not trying to break down barriers, by being on prime time at 8pm with 1.8 million viewers every night, they are reaching an audience for whom the disabled are the forgotten people.

That is part of the aim of the Paralympic­s. To teach us that a wheelchair is not contagious, that people in wheelchair­s are not deaf or retarded, that the cerebral palsied are in an ongoing battle to keep control of parts of their bodies, that those without limbs find a way to drink beer or walk, and that the blind can find their way through the fog.

They are not superhuman, they are just humans who have found another way to do things.

The plight of the disabled in South Africa is an awful one. If Zanele Situ had not discovered she could throw a javelin, they would still be heaving her in and out of taxis on her way to a job as a seamstress in Umtata.

That has been a part of the mission of Team South Africa in Rio. A reminder, every four years, that the disabled are among us. Their medals, the front page stories, the headlines, that is the shop window. These are heroes who seek to inspire and remind.

Today Team SA will fly home with a decent medal haul. Not the 29 that was predicted, but that was never going to happen. Chef de Mission Leon Fleiser said he would be happy with 10 gold medals, and his team is a few shy of that. The rest of the world has caught up. Nigeria and Tunisia are both ahead of South Africa on the table. Nigeria identified their strengths. Six of their eight gold medals came from powerlifti­ng. All of Tunisia’s gold medals are from athletics.

South Africa won gold in cycling, athletics and swimming.

The hard truth is that they missed their superstars. Oscar Pistorius is the name that dare not be spoken here. Team SA officials stepped in when journalist­s tried to ask 14-year old Ntando Mahlangu about whether he was the new blade runner. Mahlangu is Mahlangu. He’s a superstar in the making, but he is not the second anybody.

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