Daily Sabah (Turkey)

‘GETTING OUT’ BRINGS MEDALS TO VISUALLY IMPAIRED ATHLETE

Döndü Yeşilyurt is targeting the upcoming 2020 Paralympic­s after her foray into weightlift­ing and judo brought her multiple medals and got her out of the house that she was confined to due to her visual impairment

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HAILING from a small village in northern Turkey, Döndü Yeşilyurt came a long way in 12 years. The 26-year-old athlete with multiple internatio­nal and domestic titles in weightlift­ing and judo turned her visual impairment to success.

Yeşilyurt secured spots in national weightlift­ing and judo teams of Turkey and is now preparing for the 2020 Tokyo Paralympic­s. “I feel alive after I took up sports,” she told Anadolu Agency (AA).

The young woman, who was born in a village in Samsun in the Black Sea region, stayed there until 2007 before her father took her and siblings to the city so that they could attend school. Her eyesight which was better while the family was in the village, worsened but Yeşilyurt was not desperate though she says she felt “confined” to her home and she only stepped out to go to school.

“I was strong and people around me always tried to talk me into taking up sports. I finally decided to do arm wrestling and started checking associatio­ns for visually-impaired for any sports club I could enroll in,” she recounted. Then, she met a weightlift­ing trainer in 2016, an encounter that changed her future.

“He told me I was strong enough to win titles and started training me. I won the top Turkish title in 2017 and my trainer also suggested training for judo, seeing how strong my physique was. After one month of training, I signed up for the Turkish judo championsh­ip for visually impaired and won a second title in 2017,” she said. This earned her a place in the national judo team but Yeşilyurt did not stop there and won her first internatio­nal title in Latvia, in a 2017 tournament. Then came a bench press win in 2018 Weightlift­ing Championsh­ip in Egypt and a second spot in power lifting category in the same tournament.

“I had great support both from my family and sports authoritie­s. I had a difficult time while attending university as I had to train both for weightlift­ing and judo and focus on my studies,” she recalled. Still, she is not daunted and plans to continue competing in both sports. “Of course, all athletes dream of competing Olympics and I want to compete in the 2020 Tokyo Paralympic­s in judo,” she said, citing that weightlift­ing is not included in the Paralympic­s yet. “You forget all the troubles you had to endure once you win an internatio­nal title and it motivates you to work harder for bigger goals,” she said.

Yeşilyurt, who described herself as an introvert in high school barely spoke to anyone but teachers, says her foray into sports brought her “self-confidence.” “It is not about winning titles only. It is something that improves you both physically and mentally,” she said.

She also has advice for parents of disabled boys and girls. “They should not raise them as people dependent on them. They should let them go out alone, they should raise them as people with self-confidence,” she concluded.

 ??  ?? Döndü Yeşilyurt has won titles both in weightlift­ing and judo in only a couple of years after she took up both sports.
Döndü Yeşilyurt has won titles both in weightlift­ing and judo in only a couple of years after she took up both sports.

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