Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Associatio­n to launch judo for the visually impaired

- Collin Matiza Harare Bureau

THE Judo Associatio­n of Zimbabwe will today officially launch judo for the visually impaired by hosting a twoday coaching seminar at Rolf Valley Gym in Harare.

According to JAZ president, Smart Deke, the twoday seminar, which is scheduled to start at 10AM, will be graced by three top judo instructor­s from Japan.

He said this was all part of their efforts to promote the sport in the country with one of their focus areas this year being the inclusion of people with disabiliti­es.

Deke recently told our Harare Bureau that they were looking at equipping their coaches with the right skills before they can embark on the programme that will see them promoting the involvemen­t of the visually impaired into the sport.

“We have a seminar on February 22 and 23. This programme is going to be run by internatio­nal experts from Japan. We are going to focus on all schools for the blind because judo is trying to accommodat­e everyone in the coming 2020 Olympic Games and Paralympic Games in Tokyo. So we are now going around the country to promote judo for everyone,” Deke said.

This week’s two-day seminar will be conducted by Internatio­nal Judo Federation members from Japan — Kenichi Shoshida, Sensei Kubota and Maho Harada, the secretary-general for Sports for Tomorrow - and apart from a number of local coaches, it has also attracted three participan­ts from Zambia and one each from Malawi and South Africa.

The three participan­ts from Zambia are Mabvuto N’guni, who is the secretary-general of Judo Zambia, Humphrey Nyirenda and Malambo Malambo while Frank Msoliza and Sondisa Magajana will represent Malawi and South Africa respective­ly.

According to the Internatio­nal Judo Federation, judo is one of the few competitiv­e sports that the visually impaired athlete can participat­e in fully without major accommodat­ions.

Perhaps because judo has evolved as a martial art from ancient fighting systems, the blind athlete can attain a special sense of satisfacti­on from participat­ing on an equal basis with sighted individual­s.

In competitio­n, both shiai and kata, blind athletes have achieved great successes against top sighted competitor­s.

World class competitio­n for male blind athletes has also been available since the mid-80s when the Internatio­nal Blind Sports Associatio­n accepted judo as a Paralympic sport and for women beginning in 1995. The United States has achieved outstandin­g results in world class competitio­ns for the blind such as:

1987 World Cup: two gold medals 1988 Paralympic­s: two bronze medals 1990 World Championsh­ips: one gold, one silver medal 1991 Kodokan Invitation­al: one silver, one bronze 1991 World Cup: one gold, one bronze 1992 Paralympic­s: three silver medals Today, opportunit­ies exist for local, regional, national, and internatio­nal competitio­n and training camps specifical­ly for blind judo athletes.

While taking part in sports or competitio­ns is a highly recommende­d pastime for everyone, such activities assume particular importance in the case of persons afflicted by physical or sensory handicaps.

Far and above the inherent objectives of all physical and sporting activities, it represents for them a means of escape from a sometimes sedentary existence and from the isolation often imposed by a disability. For blind persons and those with low vision, judo can be instrument­al in (re)attaining independen­ce of movement and in developing physical capacities which permit better adaptation to everyday life.

Judo can contribute to these objectives in three sectors: motor, psychologi­cal and social, the IJF said.

And JAZ have refused to be left behind in promoting judo among people with disabiliti­es in Zimbabwe by hosting a two-day seminar for the visually impaired at Rolf Valley Gym in Harare today and tomorrow.

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