(AP Photo/Petros karadjias)
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CTV.ca News Staff
The Department of National Defence is working with the Canadian
Paralympic Committee on a program called "Soldier On" to help members
of the military who have been permanently injured in action or on the
job to use sports to recover.
The program is still in its infancy and funding and other details
are still being worked out. But there's hope that some of the soldiers
involved in the program will choose to compete for Canada, perhaps at
the 2008 or 2010 Paralympic Games.
"I'm sure it will benefit the soldiers -- especially now with
Afghanistan. A lot of the guys are coming back injured with
disabilities," Sgt. Steve Daniel, who is taking part in the
program, told Canada AM.
"A lot of the guys in the military -- especially combat
arms/infantry -- are in very good shape so they'd be a benefit to the
program."
The aim of "Soldier On" is to help disabled military veterans with
their Rehabilitation and adjustment to their new Disability. But it
also helps speed the rehabilitative process, allows disabled soldiers
to interact with their peers and shows them that they still have
the ability to achieve even after they've undergone an amputation,
a spinal-cord injury, or other injury.
Tracey Ferguson is helping with the program from the Canadian
Paralympic Committee side. She has been a member of the Canadian
Women's Wheelchair Basketball team since 1991 and has competed in four
Paralympics.
She says participating in sport is not only challenging and fun, it has helped improve her quality of life.
"Because you're more agile in the chair and you pick up skills that
you can transfer back into your day-to-day routine," she explained.
Daniel was injured in June 2005 during a free fall parachuting
exercise and fractured his spinal cord. He says he started playing
wheelchair basketball after undergoing surgery, two months of rehab and
physiotherapy.
He has also tried sit-skiing, which he calls "an amazing experience." His ultimate goal would be to compete one day for Canada.
"I'd love the represent my country once again, in a different way, wearing the sports hat," he says.
Ferguson hopes he will and says it's an experience like no other.
"It takes a lot of work, but it's worth every minute," she says.
"To represent Canada on the international stage is a true honour. To
come into a stadium with 80,000 people screaming when they announce
Canada is a feeling that you just can't duplicate. It's a pretty
spectacular to have that opportunity."
To learn more about the "Soldier On" program, tune in to TSN this Sunday for, "Bell Spirit of the Game" at 11 a.m., when host Brian Williams takes a closer look at the new initiative.