Wheelchair
Games Provide Therapy, Fun for
Disabled Vets
By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service
OMAHA, Neb. - About
500 disabled veterans, including
recently wounded warriors from
Iraq and Afghanistan, had their
final day of competition on July
29 at the 28th National Veterans
Wheelchair Games.
The event is the worlds
largest annual wheelchair sports
competition. It brings together
veterans with spinal cord
injuries, amputations or other
mobility or neurological
conditions to compete in 17
different events.
Veterans Affairs Secretary James
B. Peake, who opened the competition
July 25, called it a big part of
the veterans rehabilitation
and said the games provide a
therapeutic extension of
the top-notch health care
veterans receive in VA medical
centers.
"Rehabilitation is crucial
to living a full life following
an injury, Peake said.
I applaud all of the
veterans participating as they
strive to achieve their goals
during this week of athletic
competition.
Competition was running fierce
during the third day of
competition Monday, July 28, with
participants fanned out to venues
across Omaha to compete in
swimming, basketball, track,
weight lifting, softball, air
guns, quad rugby, nine-ball
billiards, field events, bowling,
table tennis, archery, hand
cycling, wheelchair slalom,
trapshooting, a motorized
wheelchair relay, and power
soccer.
In addition, athletes with
prostheses had the option of
competing in several stand-up
events.
Airmen 1st Class Silvia Lisseth
and Crystal Holk, both
active-duty airmen at nearby
Offutt Air Force Base served as
volunteers at a platform in the
Qwest Center, where winners
received their medals.
Lisseth said she was blown away
by the veterans enthusiasm
for the games.
Its amazing to see
how much they put into this and
how much heart they have in it,
she said. Holk said she felt
honored to announce each winners
awards before the medal
presentations. Its
really inspiring to see how
motivated they are to come and
win these, and then to see the
big smiles when they wear those
medals, she said.
But
Randy L. Pleva Sr., president of
the Paralyzed Veterans of
America, which cosponsors the
games, said the games are about
much more than medals. Theyre
a mix of camaraderie, competition
and courage, he said.
And theyre
rehabilitation at its best for
our paralyzed veterans.
Tiffany Smith, a recreational
therapist from Walter Reed Army
Medical Center in Washington,
brought five patients to the
games, three of them for the
first time. Its a
real morale boost for them to
come here and get challenges
personally outside the hospital
setting, she said.
The games bring back their
competitive streak and show them
that they are able to return to
what they used to do in a
competitive way, Smith
said. Meanwhile, they provide a
forum for building leadership,
self-esteem and a sense of
teamwork, she said.
Participating in the games opens
a whole doorway for them,
said Steve Zaracki, a sports
coordinator who works for the
Paralyzed Veterans of America.
You see their spirit open
up. Its inspiring.
Zaracki said its
particularly gratifying to work
with recent combat veterans who
still are adjusting to their
wounds.
It makes you really want to
provide for them because of all
that they have done for us,
he said. You want to
motivate them. You want to push
them. You want to inspire them to
say, Look, I can do this.
There is life in a wheelchair.
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