Paralympics 2012:
Brad Snyder, Navy
Veteran Blinded In
Afghanistan, Wins Gold
LONDON -- The explosion that took
away Brad Snyder's sight couldn't touch the Navy lieutenant's fighting spirit.
A year after Snyder stepped on an
improvised explosive device laid by Taliban that he was trying to detect while
on duty in Kandahar, the American is swimming at the London Paralympics – and
adding sporting medals to his military ones.
"It was pretty much immediate
that I (decided I) was going to try and minimize my blindness as much as
possible, and get out and pursue success," Snyder told The Associated
Press.
"Thankfully my support network was pretty savvy and said, `You
should check out this Paralympic swimming thing.'"
Snyder is glad he listened, having
quickly excelled with the same determination he applied to clearing IEDs in one
of the most dangerous Afghanistan assignments.
Before Friday's anniversary of the
blast, Snyder has already been on the London podium twice: winning gold in the
100-meter freestyle and silver in the 50.
"This is something every kid
dreams of when they are 8," he said. "I remember Tom Dolan winning
the 400 IM in Atlanta (at the Olympics).
"Through blindness I've been
able to experience a level of competition I never would have otherwise. So in a
way I am very thankful for that."
Snyder is one of many servicemen in
London using sports to aid their recovery after being horrifically injured on
the front lines of the Afghanistan and Iraq wars.
"I hope that my
generation," Snyder says, "the warriors coming back from Afghanistan
and Iraq who are lying in bed missing a limb or whatever and they don't know
what's next, can see my story and say: `Hey, that's for me. If he can do it, I
can too.'"
Snyder's remarkably fast journey
from the battlefield to elite sporting competition began soon after he
discovered he would never see again.
He is one of the lucky ones, as
shown by the tattoo commemorating a fallen comrade that adorns his chest.
"In my line of work, I had seen
quite a few injuries due to blasts, and none of them were very good,"
Snyder said. "I was able to see out of my left eye for a brief moment
after I was blown up.
"I looked down and saw I had
both my legs and both my arms, and immediately felt relatively optimistic about
the outcome. I felt very thankful that maybe this isn't going to be so
bad."
There are 20 wounded servicemen on
the U.S. Paralympic team, with six veterans of the Afghanistan or Iraq
conflicts.
"To put a different uniform on,
to put a track uniform on instead of my country's combat uniform – it's a big
honor," said Chris Clemens, who will compete in the 100 and 200 sprints
and long jump.
Clemens sustained brain injuries
while serving as a Navy Seal in 2004 when a rocket-propelled grenade exploded
at an Afghan camp. He now competes in the classification group for athletes
with cerebral palsy.
"It allows me to escape my
injury," Clemens said. "It truly allows me to feel free. I see the
disability gone."
That was the sentiment sought by
pioneer doctor Ludwig Guttmann when he organized an archery competition for 16
patients at Stoke Mandeville Hospital in Britain for servicemen injured in
World War II. He held it about the time of the 1948 London Olympics and the
event evolved from 1960 into the Paralympics.
British victims of the Afghan and
Iraq conflicts are also competing, with eight former servicemen among the home
team.
The British program, Help For
Heroes, which assists the war wounded to use sport in their rehabilitation, was
inspired by Derek Derenalagi, who lost both legs in Afghanistan five years ago.
The Fijian-born soldier was
pronounced dead before a pulse was found just as he was being put into a body
bag.
His remarkable recovery was
completed when he competed in the discus last week in front of 80,000 people at
Olympic Stadium.
"I never, never imagined that I
would get through to the Paralympic Games, having suffered multiple injuries,
losing both of my legs," he said. "I watched the Paralympics in
Beijing when I was still in hospital, and I made up my mind to make it into the
Paralympic Games 2012. So I made it."
As did Nick Beighton, who rowed for
Britain less than three years after both legs were blown off in Helmand
Province while he returned from a foot patrol. He spent 13 days in a medically
induced coma.
"Sometimes the biggest battle
is healing your mind, getting over what has happened and rationalizing who you
are now from who you were and what you thought you were going to be in
life," Beighton said.
"You have a very fixed idea of
who you are and what you want to achieve in ... that is what the military
teaches you. You set yourself a target and you push on beyond it."
Finding a way of living when the
focus has previously just been on surviving is often what it comes down to.
"There's no point being in the
corner and letting yourself down after being injured," said British
sitting volleyball player Netra Rana, a Gurkhas rifleman who lost his left knee
in an explosion in Afghanistan.
"This is life. You have to find
your way and find a way to enjoy yourself."
Josh Olson, Shooting
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