
Since 2002,
Kapurura has been an assistant teacher at a crèche for children that need
special care. “I love my job. It is the most important thing to me,” she said.
“I have lots of close friends at work too.”
Kapurura always wanted to have a job. “I wanted to get away,” she says. This
is because in the institutions that she had always been a part of, students
were said to be “handicapped.” She is very close to her parents and they constantly
support her in all her endeavors. Presently both parents are working as teachers
in Zimbabwe.
What has Special Olympics meant to her during her life? “It has been very
good to me. I have enjoyed it. It is nice to meet new people.” Pondering the
question further, Kapurura’s eyes shine and she smiles. “I’m glad I’m a normal
person and Special Olympics helped me realize this,” she concluded.
Meet Delano Beukes
Special Olympics Namibia athlete Delano Beukes’ performance in the five-a-side
football competition at the 2003 Special Olympics World Summer Games was the
stuff that legends are made of. As captain of a seven member team that looked
to be novices compared to experienced teams such as Gibraltar, Portugal and
Barbados, Beukes led his charges by sheer example, and his charisma wooed
hundreds of fans for the team.
But it was on the field of play that his genius was really exposed. The youth
showed true grit, determination and — above all —class as he bobbed, weaved
and danced around his opponents on his way to a 12 goal feast in the tournament.
His magical feet captivated the multitude of fans that thronged to every game
Namibia played. The boy wonder knew it too, and certainly lived up to all
the hype. Every time he had the ball, the crowd would hold its collective
breath, then gasp, as he cleverly beat his opponents with one tormenting skill
after another. Perhaps the biggest draw for the ever-growing number of fans
was Beukes’s signature back-somersault celebration at every goal he scored,
which delighted the crowds.
And so the stage was set for real life dram,a as the much smaller Namibian
team, dented and bruised, made its way to the medal playoffs, owing much to
the exploits of one Beukes.
By the medal rounds, the opposition had realized who the adroit players were
within the Namibian ranks. In their first playoff game against the larger
and more physical team representing Special Olympics Ivory Coast, Beukes was
targeted for the most tackles, thus spending much of the game nursing his
injuries rather than competing. Beukes' teammates Chisto Nel and Gideon Nanub,
who also performed very well throughout the Games, were tackled numerous times
and received their fair share of injuries too. Namibia lost the match 4-2
and was left to fight for a bronze medal against a very crafty Special Olympics
Venezuela team.

Meet
Liinah Bukenya
© from The Irish Times 25 June 2003. Reprinted with permission, all rights
reserved.
Special Olympics Uganda swimmer Liinah (pronounced Leenah) Bukenya learned
the basics of her sport less than a year ago. She started swimming, like most
of us did, by splashing about uncertainly in armbands.
Eleven months later she had improved enough to compete in two aquatic events
in this year's Special Olympics World Summer Games.
It was impossible to know we were watching a beginner as the 12-year-old warmed
up in the National Aquatic Centre in Dublin yesterday, her beaded braids tucked
out of the way under a blue cap as she glided through the water.
And you couldn't tell that a year ago she would have struggled to complete
a length of the pool, from the confident start she made in the finals of the
50m backstroke. Leading all the way, she looked far more comfortable than
a novice could ever hope for. To her delight she completed the race ahead
of her competitors in one minute and three seconds.
Outside, the sun-drenched medal presentation was a moving spectacle in a week
full of emotional highs. Her Royal Highness Queen Sylvia Nagginda of Uganda,
where the swimmer is from, presented the gold medal to Bukenya with a hug.
Nagginda, a patron of the games, knows just how much courage it took for the
swimmer, one of the youngest athletes competing in the games, to get to Dublin.
Two months ago Bukenya lost her father when he died suddenly due to high blood
pressure. She was told the news at her boarding school in the suburbs of Uganda's
capital Kampala, and not surprisingly, the tragedy threw her training into
turmoil in the weeks leading up to the games.
"It was a difficult time," said her coach Roger Mukasa. "The
incredible thing about Liinah is that she is so competitive, she came back
and she kept up her training. In everything she does, running, singing, dancing
or swimming she wants to win but even so this win is a big surprise."
The Irish Times tracked her down yesterday because she was helped by this
newspaper through the Support an Athlete program. Bukenya has no family with
her at the games due to visa problems. But two Irish people who met her while
working in Uganda came to Dublin so they could watc

Eoin Wrenn
from Co Limerick and Michelle Foudy from County Clare both met Bukenya in
the Kampala region when they worked there with orphans. The charity workers
said they thought she was "amazing" as Bukenya grinned back at them,
explaining in a soft voice how she viewed her chances before the race began.
"I thought maybe I might get a silver but this morning I said to myself
that even if I didn't get anything I would be brave," Bukenya said, sitting
on the steps surrounded by well-wishers and showing off her gold medal to
excited Ugandan delegates.
Assistant head of the Ugandan delegation, Edward Babumba, described her as
a girl who is "very cheerful all of the time." In Roscommon last
week she delighted residents of the Ugandan host town by serenading a crowd
with an impromptu rendition of a Special Olympics song.
"At school she loves singing and sport and can read English better than
she can her mother tongue," said Babumba. "I think she was expecting
at least a medal but a gold medal was not expected. It's like a miracle when
you think of what she has gone through. She is very strong in the heart."
Now her coach is hoping Bukenya will repeat this gold medal-winning performance
tomorrow when she competes in the 50m freestyle race. "She is even better
at freestyle than she is at backstroke," said Mukasa.
But yesterday the laughing girl was thinking only about the celebrations planned
in Wesley College in Dundrum where she is staying during the games.
"I am going to sing and dance and eat," she said, still stroking
the glittering prize around her neck. "I am very, very happy."
Editor's note: Bukenya finished in 3rd place in her 50m freestyle race, completing
her Special Olympics competition with a gold and a bronze medal.
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