Special journey begins for 11 China families
10/10/2007 13:48
Shanghai Daily new
Eleven families from 11 cities across China were united in Shanghai yesterday
for a "Blending Journey" to the 2007 Special Olympics World Summer Games. All
the families have one thing in common: they have a family member who is mentally
challenged. Organized by the Special Olympics steering committee, the
"Blending Journey" is the last event of a program called "Special Olympics
e-home," a volunteer program sponsored by the Website Shanghai Online
(www.online.sh.cn). It aims to help needy families with intellectually
disabled members to mingle with the athletes and attend events of the Special
Olympics. A welcome ceremony was held soon after the 11 families arrived in
Shanghai yesterday. "In my heart, the Special Olympics is just like my family
from which I can feel the confidence and happiness in my life," Zhang Jinhao, an
intellectually challenged child in the family from Wenzhou, Zhejiang Province,
said at the ceremony. "I hope I can become a useful person for society when I
grow up, and I believe that I can do it." During the ceremony, Zhang Ming, a
21-year-old intellectually challenged singer of the family from Beijing, sang a
traditional Chinese song "Father." "I want to dedicate the song to all of the
people who take care of me like my father," he said. Zhang sang the song with
tears. When he finished, he said loudly: "Papa I love you." The tearful
audience applauded wildly as he hugged his father. Special Olympics
International Chairman Timothy Shriver said: "I want to thank you, Zhang's
father, because you have brought up such a good son." Two families prepared
drawings by their intellectually challenged children as gifts for Eunice Kennedy
Shriver, founder of the Special Olympics. During the ceremony, the mentally
disabled people from the 11 families also signed their names on a giant China
map at the places they come from. Today, the 11 families will watch Special
Olympics competitions and visit the Oriental Pearl tower. They will also
watch the closing ceremony of the Games at the Jiangwan Stadium tomorrow
night. "The program of Special Olympics e-home provides a platform for
families with mentally disabled to blend into the 2007 Special Olympics World
Summer Games," said Yang Jie, manager of the Website Shanghai Online. "We
launched the first phase of the program 100 days before the Games. "The
application process was through the Website and 20 local families volunteered to
take part, establishing close relationships with local needy families," he
said. "At the farewell party, I saw an autistic child holding hands with a
local family member, calling her sister and reluctant to leave. "At that time
I felt we did the right thing."
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