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24 NOVEMBER 2016
Supplement
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I WOULD RATHER WALK WITH A FRIEND IN THE DARK THAN ALONE IN THE LIGHT American educator Helen Keller overcame the adversity of being blind and deaf to become one of the 20th century’s leading humanitarians
G
adi Yarkoni was 19 when he lost his sight. He was a soldier at the time, in active service during the Second Lebanon War, and got shot in the skull. The bullet severed his optic nerve and the injury blinded him for life. Plunged into a world of darkness before reaching the age of 20 is unimaginable and, for many, would mark the end of all possibilities. Fortunately, Gadi isn’t one of them and this was never more apparent to his family and countrymen than when he crossed the finish line at the Rio Paralympics in August, taking ninth place. But Gadi has crossed the line in many races and this was his second time participating in the Games, as he ran tethered to his trainer in the marathon in London in 2012. Impressively, now aged 41, the IDF veteran shows no sign of taking off his running shoes. But behind every successful story of miraculous recovery there is a significant other providing motivation. For Gadi, it is a golden Labrador called Butch. Together, they make a formidable team and Gadi, who once stood to attention in the army, is now giving the orders to his four-legged companion, who responds to his every command.