
"Boxing makes me
feel more
and more
normal,"
says
Ramathan.
(Reuters) |
KAMPALA —
Bashir
Ramathan, a
36-year-old
Ugandan
Muslim,
might have
lost his
eyesight but
he certainly
has not lost
faith in
himself or
hope in
life.
"You find
other blind
people sad
at home. I
say to them,
you have to
move. If you
stay like
that, you
could bring
more
sickness on
your body,"
Ramathan
told Agence
France-Presse
(AFP) in an
interview on
Tuesday,
March 25.
Ramathan
lost his
sight in
1995 and
doctors told
him his
optic nerves
had become
paralyzed
and that he
would never
see again.
His mother
died the
year before
he lost his
eyesight.
The year
after, his
grandmother
died.
Then, unable
to cope with
his
blindness,
his wife
left him the
following
year, taking
their
daughter
with her.
|
But the practicing
Muslim refused to
give in.
He learned how to do
simple household
tasks and run
errands by himself.
"It forced me to
become strong. I had
to learn how to be
alone," said
Ramathan, leaning
against a wall with
cracked paint.
"I was told by my
parents I could do
everything."
The German
Ramathan is not only
trying to live a
normal life but
to exceed in the
sport he began as a
child; boxing.
He resumed his
boxing career three
years ago.
Every morning, he
takes a two-kilometer,
hour-long jog with a
guide who runs
alongside to prevent
Ramathan from
hurting himself.
He then heads to the
gym for
weight-lifting and
training.
"Most people were
surprised," noted
the blind Muslim
boxer, jumping rope.
"They say, 'How can
this one play?'"
Ramathan recognizes
that boxing is more
difficult without
sight, but says he
has learned how to
"see" with his ears.
In matches, he
listens for the
breathing and the
footsteps of the
other boxer to guide
his own actions.
When the floor is
too padded to allow
noise, a coach
stands outside of
the ring to shout
directions to both
blindfolded boxers.
His coach, Hassan
Khalia, 45,
attributes
Ramathan's skill to
his talent for
listening.
"Before he became
blind he was a boxer
-- I knew being
blind would not hurt
him," he says. "He's
still one of the
best."
Now Ramathan's name
stirs amazement in
coaches, while
trainers gush over
his skill and
competitors quake in
fear.
He has fought in
over 15 matches
since he resumed
boxing and remains
undefeated.
Peers call him "the
German" -- a
reference to
Germany's tenacity
on the football
field, mirroring
Ramathan's in the
ring.
Others praise his
agile movements and
fine-tuned reflexes.
Robert Sembooze, a
25-year-old boxer,
says he was wary of
entering the ring
with Ramathan for a
blindfolded match.
"Boxers fear to
compete against him
blindfolded because
Bashir can sense
faster than others
and is very sharp,"
he admitted.
"If there were more
blind boxers, he
could be a
champion."
Ramathan aspires to
be a contestant in
this year's
Paralympics, but
lacks a sponsor.
A builder before he
became blind, he now
relies on his local
mosque for
sustenance.
"Boxing makes me
feel more and more
normal."