Helen Keller is a famous American woman writer, educator, philanthropist and social activist. When 19 months old, he was deprived of sight and hearing because of acute gastric congestion and cerebral congestion. 1887 met Sullivan. June 1899 was admitted to Radcliffe Women's College of Harvard University. 1968 June 1 died at the age of 87, but lived in a dull and silent world for 86 years.
During this period, she has finished 14 books. Among them, the most famous ones are: If you give me three days of light, my life story and the story of the stone wall. She devoted herself to the welfare of the disabled and established many charitable organizations. 1964 won the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and was selected as one of the "Top Ten American Idols of the 20th Century" by Time magazine the following year.
2. Shi Tiesheng's wheelchair life
17 years old, middle school jumped the queue and went to a remote mountain village in Shaanxi. Once, I was herding cattle in a ravine and suddenly it rained heavily. I began to have a high fever after being soaked to the skin. Later, my legs couldn't walk. After returning to Beijing, he was diagnosed as "multiple sclerosis", which led to paraplegia of both legs. Suddenly without legs, Shi Tiesheng's temper became extremely gloomy and furious.
Always losing his temper with his mother. More unfortunately, liver disease took the life of his mother who had been with him, and her sudden departure was like a sap waking Shi Tiesheng up.
Shi Tiesheng's first book was published. He took a pen and paper and bumped into a road in the newspaper, which was his road and hope for survival. When he was stabbed by the thorns of life, he did not sink, but bravely looked up.
3. American Olympic hero: Wilma Rudolph
Although Wilma Rudolph was disabled by polio, she suffered from pneumonia and polio when she was a child. A little girl who needed to walk with iron braces on one foot still won three gold medals in the track and field events of 1960 Rome Olympic Games. The Olympic legend was born on June 23rd, 1940/kloc-0, the child of a railroad worker's family in Tennessee, USA.
When she was a child, pneumonia and scarlet fever caused high fever and polio, which made her left leg atrophy and unable to walk. She needs iron filings to support her teaching.
After taking off her iron shoes, her athletic talent gradually developed. In just four years, at the age of 16, she was selected for the American 1956 Melbourne Olympic sprint team and began her legendary journey.
4. Beethoven
He was born in a civilian family in Bonn, Germany. He studied music with his father since he was a child and showed his talent in music very early.
By the age of 26, Beethoven had attracted the attention of the music industry. However, the disease is approaching Beethoven quietly day by day, and there is always a "buzzing" sound in his ear. Beethoven was deaf. However, Beethoven left his retirement and escape. External disasters inspired the Bedouin's inner strength, and he continued to pursue his favorite music, completing the famous Second Symphony and Hero Symphony.
5. Zhang Haidi
At the age of five, Zhang Haidi suffered from spinal hemangioma, which led to paraplegia. However, she is physically disabled, determined, hard-working and helpful. Facing the cruel challenge of fate, Zhang Haidi didn't feel depressed or depressed. Although she didn't have a chance to go to school, she taught herself college English, Japanese, German and Esperanto, and took college and postgraduate courses.
From 65438 to 0983, Zhang Haidi began to engage in literary creation, and successively translated The Seaside Clinic, Little Miller's Travels and Rebecca's New School, and created works of more than one million words, such as Windows Open to the Sky and Life and Dreams in Wheelchairs. Now he is a first-class writer in the literary creation room of Shandong Writers Association.