Paralympic champion brings documentary to Yellowknife

Paralympic champion Marnie Peters hopes to challenge stereotypes when she screens a documentary in Yellowknife on Wednesday.

Peters won wheelchair basketball gold with Canada at the Sydney Paralympics in 2000.

Now, as part of NWT Disability Awareness Week, she’s in Yellowknife with a documentary entitled My Way To Olympia. (Entry to the screening is free – it runs from 7pm at Northern United Place.)

Shot in the run-up to the London 2012 Paralympics, the film follows disabled director Niko von Glasow as he comes to terms with something he hates: the Paralympics.

“He thinks sports are stupid and, more importantly, that the Paralympics are stupid,” says Peters. “He totally doesn’t get what the big deal is about sports for people with disabilities, and why the Paralympics are such a big deal.”

Over the course of the documentary, Von Glasow’s preconceptions are challenged as he follows a one-handed Norwegian table tennis player, the Rwandan sitting volleyball team, an American archer without arms, and a Greek paraplegic boccia player.

Peters wants people to take at least two things from the movie: the first being the effect sports can have.

“Sports has had a huge impact on my life. I had a car accident when I was a teenager – like everybody else in the world, they think, ‘It’s never going to happen to me.’ And the reality was, it happened to me,” she tells Moose FM.

“I was really big into sports before my accident. I was a big soccer player and cyclist. After my accident, a friend told me to try wheelchair basketball – and the truth is, I met some of my best friends playing wheelchair basketball. It taught me a lot about myself as a person, about overcoming obstacles and fighting through things.”

Related: NWT sending 30 volunteers to 2015 Pan American Games

The film’s second lesson concerns those obstacles: the barriers Peters and other disabled people face on a day-to-day basis.

“One of the things I hate most is when people say, ‘I know what you’re going through – I broke my leg and I was in a wheelchair for two weeks.’ Or they had eye surgery and had to wear a patch. Well, you know, you experienced some changes in your life but not what it was like to have a disability full-time,” she says.

“The movie follows the challenges these athletes have – it makes people see the barriers society puts in front of us.

“I’m not disabled because I had a car accident. I’m disabled because we don’t do a very good job making sidewalks or building buildings. That’s what impedes me from achieving things, not my own capabilities.

“That’s what the movie gets through to people: disabled people are stopped from achieving by the barriers society puts in front of us.”

On Twitter: On Thin Ice – emergency preparedness for northerners with disabilities

Peters will also speak in a number of Yellowknife schools as part of NWT Disability Awareness Week.

“The challenges in the built environment, and with transportation and things, really aren’t much different in Yellowknife to many other parts of Canada,” she says.

“Sometimes there needs to be a bit more thought and consultation in terms of what are your needs, and how can we make that work?

“It’s incremental steps and you have to start somewhere. I think that’s partly where the North is at right now – but it’s recognizing that those same steps are happening in other cities as well.”

Ollie Williams
Ollie Williams
Hello! I'm the one with the British accent. Thanks for supporting CJCD. To contact me, you can email me, find me on Twitter or call (867) 920-4663.

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Tuktoyaktuk RCMP lay charges in bootleg liquor investigation

Tuktoyaktuk RCMP are laying charges following an investigation into liquor bootlegging earlier this week.

Youth engage with Tłı̨chǫ language in unconventional immersive spaces

While in-person On the Land learning continues to be central to Tłı̨chǫ language revitalization, the Tłı̨chǫ language division is looking at ways to engage with youth through new immersive platforms, like virtual spaces, that honour history and traditions. Danielle Dacanay with the Tłı̨chǫ Government’s Language Division emphasized that virtual resources are supplements to learning the language in the traditional way, they are not a replacement for it.

New microgrant stream wants youth to plant language seeds outside school

“100 youth projects wanted in French,” a new microgrant program wants youth to plant language learning seeds outside school. A network of action-research teams in Canada, other parts of North America, Africa and Europe is launching a youth grant stream to support French language engagement outside of conventional spaces. Youth across the country aged 14 to 30 are eligible for 100 microgrants in support of grassroots initiatives as part of this program run by the Dialogue Network.

Water testing at another Yellowknife school confirms elevated lead and copper

Testing at another school site in the city of Yellowknife showed elevated levels of lead and copper in water present in some of its drinking taps. Earlier this month, testing showed four other school buildings in Yellowknife and a school in Behchokǫ̀ had elevated levels of both copper and lead in water. Since comprehensive testing of schools across the territory began this fall, 28 school sites out of 34 announced to date have tested positive for elevated levels of lead.

Testing at more NWT buildings confirms lead in water

Fort Smith officials said water testing at municipal buildings has confirmed the presence of lead. According to the announcement, water samples at the Town Hall, the Fire Hall, and the Municipal Services Building continue to show elevated levels of lead.