I HAVE A DREAM BIG IDEAS Bebe Vio I HAVE A DREAM Bebe Vio I have a dream © European Investment Bank, 2019 All rights reserved. All questions on rights and licensing should be addressed to [email protected] Photos: © Gettyimages, © Shutterstock. All rights reserved. Authorisation to reproduce or use these photos must be requested directly from the copyright holder. The findings, interpretations and conclusions are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the European Investment Bank. pdf: QH-03-19-398-EN-N ISBN 978-92-861-4313-7 doi: 10.2867/861723 eBook: QH-03-19-398-EN-E ISBN 978-92-861-4312-0 doi: 10.2867/63687 All athletes experience setbacks. But to have your limbs - the very tools you use to practice your sport - taken away by an illness at a young age is a setback that many would never overcome. Bebe Vio never gave up her dream of becoming a fencer, despite having her arms and legs amputated when she was eleven years old after suffering from fulminant meningitis. Instead of abandoning her dream of going to the Olympics, she began training for the Paralympics from a wheelchair. Her unwavering determination to win, despite her physical challenges, made her a world champion fencer. She also established her own association, art4sport, to encourage other people to pursue the beauty of life through sport. This is the eighth essay in the Big Ideas series created by the European Investment Bank. The EIB has invited international thought leaders to write about the most important issues of the day. These essays are a reminder that we need new thinking to protect the environment, promote equality and improve people’s lives around the globe. BIG IDEAS I HAVE A DREAM BEBE VIO WAS FIVE YEARS OLD WHEN SHE STARTED TO FENCE | 5 I HAVE A DREAM Dreams have always been a constant in my life. We should all have dreams that we aspire to: they are the engine that drives everything. I began dreaming when I was a young girl and I’ve never stopped! I was five years old when I started to fence, I was quite good and almost immediately I began thinking about taking part in the Olympic Games. Then, along the way, I had to revise my plans a bit. At the end of 2008, when I was 11, I contracted fulminant meningitis. It was a dreadful situation and to save my life my legs had to be amputated from the knee down and my arms below the elbow. I was in hospital for 104 days and when I came out I couldn’t wait to get started again. I was different, however, and the doctors said that I wouldn’t be able to do the things I had done before. Right away I tried to work out how I could go back to my previous life and I based my plans on my main passions, the three S’s: scouts, school and scherma (fencing). I HAVE A DREAM BEBE VIO WAS FIVE YEARS OLD WHEN SHE STARTED TO FENCE SCOUTS, SCHOOL AND FENCING SCOUTS, SCHOOL AND SCHERMA (FENCING) ARE THE THREE S’S IN BEBE’S LIFE | 7 SCOUTS, SCHOOL AND FENCING With the scouts it was easy because they are excellent at this sort of thing, and the day after I rejoined the group I was already running around the fields on my scout leader’s back. In practice, I had never really left school since I didn’t want to have to repeat the year – so the teachers came to give me my lessons in hospital. They were all fantastic and thanks to them I was able to continue my lessons at the same pace as my classmates. Then there was fencing. I could no longer fence standing up, so I turned to wheelchair fencing and I immediately fell in love with it too because it is even more beautiful. In a wheelchair, you can’t retreat when you’re afraid, so you have to take on your opponent. You have to be fearless and attack to avoid defeat. And I like to attack! Gradually my dream took shape again but instead of the Olympics I began dreaming about the Paralympics! I started making plans and contacted anyone who could help me achieve my dream. All alone, you’re nobody and you’ll go nowhere. You can be as talented and strong as you wish but you always need people in your life. I needed technicians to make a prosthetic aid to support the foil (I was and still am the only female competitor in the world who fences without arms), physiotherapists to help me physically prepare my “new” body for this new adventure, fencing experts to teach me how to fence in a wheelchair, and many other people who supported me. I relied on the CIP, the Italian Paralympic Committee, which some dub the CONI (Italian National Olympic Committee) for disabled athletes. Until a few years ago the CIP lacked autonomy and came under the umbrella of CONI; however, in 2017 its Chairman Luca Pancalli managed to get it recognised as an independent body by the Italian Government. This was an important achievement, which will help the Paralympic world to flourish. 2008: SCOUTS, SCHOOL AND FENCING In a wheelchair, you can’t retreat when you’re afraid, so you have to take on your opponent. You have to be fearless and attack to avoid defeat. And I like to attack! SCOUTS, SCHOOL AND SCHERMA (FENCING) ARE THE THREE S’S IN BEBE’S LIFE WHEELCHAIR FENCING | 9 IN 2011 BEBE PARTICIPATED IN HER FIRST INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION WHEELCHAIR FENCING In 2010 I started participating in wheelchair fencing and a couple of years later I was honoured and fortunate enough to attend the 2012 Paralympic Games in London and serve as a torch bearer at the opening ceremony. During the two weeks of the Games I also worked as a journalist for Sky Sport. It was an amazing experience, which brought home to me even more how fascinating and exciting the Paralympic Games are. After that, I worked hard for four years, which was also hugely enjoyable. In 2011 I participated in my first international competition, the Under 17 World Championships, and I was lucky enough to win. The following year I officially joined the Italian National Paralympic Fencing Team and began to take part in the initial stages of the World Cup with the adults. At first, I was a bit apprehensive because at 15 years of age I found myself competing against girls and women, some of whom were twice my age. They were all very nice to me though, because I was the youngest and the only one without all four limbs. I didn’t disappoint them: in all three competitions that I entered that year I got to the final although inevitably I became nervous and finished second each time. This made me so angry! 2010: WHEELCHAIR FENCING In 2011 I participated in my first international competition, the Under 17 World Championships, and I was lucky enough to win. The following year I officially joined the Italian National Paralympic Fencing Team. | 11 The following year I took part in my first World Championships, in Budapest. What an amazing opportunity! The Olympic and Paralympic athletes were competing at the same time and more than once I found myself up on the piste fencing beside some of my absolute heroes: Elisa di Francisca, Arianna Errigo and Valentina Vezzali. I was the mascot of both Italian national teams and to me it felt like I was living a dream. It was just a pity that a Thai opponent, Jana Saysunee, brought me back down to earth. I suffered a resounding defeat, with the result that I was knocked out and finished tenth. I was raging – I had fenced badly and I burst into tears. My mother tried, without success, to console me. Then thankfully Valentina Vezzali came into the changing room and explained to me that finishing tenth at the World Championships at 16 years of age was already an excellent result and that she herself did not start winning her first major championships until the age of 21. I felt much better but promised myself that three years later at the 2016 Paralympic Games in Rio, I would be at the level of the Chinese girls, the best wheelchair fencers in the world. BEBE VIO WITH HER COACH SIMONE VANNI (2017). SHE PROMISED HERSELF TO BECOME ONE OF THE BEST WHEELCHAIR FENCERS IN THE WORLD FIRST PARALYMPIC GAMES | 13 BEBE IN 2017. IN 2016 SHE EXPERIENCED HER FIRST PARALYMPIC GAMES That was when I began winning. Starting in 2014, I managed to win the gold medal in every major competition that I entered: the Europeans in Strasbourg in 2014, the World Championships in Eger in 2015 and again the Europeans in Turin in 2016. Later in 2016 in Rio I experienced my first Paralympic Games. While qualifying for the Games was fairly straightforward, combining school with my physical and fitness training was really tough: that same year I was also preparing for my final school exams and the months leading up to these two events, one at the end of July and the other at the beginning of September, were gruelling. My teachers wanted me to dedicate most of my time to my studies whereas, more than anything, my trainers and sports coaches wanted me to train for the Paralympics! At a certain point, my teachers realised the difficulties that I was facing and suggested that I drop out of school for that year in order to devote myself entirely to the sport. But I didn’t agree – I wanted to do both and do them well. I wanted to get good results in my exams since the university course for which I had applied in Milan required a minimum grade of 75/100, but I also wished to finish on the podium at the Games because I had been winning everything for two years and certainly didn’t want to miss out at the biggest competition of all! 2016: FIRST PARALYMPIC GAMES Starting in 2014, I managed to win the gold medal in every major competition that I entered: the Europeans in Strasbourg in 2014, the World Championships in Eger in 2015 and again the Europeans in Turin in 2016. Later in 2016 in Rio I experienced my first Paralympic Games. FIRST PARALYMPIC GAMES
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