My favourite Canadian of All-time

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  • #30582
    canadaram
    Participant

    http://www.terryfox.org/TerryFox/Terry_Fox.html

    Terry Fox was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and raised in Port Coquitlam, British Columbia, a community near Vancouver on Canada’s west coast. An active teenager involved in many sports, Terry was only 18 years old when he was diagnosed with osteogenic sarcoma (bone cancer) and forced to have his right leg amputated 15 centimetres (six inches) above the knee in 1977.

    While in hospital, Terry was so overcome by the suffering of other cancer patients, many of them young children, that he decided to run across Canada to raise money for cancer research.

    He would call his journey the Marathon of Hope.

    It was a journey that Canadians never forgot.

    After 18 months and running over 5,000 kilometres (3,107 miles) to prepare, Terry started his run in St. John’s, Newfoundland on April 12, 1980 with little fanfare. Although it was difficult to garner attention in the beginning, enthusiasm soon grew, and the money collected along his route began to mount. He ran close to 42 kilometres (26 miles) a day through Canada’s Atlantic provinces, Quebec and Ontario. However, on September 1st, after 143 days and 5,373 kilometres (3,339 miles), Terry was forced to stop running outside of Thunder Bay, Ontario because cancer had appeared in his lungs. An entire nation was stunned and saddened. Terry passed away on June 28, 1981 at the age 22.

    The heroic Canadian was gone, but his legacy was just beginning.

    Support your local Terry Fox Run.

    http://www.terryfox.org/InternationalRun/
    To date, over $650 million has been raised worldwide for cancer research in Terry’s name through the annual Terry Fox Run, held across Canada and around the world.

    #30583
    canadaram
    Participant

    #30627
    wv
    Participant

    Yeah, I remember that guy.

    http://www.runnersworld.com/runners-stories/terry-foxs-marathon-of-hope
    “…Terry Fox; in a 2004 poll among Canadians, he was voted the second greatest Canadian of all time in any field….”

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    #30628
    wv
    Participant

    “Some people can’t figure out what I’m doing,” he had said in June. “It’s not a walk-hop, it’s not a trot. It’s running, or as close as I can get to running, and it’s harder than doing it on two legs. It makes me mad when people call this a walk. If I was walking, it wouldn’t be anything.”

    He would run two miles, take a brief water break at the van that his best friend, Doug Alward, drove beside him, run another two miles, and then take another break. Terry continued this routine until he covered 14 to 16 miles, usually finishing his morning stint by 8. He would rest for three hours, then run another 10 to 12 miles, regardless of heat, cold, crowds, or headwinds.

    In the afternoons and evenings, he gave interviews and addressed audiences in community halls and school gyms. As he spoke, a representative of the Canadian Cancer Society would move among the crowd, collecting bills and change in plastic trash bags and wrinkled grocery sacks. Every cent went directly to fighting cancer; all expenses for the Marathon of Hope were separately donated. He declined all sponsorship offers and displayed no advertising logos, not even a T-shirt with the name of a college or hockey team. The only hint of a corporation’s presence were the three parallel stripes on Terry’s dark-blue Adidas Orions….see link
    http://www.runnersworld.com/runners-stories/terry-foxs-marathon-of-hope

    #30688
    canadaram
    Participant

    Thanks for the link to the Runners World article WV. I’ve never read that one before. Whenever humans have me feeling a little down I sometimes watch old news footage of Terry, or read some articles and then I usually feel better.

    • This reply was modified 8 years, 8 months ago by canadaram.
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