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Blesma News

Latest news from Blesma, The Limbless Veterans

 

  • Steve Gill: Road to Rio

    Steve Gill
    18 April 2016

    Blesma Member Steve Gill is hoping to be selected for Great Britain’s archery team at the Paralympic Games in Rio later this year. We catch up with him on his progress.... I used to play wheelchair basketball and thought archery was boring when I first tried it about 15 years ago. Then, a few years back, I was at a basketball session and people were trying archery in the next hall. I thought I’d give it another go, and banged a few good shots in!  I lost both my legs and an eye in a terrorist bomb attack while I was stationed in Belfast in May 1989. At the

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  • Kenneth and Barbara Pickard: "70-year marriage is a walk and (sit!) in the park"

    Kenneth and Barbara Pickard
    18 April 2016

    Kenneth and Barbara Pickard, who first met in Trowbridge Park in Wiltshire on VE Day in 1945, now have a spot to call their very own after the Friends of Trowbridge Park unveiled a new bench and floral border to honour them. Kenneth, 92, (who became an above-knee amputee in Normandy in 1944) and Barbara, 89, attended the opening ceremony with Mayor Roger Andrews. Everyone was so happy all those years ago because of the end of the war and I spoke to Kenneth because we both went to the celebrations on our own

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  • Blesma is supporting a hard-hitting play that’s due to open in London’s West End.

    Blue on Blue
    8 April 2016

    Blesma is supporting a hard-hitting play that’s due to open in London’s West End and a Member has the starring role... Darren 'Swifty' Swift is about to star in Blue on Blue, a play about a double amputee written by Chips Hardy, the dad of Hollywood star Tom Hardy, and funded mainly by The Skullcap Collective. Blesma spoke to those involved about why this is a production every Blesma Member should see… DARREN SWIFT PLAYS THE PART OF MOSS

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  • Blesma Community programme

    Blesma Community programme
    29 March 2016

    Read how we're getting injured veterans into schools giving talks about overcoming adversity. The stage is silent then Andy Reid’s steady voice cuts through the tension to set the scene of a stark hospital room filled with doctors and distressed relatives. “I wake up. I look down and at the end of the bed I can see that there is nothing where my legs should be,” he says. “I walk my fingers slowly down my thigh not wanting to find the end, not wanting to know. “I stop. I turn to Claire, my partner, and say. You are the love of my life but I will understand if y

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