At just 14, Husnah Kukundakwe was the youngest Paralympian at the Tokyo Games and the Ugandan swimmer faces an equally tough test next year in Paris, but the 16-year-old said she is used to smashing stereotypes — starting with her own mother.
Born without her right forearm and with an impairment to her left hand, Kukundakwe was three years old when she began paddling in a pool at her local kindergarten.
“I would just go there, play around, just beat around the water, and I felt nice. I love being in the water,” she said.
Photo: AFP
However, her mother was not so enthusiastic.
“In the beginning my mum wasn’t supportive ... because she was worried that I won’t be able to swim,” Kukundakwe told reporters.
“After realizing I wasn’t going to stop going into the water, she eventually gave in,” Kukundakwe said on the sidelines of a training session in a suburb of Uganda’s capital, Kampala.
She soon won her first contest, aged nine, racing past able-bodied swimmers.
“It opened my mum’s eyes that I would do better,” she said, her face lighting up as she recalled the victory.
Her mother, Hashima Patience Batamuriza, who is now her manager, allowed her to stop using flotation vests, paving the way for a journey that has taken Kukundakwe to the Olympics.
The teenager never imagined that she would compete on a global stage, despite spending hours in the water every week.
“It was something I had not looked into because I didn’t know para swimming ever existed or ... sports [for] people with disabilities like me,” she said.
A trip to Kenya’s capital — her first time taking a flight — proved to be a turning point.
Prior to that, the 11-year-old had only practised alongside able-bodied swimmers.
In Nairobi, she was surrounded by other disabled athletes.
“I started feeling comfortable with myself. If people with disabilities more than mine ... [could] feel comfortable and confident doing what they love most and that is swimming, why not me?” she said.
She secured a certificate allowing her to participate in international sporting events, later attending a swimming camp in South Korea and eventually competing in the World Para Swimming World Series 2019 in Singapore.
Then came the icing on the cake: qualifying for the Tokyo Games.
However, the COVID-19 pandemic threw her preparation into disarray as Ugandan authorities ordered swimming pools and gyms to close.
She started jogging with her father, a civil engineer, or her older brothers, and began taking swimming lessons on Zoom.
When the Games were finally held in August 2021, she competed in the SB8 100m breaststroke. She failed to make the final, but achieved a personal best time of 1 minute, 34.35 seconds.
She said the experience was “amazing” and “nerve-wracking because I was competing with Paralympics legends and also meeting my role models face-to-face.”
Meeting Irish Paralympic swimmer Ellen Keane was overwhelming, she said, describing the 28-year-old gold medalist as “someone I pray to be [like] every day of my life.”
Yet she also knows that she is no less of an inspiration to young Ugandans, particularly those with disabilities.
Kukundakwe spent years struggling to keep up with able-bodied swimmers, a challenge she turned into an advantage, she said.
“I worked towards matching their pace to be able to compete against them,” she said.
Today her sense of purpose extends beyond wanting to win medals.
“My main goal of going for international events is to inspire people with disabilities, especially the children, to reach their dreams the best they can,” she said.
It is an uphill battle in Uganda, where disabled children are sometimes seen as a burden and abandoned by their families.
According to Uganda’s state-run Equal Opportunities Commission, people with disabilities still face stigma and discrimination, and are often denied access to public services such as health and education.
Kukundakwe, who is a youth ambassador for the International Paralympics Committee, believes change is coming.
“When I came back from championships ... people would come and say: ‘Hi Husnah, welcome back.’ Yet before they would look at me and even stare at me, point fingers,” she said.
“My career has changed the perception,” she said. “People no longer look at me as a girl who is disabled, but as one traveling the whole world as a professional swimmer.”
Furthermore, she believes her example is encouraging more disabled Ugandans to take up sports.
Currently focused on training for Paris, she also hopes to compete at the 2028 Games in Los Angeles.
Her ultimate dream is to become a pediatrician, she said.
“Much as I love swimming, I cannot be in swimming forever,” she added.
Manchester City have reached do-or-die territory in the UEFA Champions League earlier than expected ahead of what Pep Guardiola has described as a “final” against Club Brugge today. City have disproved the suggestion a new format to Europe’s top club competition would remove any jeopardy for the top clubs as Guardiola stares down the barrel of failing to make the Champions League knockout stages for the first time in his career. The English champions have endured a torrid season both in their English Premier League title defense and on the continent. A run of one win in 13 games, which included Champions League
BACK-TO-BACK: The League One club, which is owned by stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney, is sparing no expense to clinch promotion to the Championship Hollywood endings are pricey, even in England’s third division. In pursuit of their third straight promotion, Wrexham AFC splashed some cash at League One rival Reading to secure the services of striker Sam Smith. The Welsh club owned by actors Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney confirmed the signing of the 26-year-old Smith on Friday. He is one of the top scorers in the third division. The transfer fee was not disclosed, but British media widely reported it to be about £2 million (US$2.48 million) — not extravagant, but a hefty price at this level and it would be about the same figure that
Less than a week after splashing out a world-record fee for Naomi Girma, Chelsea has spent big again to bring England midfielder Keira Walsh back to the English Women’s Super League. Walsh left European champions Barcelona after more than two years to join Chelsea for a reported £400,000 (US$496,000) on Friday. Walsh was the world’s most expensive player for two years after moving to Barcelona from Manchester City for a reported £400,000 in 2022. That status now belongs to Girma, the US defender who cost Chelsea a reported £900,000 to sign from the San Diego Wave. Still, it means 27-year-old Walsh — a technically
Ousmane Dembele on Wednesday scored a hat-trick as Paris Saint-Germain romped to a 4-1 win at VfB Stuttgart and qualified for the UEFA Champions League knockout stages. PSG were at risk of elimination after a disappointing league stage, with three losses and a draw, but were utterly dominant against an outclassed Stuttgart side as they confirmed their place in the playoffs. With six minutes gone, Bradley Barcola headed PSG in front after Desire Doue stood a cross up at the back post following a corner. Stuttgart probed for an equalizer, but PSG hit on the counterattack, Dembele tapping a Barcola pass into an