This piece was published in January 2020 on Perspectives of The Himalayan Times. You can find the piece here:
Investing in a champion: Keshav Thapa | Sharing4good
We
started the first partnership column of the decade with an urgent appeal that,
in reality, is an amazing opportunity for corporate houses of all kinds, from
banks to insurance companies to cement producers to all major hotels and travel
agencies to private colleges: sponsor Keshav Thapa to be able to play in the
upcoming Paralympics games in Tokyo 2020.
Who
is Keshav first of all and why should you sponsor him? Keshav is a para-tennis table player and he is
the best player in his own category in Nepal and perhaps, if we had held the
Para-South Asian games, he would have proved he is also one of the players in
the entire region.
As
the country is celebrating a new sports renaissance, it is high time we started
taking notice of adaptive athletes as well, athletes with disabilities that are
as well, putting a lot of efforts despite very daunting circumstances.
Yet
athletes like Keshav are marching on, full of self-confidence and grit,
determined to prove he can be among the best.
An
incident back in 2011 where Keshav damaged his spinal cord, forcing him on a wheelchair,
changed his life.
Despite
thisset back, he was able to turn adverse circumstances into a new life
purpose, helping other persons with spinal cord injury to have a dignified
life.
He
graduated in management from Boudha Multiple College and after that he was a
key member of the National Spinal Cord Injury Sports Association,
N.S.C.I.S.A., one of the most important not for profits promoting adaptive
sports in the country and then more recently he founded a new organization, the
Spinal Cord Injury Network that hosts 16 youths living with
disabilities, mainly but not only, due to spinal cord injury.
Since
his rehabilitation, Keshav literally embraced sports and he was a key player
for the N.S.C.I.S.A male team in the first edition of the Turkish Airlines
ENGAGE Empowering League, one of the biggest adaptive sports competitions in
the entire Asia Pacific region.
Then
Keshav started enjoying more and more playing tennis table and a hobby became a
passion and soon this passion became a commitment towards excellence.
In
2013 Keshav won the Para National Table Tennis Championship organized the
National Physical Disable Para Tennis Association.
From
there onwards, there was an upward trajectory towards more and more
competitions, including championships played overseas.
In
2014 Keshav got the chance to play in the Asian Spinal Cord Network Sports Championships
in Bangladesh where he won the gold medal.
Remarkably
he was able to represent Nepal at the Para Asian Games in Jakarta back
in 2018 where in the group stage was able to beat Kazakhstan.
Now
Keshav has a really good chance to get qualified for Tokyo 2020 but there is
still a big obstacle, being able to play at the Para Polish Open Tennis Table
in Poland that will be held in February 2020.
In
order to be able to be selected for Tokyo 2020, Keshav was requested to play at
least four international competitions and he managed, despite many challenges,
going to three of them.
First
in July 2019, he was at Para Asian Tennis Table Championship in
Taichung, Taiwan where he lost in the deciding point (3-2) against South Korea.
Then Keshav was able to be at Para Japan Open Tennis Table in Tokyo and
then at the Thailand Open Para Tennis Championship where he lost, always
in the deciding point (3-2) in the group stage against Indonesia, both
tournaments held on August 2019.
Keshav
was able to attend all these tournaments thanks to the generosity of Michael
McGowan and Lucy Broster, both British citizens with a long commitment to help
make Nepal more inclusive for persons with disabilities. Michael supported
Keshav in a big way paying for entrée fees of all the competitions and most of
the flights while Lucy raised travel expenses for Tokyo and Bangkok through a
crowd funding.
Now
the private sector needs to step up in order for Keshav to be able to attend
the championship in Poland, the most affordable, in terms of fee, championship
before Tokyo 2020.
Why
should a corporate invest in Keshav? Is there a business case?
First
Keshav is a top national athlete and his achievements at international level,
proved it. Second it makes sense to support him because he is a representative
of a large group of persons, those citizens with disabilities, who are not only
claiming for their rights, but are also consumers and costumers and normally
they are overlooked.
Third
a corporate support for Keshav would give a strong signal that national
business houses can be inclusive.
In
the past, Machhapuchchhre Bank Limited, MBL, had appointed Ms. Mira Rai, Ms.
Pratima Sherpa and Mr. Aryan Giri, all renown able bodied athletes, as its
Brand Ambassadors.
It
is high time corporates gave a chance to champions like Keshav.
Believe
me it would be unfair not to mention there are many other adaptive champions in
Nepal from Laxmi Kunwal to Sarita Thulung, both para-swimmers to Sita Bhandari,
a top Para Taekwondo player to Dan Theeng, one of the best wheelchair
basketball players, to Bikram Rana, a visually impaired runner to the blind
cricket teams of the Cricket Association of the Blind, just to mention few of
them.
Hoping
that the private sector will show interest in supporting adaptive athletes in
2020, I will try my best to cover all those deserving yet unnoticed champions
through this column in the year ahead.
Meanwhile
i would like to personally thank Michael McGowan and Lucy Broster for supporting
Keshav.
Why
always depending on foreign generosity? We always complain about aid dependency
then, can we all step up and join a cause?
Corporates
could step in paying all the travel and fee costs for the Poland Championship
and also could pay him a monthly stipend that would allow him to be focused on
elevating his game.
I
am truly looking forward to write the next column about Keshav’s new corporate
sponsors and his achievements in Poland and beyond. Happy inclusive new decade!
Galimberti
is the Co-Founder of ENGAGE, an NGO partnering with youths living with and
without disabilities. He can be reached at simone_engage@yahoo.com
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