Paraplegic man with polio whose mother tried to cure him by putting him in a hole as a child now flourishing in the UK
Jignesh (Jig) Vaidya, 52, was born in Mumbai, India, and contracted polio aged two, leaving him paralysed from the waist down.
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Your support makes all the difference.A paraplegic man with polio who spent hours of his childhood in a hole in the ground in Mumbai, as his mother believed blood flow to his legs may cure the disease, and was âcarried everywhereâ until the age of 14, has said âyou should never give upâ as he defied the odds to become a professional wheelchair sportsman and father a child in his 50s.
Jignesh (Jig) Vaidya, 52, who was born in Mumbai, India, but now lives in Leicester, contracted polio aged two as he was not âvaccinated at the right timeâ because his family could not afford it.
This resulted in him being paralysed from the waist down, and he was hospitalised for at least six months at the age of four, with his legs in plaster to keep them straight.
After this, Jigneshâs doctor said âthereâs nothing we can doâ, and since his family could not afford a wheelchair or further treatment, and his access to education was limited due to his disability, he remained at home for several years, with his mother Nirmala, now 83, âdoing everything for himâ â washing, feeding, changing and carrying him.
Defying his difficult beginnings, Jignesh has spent his life moving across the world, becoming a professional wheelchair basketball player and enjoying a successful career, currently working as a project assistant at Maximus UK and broadcast assistant at the BBC, all before the birth of his now 20-month-old son, Jesse.
He has not forgotten where his life began, however, and told PA Real Life: âAs an Indian remedy, (my mother) dug a hole outside our house in the sun and put my whole body in it for six hours every day, neck down, in 30-degree heat.
âShe put really heavy bangles on both my legs and asked me to sit on the wall for three, four hours a day, dangling them, as she thought, âJignesh will walk one dayâ.â
Jignesh said his mother believed in Indian medication and thought the blood flow may help to cure his polio â a serious infection caused by a virus â but Jignesh described it as âhellâ.
From that point on, he thought, âthis is going to be my life, this is it for me, itâs not going to get any betterâ.
âI thought, âIâm going to be a loser â I hate to say that word â Iâm not going to have any friends, and Iâm going to be asking people for help all my lifeâ,â he added.
At the age of 14, Jignesh was given a wheelchair after his community rallied to raise some funds and he was finally able to go to school.
He said he had to âcatch up to the people who were ahead of (him)â, but he loved having some independence and no longer having to be carried by his family or others.
He experienced a major setback when he moved to Dubai at 16, as he gave up his wheelchair to support another young boy with polio in Mumbai, and this left him in a dark place, mentally, as he had no âfreedomâ.
Since then, however, he has moved to Leicester, received an âamazing educationâ, competed as a professional wheelchair basketball player, skydived, and fathered a son called Jesse, despite doctors saying this would not be possible.
Jignesh said: âYou should never give up in this life, and donât be afraid to open up and ask for help.
âDo what youâre best at and, if you work at something every day, whatever your goal is in life, you will get there.
âIt may take some time, maybe even years â it took me until the age of 20 to learn how to write my name in English â but I didnât give up and look at me now.â
From the age of 14, when Jignesh received his first wheelchair in Mumbai, he said he started to âflourishâ and enjoyed going to school.
However, he was subjected to discriminatory comments by his teachers, with one saying: âHeâs handicapped, he canât go at the front, put him in the back.â
Since Jigneshâs late father Laxmikant, 66, was working in Dubai at the time, he ended up moving out there for two years at the age of 16 â but because his family could not afford to send him to school and he no longer had his wheelchair, he said he spent two years âlooking out the window, watching people go byâ.
He said âthere was nothing for (him)â, apart from a taxi ride once a month, and this significantly impacted his mental health, as he felt this had reversed all the progress he had made.
âThere was one point in my life, in those two years, where I was going to dark places and crying all the time,â he said.
âI thought, âIf mumâs not here, I could jump out the window and nobody will know. I can end itâ, because I thought, âThis is it, I canât go back to what I had, Iâm stuckâ.â
After his father earned enough money from those two years in Dubai, he and his family moved to the UK in 1988, when he was 18, and this is when everything changed.
He received a new wheelchair in March 1989, aged 19, and started full-time education in September 1990, aged 20, where he learned English, maths, and how to use computers â and given he had impressive upper body strength and speed, he started playing sports as well, including wheelchair hockey and basketball.
âI was a coloured person, a new arrival, couldnât speak the language, and yet I was treated like everyone else,â he said.
âI just thought, âWow, Iâm a part of society, Iâm not being treated like a dog, like I was in Mumbaiâ, and if an opportunity comes in, I will take it, as thereâs no going back.
âWhen I started playing sports, I knew there and then that this is it, this is my life, this is my path.â
Jignesh has since gone on to compete as a professional wheelchair basketball player internationally in places such as France, play for teams including MK Aces Wheelchair Basketball Club and Leicester Cobras, coach at the Coventry Crusaders club, skydive, and father Jesse with his partner Julie, 40, a teacher â confounding doctors.
He goes to his local Nuffield Health gym every day, completing workouts and classes which have been adapted for him, and this helps to slow the progression of his polio as muscle weakness can increase over time.
He âcherishesâ being able to work with the âamazingâ staff, including his personal trainer Matthew Molloy, in an inclusive environment where he is part of a team, supported, and everyone can âflourishâ.
Looking back, Jignesh realises why his mother, who he now cares for, would say, âeverything happens for a reasonâ, and he is extremely grateful for his familyâs love and support.
He is excited to watch Jesse grow up, and he wants to continue encouraging disabled people to stay active, fight for their rights, and ânever give upâ.
âI never thought that when I was in that hole, or when I was in Dubai and had nothing, that Iâd be where I am today,â he said.
âSometimes, when Iâm driving, I think, âThis could be a movie; Iâm going to wake up and be back in Mumbaiâ, so every day now, I pray and say, âThank youâ.â
To find out more about Nuffield Health, visit: nuffieldhealth.com