1, Zhang Haidi
Zhang Haidi, born in the fall of 1955 in Jinan. 5 years old suffered from spinal cord disease, paralyzed from the chest down. In front of the cruel challenge of fate, Zhang Haidi did not frustrated and sink, she with tenacity and perseverance to fight with the disease, withstood the severe test, full of confidence in life. Although she did not have the opportunity to enter the school gate, she was furious to study, finished all the courses of elementary school and secondary school, studied English, Japanese, German and Esperanto at university, and studied at university and master's degree courses. 1983 Zhang Haidi began to engage in literary creation, and successively translated hundreds of thousands of English novels such as The Seaside Clinic, and edited books such as Open Window to the Sky, The Pursuit of Life, and Dreams from a Wheelchair. Dreams from a Wheelchair. Among them, Dreams on a Wheelchair was published in Japan and South Korea, while Questions of Life was reprinted three times in less than half a year after its publication, and won the National "Five One Project" Book Award. Prior to "The Pursuit of Life," this award had never been given to a prose work. Recently, a 300,000-word long novel, "The Top", is about to be released. Since 1983, Zhang Haidi has written and translated more than a million words.
2. Stephen. Stephen Hawking
Stephen. Stephen Hawking, one of the great men of this century with an international reputation, now 60 years old, born on the anniversary of Galileo's death, Professor of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics at the University of Cambridge, the most important contemporary general theory of relativity and cosmologists. 70's he proved the famous singularity theorem together with Penrose, for this reason they **** together to win the 1988 Wolf Prize in Physics. He has thus been hailed as the world's most famous scientific thinker and most distinguished theoretical physicist after Albert Einstein". He also proved the area theorem for black holes. Hawking's life is very legendary and in terms of scientific achievements he is one of the most brilliant scientists of all time. He held one of the most prestigious professorships ever held at Cambridge University, that of the Lucassian Professor of Mathematics, which was held by Newton and Dirac. He held several honorary degrees and was a Fellow of the Royal Society. He was confined to a wheelchair for 20 years due to Lou Gehrig's Disease (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis), but he was disabled and turned it to his advantage, overcoming his handicap to become a supernova in international physics. He could not write, even slurred, but he transcended the theory of relativity, quantum mechanics, the Big Bang and other theories to enter the creation of the universe of the "geometric dance". Although he was so helpless in a wheelchair, his mind traveled brilliantly into the light of space and time, solving the mystery of the universe.
3, Helen Keller
Helen Keller (June 27, 1880 - June 1, 1968), born in Tuscumbia, Alabama, United States. American author, educator, philanthropist, and social activist. Suffered from acute congestion that robbed her of her sight and hearing at the age of 19 months. Through the efforts of her mentor, Anne Sullivan, she was able to learn to speak and begin to communicate with others; in June 1899, she was admitted to Radcliffe College for Women at Harvard University, and in 1924, she became a key leader of the American Foundation for the Blind. She was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1964, and in 1965 she was named one of Time Magazine's "Ten Heroic American Icons of the Twentieth Century". In 1965, he was selected by Time Magazine as one of the "Ten Great American Heroes of the Twentieth Century".
4, Sang Lan
Sang Lan, Ningbo, Zhejiang Province, born in 1981, entered the national gymnastics team in 1993. 1997 obtained the national vaulting champion, in 1998 in the fourth U.S. Friendship Games, practicing vaulting, an accident, resulting in cervical vertebrae fracture, paraplegia below the chest. Presented to the public, Sang Lan always faces a smile. With her tenacity, optimism, strength and courage, she infects the whole world with her actions and deeds. She is the female role model with the most Olympic spirit. After the champion jumper became paralyzed, she did not choose to be depressed, but accepted the fact frankly and realized the Olympic dream in her own way. 1999 January Sanglan became the first foreigner who hosted the lighting ceremony for the Empire State Building in Times Square; 1999 April Sanglan was awarded the Fifth "Courageous Athlete Award" issued by the Nassau County Sports Commission of New York, New York. In May 2000, Sang Lan lit the torch for the Fifth China Disabled People's Games; in September 2000, Sang Lan represented the China Disabled People's Art Troupe to perform in the U.S.; in September 2002, Sang Lan joined Star TV, a subsidiary of the world's media tycoon Murdoch News Group, and served as the host of a brand-new sports special program "Sang Lan 2008". In September 2002, Sang Lan joined Star TV, a subsidiary of the world's media mogul Murdoch News Corporation, as the host of a new sports program called "Sang Lan 2008", in which she continued her journey to the Olympics. She wanted to be able to stand up where she had fallen, and to get closer to her favorite sport in a different way. After that, she, who loved media career, began to appear in front of the audience with a straightforward interview style, telling the audience the little-known stories behind the Olympic gold medals with multiple angles and levels, and won the recognition of many viewers with her natural, confident hosting style and real infectious power. In September 2002, Sang Lan was admitted to the Department of Journalism at the School of Journalism and Communication of Peking University, majoring in Radio and Television. After graduating from the university, Sanglan continued to engage in sports-related reporting, becoming one of the ambassadors for the 2008 Olympic bid and a torchbearer for the 2008 Olympic Games, and in 2008 she became a special correspondent for the official website of the Beijing Olympic Games.