Sunday, July 19, 2026

She played because of everything it took to get there

Manami Ito started playing the violin when she was seven. At 20, she lost her right arm in a motorbike accident on the way to nursing school.
Most people would have stopped playing. She became a nurse instead. Japan's first with a prosthetic arm.
Then she started swimming. By 2008, she was at the Beijing Paralympics, finishing fourth in the 100-metre breaststroke. She competed again at London 2012.
Then she picked the violin back up.
Ito had a prosthetic arm designed with a bow attachment, controlled by a harness connected to her left shoulder. She uses her shoulder blades to move the bow across the strings. It took hours of practice to relearn an instrument she had played since childhood using an arm that wasn't hers.
She retired from swimming. She left nursing. But the violin stayed.
In 2021, she walked onto the stage at the Tokyo Paralympic Games Opening Ceremony in a white dress and played for the world. A seven-year-old girl's hobby, interrupted by an accident, rebuilt with engineering and stubbornness, performed in front of millions.
She didn't play in spite of the prosthetic. She played because of everything it took to get there
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May be an image of violin and text that says 'She started playing violin at 7. She lost her arm at 20. She competed at two Paralympic Games as a swimmer, then relearned the violin with a custom prosthetic bow and performed at the Tokyo 2020 Opening Ceremony.'

Their love challenged a world where racial divisions were deeply rooted

In 1955, a king was told he had to make an impossible choice.
His crown...
Or the woman he loved.
His name was Seretse Khama.
He was the heir to the throne of the Bamangwato people in Bechuanaland, a British protectorate in southern Africa. From the moment he was born, his future seemed already written.
Study in London.
Return home.
Become chief.
Everything followed a path that had been planned for him.
Until one evening in London changed everything.
At a dance, Seretse met a young Englishwoman named Ruth Williams. She was not part of the political world. She worked an ordinary office job as a clerk and had never even been to Africa.
She had no idea that one conversation would place her at the center of an international controversy.
When Seretse asked her to dance, neither of them knew that moment would change not only their lives, but the future of an entire nation.
They fell in love.
Quickly.
Deeply.
Without apology.
In 1948, they married quietly in London.
There was no grand royal ceremony.
No political approval.
Just two people choosing each other.
But their love challenged a world where racial divisions were deeply rooted.
At the time, neighboring South Africa was establishing apartheid, a system built on strict racial segregation. The idea of a Black African leader marrying a white British woman created outrage among powerful political groups.
The pressure began almost immediately.
In 1950, the British government asked Seretse to travel to London for discussions about his future.
He went expecting a conversation.
Instead, he was told he could not return to Bechuanaland.
The heir to the throne was forced into exile.
He was separated from his people.
Separated from his pregnant wife.
And separated from the role he had spent his entire life preparing to fulfill.
For six years, Seretse lived away from his homeland.
Ruth chose to stand beside him.
Together, they built a family while facing uncertainty and rejection from those who wanted them apart.
During those years, two more children were born.
But while the British government tried to replace Seretse, something unexpected happened back home.
The Bamangwato people refused to accept another leader.
Their message remained the same:
They would wait for Seretse.
Their loyalty became a powerful challenge to the colonial system that had tried to silence him.
By 1956, growing public pressure and political embarrassment forced Britain to change its position.
Seretse and Ruth were finally allowed to return home.
When they arrived, they were welcomed by thousands.
The people celebrated the return of the leader they had never stopped supporting.
And Ruth, once viewed as a problem by politicians, was embraced as part of the nation’s future.
Seretse eventually gave up his traditional claim to kingship.
But he never gave up his commitment to his people.
As Bechuanaland moved toward independence, he became a key figure in building a new nation.
In 1966, Bechuanaland became the independent country of Botswana.
Seretse Khama became its first president.
What happened next surprised much of the world.
Soon after independence, Botswana discovered enormous diamond reserves beneath its land.
Many newly independent nations struggled with foreign companies taking control of natural resources.
But Seretse took a different path.
He negotiated an agreement that allowed Botswana to share ownership and benefits from its diamond industry.
The money generated from those resources was invested into the country’s future.
Schools were built.
Healthcare expanded.
Roads and infrastructure improved.
Instead of becoming a source of conflict, diamonds helped Botswana build stability and growth.
Ruth remained beside Seretse throughout his presidency and continued supporting the country even after his death in 1980.
She lived in Botswana for the rest of her life and was honored by the nation she had once been told she did not belong to.
She died in 2002 and was buried beside Seretse with full state honors.
Their legacy continued through their family, including their son who later became president of Botswana.
It all began with a simple dance in London.
A meeting between two people who never expected to challenge governments, traditions, and powerful systems.
But sometimes, the strongest resistance is not found in protests or battles.
Sometimes, it is found in two people who refuse to abandon each other.
Because sometimes the most powerful challenge to injustice...
Is simply love that refuses to surrender.
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