Downhill skier Sheina Vaspi, 20, will be Israel’s sole competitor at the Winter Paralympics in Beijing from March 4 to March 13.

Although Israel has always sent a team to the Summer Paralympics, this marks the first time that it will be competing in the Winter Paralympics.

Vaspi is unusual in another way: raised in a Lubavitch Chassidic family in Yesod HaMa’ala in the Hula Valley of northern Israel, she wears a skirt over her ski pants in keeping with modest religious dress codes. And she does not ski on the Sabbath.

When she was 3, she was seriously injured in a car accident, and her left leg was amputated.

Her skiing talent led Vaspi to Canada and then the United States for intensive coaching under Scott Olson at the National Sports Center for the Disabled in Colorado, which works with athletes from 17 different countries.

“Sheina is a female in a sport that doesn’t get a lot of females,” Olson told ISRAEL21c, speaking from Lillehammer.

“She’s got a drive that really isn’t matched by a lot of people, male or female. Every time she fails, she comes back better and stronger. She is a joy to be around—she brings light into the room.”

Vaspi competes in the slalom, using 155-centimeter skis; in the giant slalom, using 188cm skis; and in the “Super G” (super giant slalom) on 205 cm skis at speeds up to 55 mph–“just short of 100k, and on one leg,” said Olson.

Although Vaspi did not win any races in icy Lillehammer, Olson said she is “hitting the marks we want. She’s competing against athletes racing for 10 or 20 years and she has only been skiing three years and only in her second year of training. To be able to perform here with world-class athletes is absolutely amazing in the timeframe we’ve done it.”

Olson plans to accompany Vaspi to Beijing.

Eli Birnbaum, chairman of the Israel Paralympic Committee, said: “We are so proud that a sunny country like ours has managed to put up a representative in this winter sport. This is a badge of honor for all those involved—Sheina and her professional staff, the Paralympic Committee and the Erez Foundation.”

This article first appeared in Israel21c.

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