Northolt Doctor Bringing Together Skaters and the Disabled

Muhayman Jamil given MBE for work of his charity Wheels and Wheelchairs

The idea came from a group of French skaters and wheelchair users travelling from Paris to London for the 2012 Paralympics
The idea came from a group of French skaters and wheelchair users travelling from Paris to London for the 2012 Paralympics

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January 31, 2024

Palliative care doctor from Northolt has set up a unique charity that brings together skaters and people with limited mobility.

Muhayman Jamil used to be a speed skater and founded Wheels and Wheelchairs so that individuals with limited mobility can ‘participate in sport and enjoy the thrill of travelling at speed.’

For his initiative he was awarded the MBE for services to the disabled.

A group meets every Saturday in Battersea Park with skaters pushing specially converted wheelchairs fitted with a third stabilising wheel during the two-hour sessions.

Muhayman said, “We zip around the park at a fair speed which is great fun. You can’t beat that buzz you get when you whizz past pedestrians, runners, and even the occasional cyclist.

"It is so liberating, and it gives our friends who are wheelchair users a sense of freedom they rarely get the chance to experience for themselves.”

Muhayman started Wheels and Wheelchairs after being asked to help plot a route that would take a group of French skaters and wheelchair users from Paris to London for the 2012 Paralympics.

"The skating community look out for one another, so a group of us travelled with them to London. It was a real adventure and when we got to the capital someone suggested we start a similar group in the UK.

"The first wheelchair user we took out was a young man who was a patient at the hospice where I used to work. He was paralysed from the neck down and spent most of his days in front of the TV.

“He had great trouble communicating verbally but after our first trip, he surprised everyone by saying how good it was to 'feel the wind on my face again'. It just grew from there and we now have up to 100 skaters and wheelchair users who are actively involved in our activities every weekend."

Muhayman, who was a keen ice skater as a youth, reconnected with the sport years later when a roller blader skated past him while he was running in Hyde Park in Central London.

“It’s actually harder to skate on concrete than ice but it’s the same principle and it's great to share that thrill with others.”

When asked if he would be attending the ceremony at Buckingham House later in the year in his skates he said, “It’s a nice thought but I don’t think they’d let me in!”

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