How This Aerial Acrobatics Teacher Is Helping Students With Disabilities

Pitu Blazquez hopes to make his students "feel free."

Pitu Blazquez isn’t just lifting bodies in his aerial acrobatics class, he’s giving his students a new perspective.

The Argentine acrobatics instructor, who offers free classes for people with disabilities in Buenos Aires, is the subject of a moving Al Jazeera Plus video posted July 14, which now has more than 11 million views on Facebook. Blazquez says he wants people to better understand that physical limitations doesn’t necessarily mean a limited life.

“These people are doing something incredible [and] extremely difficult,” Blazquez says in Spanish in the video. “They’re five meters high and they’re giving their soul and their art. And it being an integrated class, it also teaches my [able-bodied] students to work with people who can’t walk, people who can’t see but can do a lot of things.”

Blazquez, who also participates in Argentina’s physical competition show “Combate,” holds his classes in his Buenos Aires studio. In the video, the teacher asks one of his students in a wheelchair if the class made him feel like a bird, the student answers yes, “I feel free.” The two later share an emotional moment on camera.

Another unnamed student pointed to how rare it is for people with disabilities to find something geared toward them: “Nothing is built with disabled people in mind. They don’t think [about it].”

While the video says 2.9 million people in Argentina live with disabilities, Argentine newspaper La Nación reported in June that recent census numbers showed a total of 5.1 million people with physical disabilities are living in the South American country.

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