Skip to content

Burnaby deaf student battling blindness wins historic sports award

Watching 17-year-old Le Yi Deng grin and sign enthusiastically about her busy final year at the B.C.
B.C. Provincial School for the Deaf, Le Yi Deng
B.C. Provincial School for the Deaf Grade 12 student Le Yi Deng made history this year when she became the first BCSD student to win the Burnaby South Secondary female athlete of the year award.

Watching 17-year-old Le Yi Deng grin and sign enthusiastically about her busy final year at the B.C. Provincial School for the Deaf and all her future plans, it feels all wrong to steer the interview around to Usher’s Syndrome – a disease that is slowly robbing her of her sight.

But I do, and Deng tells me about a day in Grade 4 when her mom picked her up from school and took her to the doctor for a check-up.

It was the day she found out she was losing her vision.

“That was really sad news for me,” she says through an ASL interpreter. “I didn’t know what that meant for me in the future, how involved I was going to be and what I wanted to do.”

Acceptance is an ongoing struggle, she says, but it has come with a corresponding determination:

“I’m still trying to achieve what I can,” she says.

This year that attitude made history, when Deng became the first BCSD student to earn the Female Athlete of the Year Award at the joint Burnaby South Secondary-B.C. Provincial School for the Deaf grad ceremony.

B.C. School for the Deaf, Le Yi Deng
BCSD Grade 12 student Le Yi Deng poses in the Burnaby South Secondary gym with some of the many team jerseys she's worn this year. - Contributed

Deng didn’t know she was being given the award (along with co-winner Stephanie Zaborniak) until she was ready to walk onto the stage.

“It felt like fire," Deng says. "It was amazing."

She has played numerous sports since getting her fateful diagnosis in Grade 4, but, starting in Grade 11, she noticed few BCSD students were getting involved in the many different sports available at Burnaby South Secondary, which houses the provincial deaf school. 

She decided to lead by example and try to get the word out.

It hasn’t always been easy, she says, with some coaches thinking she wouldn’t be able to do things the rest of the team could.

Undeterred, she got involved in every sport she could in her last year of high school this year: cross-country, volleyball, basketball, wrestling, track and field, ultimate Frisbee and dance.

“I really wanted to feel a sense of pride and be able to just show that deaf people can do it,” she says, “and I wanted to inspire people regardless of barriers and things that they’re going through. It doesn’t matter what conditions you have or syndromes. It doesn’t matter. The point is that you should try your best. My goal was really to inspire people and not so much just be in sports but to inspire people around me.”

It’s an attitude she intends to take with her as she starts at Vancouver Community College next year in the hopes of getting into UBC after that and eventually becoming a lawyer.

“I feel ready,” she says. “I feel like I’m ready to take on the world.”