From the CBC:
“’That grin, that big heart':
Remembering Terry Fox, the Marathon of Hope and one day in Thunder Bay”
(Fox, seen during his Marathon of
Hope, had his dream of running across the country cut short near Thunder Bay,
Ont., when he learned that cancer had spread to his lungs.)
"It's not supposed to end
this way," Bill Vigars remembers thinking as he watched a plane carrying
Terry Fox, his parents, Betty and Rolly, and Dr. Geoff Davis take off from the
Thunder Bay, Ont., airport on Sept. 2, 1980, en route to Vancouver where Fox
would begin treatment for cancer in his lungs. Vigars first met Fox as he ran
through New Brunswick in the early days of his 1980 Marathon of Hope and
immediately knew there was something special about the 22-year-old man from
British Columbia who was running across Canada to raise money for cancer
research. The marathon has inspired thousands of Canadians to run in Fox's name
for 40 years, something that doesn't surprise Vigars, who got to know Fox
well. "There was no two sides to Terry Fox,
what you saw was what you got," said Vigars, who at the time was the
director of public relations and fundraising for the Canadian Cancer Society's
Ontario division. "He spoke from the heart and so from the moment I met
him I wanted to be part of this." Vigars soon became the public relations
co-ordinator for the Marathon of Hope and a close friend and confidante of the
young man whose right leg had been amputated when he was 18 as part of his
treatment for osteosarcoma, or bone cancer. As he ran, and for most public
appearances, Fox wore a white T-shirt, blue Adidas running shoes and grey
shorts, which meant his prosthetic leg was always visible, a rarity at a time
when a cancer diagnosis still carried a stigma. "Terry wore that leg
proudly and he inspired others," said Vigars, recalling the actions of one
elderly gentleman. "He had a peg leg and he started running along the
fence of his property with Terry and shaking his fist and saying 'You show
'em', and that was burned in my mind." Vigars savours many moments from
those months on the road — the laughter at the end of the day, the quiet
conversations about life and love, and of course "the look on his face as
he's running, the determination, the focus that he had."
But after 143 days and 5,373
kilometres, Fox stopped running just outside Thunder Bay. He had developed a
heavy cough, was feeling increasingly fatigued and said it was time to see a
doctor. "Terry is with me every day... That stretch on the north shore [of
Lake Superior], and that day in Thunder Bay are pretty emotional for me. The
events of the next 48 hours are seared into Vigars' memory. He, and Betty and
Rolly Fox arrived at the hospital to join Terry where they learned the cough
was due to cancerous tumours in his lungs. The four of them decided to go to a
nearby restaurant for a last supper together. They barely made it outside the
hospital before the young man, who just hours earlier had looked the picture of
health and vitality as he ran along the Trans-Canada Highway, collapsed in the
street and was rushed back inside on a stretcher. The next hours were a blur as
Vigars worked to get the Foxes a flight back to B.C. before Terry's lungs could
fill with fluid and he would be unable to fly. But he does remember the
ambulance ride to the airport, and Rolly saying to his son "This is so
unfair. This is so unfair" Vigars recalls Terry gently telling him,
"No, Dad. It's not. I'm no different than anybody else. People get cancer.
Cancer comes back. ... Maybe now, people will understand why I did this." From
his stretcher at the airport, Fox held a short news conference to explain why
he was suspending his marathon and to express his desire to pick up where he
left off once his health had improved, then boarded the plane. Vigars gave him
a hug, told Terry he loved him and watched forlornly as the plane took off,
thinking "What now? What do I do? Where do I go? It's not supposed to end
this way." But the run didn't really end there. That same day — Sept. 2,
1980 — Isadore Sharp, chairman and CEO of Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts, told
the Fox family he was committed to organizing a fundraising run that would be
held every year in Fox's name.
(Bill Vigars stands near a statue of Terry Fox. Vigars worked for the Canadian Cancer Society in 1980 and was the public relations co-ordinator for Fox and his Marathon of Hope.)
Forty years later, a virtual
version of the Terry Fox Run, is set to go ahead Sunday. To date, the event has
raised more than $800-million for cancer research. Vigars, now 73, has retraced
almost the entire route of the Marathon of Hope. If not for the pandemic, he
would have been in Thunder Bay to finally visit some of the spots that hold so
much meaning for him. "That stretch on the north shore [of Lake Superior],
and that day in Thunder Bay are pretty emotional for me", he said.
"It's like a movie that plays in your head and I want to go see the real
sets." Vigars still plans to make the trip to northwestern Ontario,
hopefully in the not-too-distant future, but he admits he doesn't really need
any reminders of the impact Fox had on his life, and the lives of countless
others. "Terry is with me every day," said Vigars. "That grin,
that big heart, that's how I always remember him."
^ It’s both sad and happy to hear
about Terry Fox and the people across Canada and the world that he inspired. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/thunder-bay/thunder-bay-bill-vigars-terry-fox-1.5729022
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