Collinda Joseph
Collinda Patricia Joseph (born May 15, 1965) is a Canadian wheelchair curler.[1] She was part of Canada's bronze medal mixed team at the 2022 Winter Paralympics. Early life and educationJoseph was born and raised in Ottawa. In 1983 at age 18, she was in a train accident in France which caused a spinal cord injury. Prior to her injury, she was a competitive diver.[2] After her injury, Joseph explored adaptive sports such as wheelchair tennis, skiing, track and field, and, finally, wheelchair basketball.[3] She attended Carleton University and then Algonquin College.[3][2] CareerJoseph played wheelchair basketball for 15 years.[2] She has been involved in wheelchair curling since 2006.[4] She first tried wheelchair curling at a RBC-sponsored “Give It A Go” event organized by her rehab clinic.[5] She began being invited to national team training camps in 2012.[6] Joseph competed for Canada in the 2019, 2020, 2021 World Wheelchair Curling Championships.[2] She won a silver medal in the mixed team competition at the 2020 World Wheelchair Curling Championship. She made her Paralympic debut in 2022 on a team with Dennis Thiessen, Ina Forrest, Jon Thurston and Mark Ideson. They won bronze in mixed team wheelchair curling.[7] Joseph competed in the World Mixed Doubles Wheelchair Curling Championships with Dennis Thiessen in 2023, only the second year the event was held.[8] They lost their semi-final to the United States, but defeated China in the bronze medal match for a third-place finish.[9] She will represent Canada at the 2025 World Wheelchair Curling Championship.[10] Outside of her curling career, Joseph has worked for Accessibility Standards Canada and the National Research Council of Canada.[11][5] Teams
Personal lifeJoseph resides in Stittsville, Ottawa.[15] She and her husband, Euan MacKellar,[9] have two children.[citation needed] Awards and recognitionIn 2022, Joseph was given “Changing Lives” award, as part of Algonquin College’s Alumni of Distinction Awards.[3] In 2023, she was inducted into the Governor General’s Curling Club, Canada's equivalent of a national hall of fame for curling.[4] She has also been recognized with the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal, the Celebration of People’s Community Leader Award, the Commonwealth Youth Secretariat’s Youth Service Award, Algonquin College’s Community Leader Award in memory of Cathy Kerr, Human Resources and Skills Development Canada Deputy Minister’s Award for outstanding achievement for excellence in service to Canadians, and Carleton University’s Honour Award for Service.[4][2] References
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