A NORTHSIDE student was the toast of his school and a national charity after cycling from Belfast to Dublin in one day.
For a school project, Daniel Gill chose to support the Irish Motor Neurone Disease Association (IMNDA) after being moved by the plight of RTE sports broadcaster Colm Murray and his battle with Motor Neurone Disease.
Daniel set off from Belfast, by himself, and cycled a full 170km before finishing up at Mount Temple School, Clontarf, where he is a student.
Vice principal of the school Helen Gormley and IMNDA’s Gemma Watts were waiting to greet him.
Daniel has raised a fantastic
?¬1,400 for the IMNDA and you can still donate to him by visiting www.mycharity.ie/event/daniel_gills_event/.
In Ireland, one person dies every five days from this devastating disease. MND is a progressive neurological condition that attacks the upper and lower motor neurones.
It is a condition that leaves people unable to do the everyday things that the rest of us take for granted. Walking, talking and swallowing may become virtually impossible.
MND strikes people across all ages and there is currently no known cure.
The IMNDA provides specialised services for people affected by this debilitating disease such as equipment on loan, financial assistance towards home help, advice and home visits by a MND Nurse Specialist. The association also funds research.
In order to provide these vital services the IMNDA depends heavily on the generosity of the public and friends of the association who generate over 75 per cent of its income. For more information, visit www.imnda.ie or email fundraising@imnda.ie