Mahamid Ruzin is legally blind, and was diagnosed as a child with the hereditary genetic eye disease achromatopsia, color blindness, and a very intense sensitivity to daylight.[6][4][7] The disease does not have a cure, and she wears special glasses.[4] It was discovered that she had the disease when she was four months old.[8] Two of her brothers also have the disease.[5]
In 2018 Mahamid married Michael Ruzin, who is Jewish, has a vision impairment as well, and is the captain of Israel men's national goalball team.[6][4] They had met at a sports camp when she was 19 years old and they were both studying in university in Jerusalem.[4][9] She and her husband have a boy and a girl, and the family lives in Hadera, Israel.[4][1]
In aftermath of the 7 October attack on Israel, Mahamid Ruzin offered her home to host Israeli evacuees, and said that she feels the same fear that her neighbor feels, and that she cried when her neighbor was called up to serve in the Israel Defense Forces reserves. She noted: "When you are on the bus, no terrorist cares if you are Arab or Jewish."[10]
Goalball career
Mahamid Ruzin's coach is Raz Shoham.[1] As to her representing Israel, she said: "I am very proud as an athlete to represent my country."[11]
Mahamid Ruzin first played goalball at a blind club in Um al-Fahem when she was 15 years old, and took part at an after-school program at the Jewish Institute for the Blind.[12][4] She said "I started to train, and I started to feel wow I'm winning and I'm good at something, suddenly the competitive thing that was very closed in me and I had no place to compete, so suddenly it came out. I began to discover abilities in myself that I did not know about at all. Ability to communicate with people, with other children. help, understand, support."[8]
The Israel Paralympic Committee ultimately decided to form a girls' team around her.[4] Mahamid was chosen to be the captain of the Israel women's national goalball team, a position that she held for eight years, from 2010 to 2018.[4][13]
2015–16; World Games championship and Rio Paralympics
In 2015, as Mahamid competed for it, Team Israel won the gold medal at the IBSA World Games. Team Israel defeated China 4–1 in the final, as Mahamid Ruzin scored all four of the team's goals.[8] It ensured its spot at the 2016 Summer Paralympics, and Mahamid Ruzin said: "I will do everything to make my country, my relatives, and the Arab sector proud, showing that there is no difference between all of us and that we can live together."[7][14]
She competed for Israel at the 2016 Rio Paralympics, where the team was eliminated in the quarter-finals and came in 7th place.[8][4] At those Games, Mahamid scored the first Paralympic goal for Team Israel.[1] She said: "I don't want to just go to the Olympics. There are those who say 'well done to you, the main thing is that you participated, the fact that you are there is already a great honor'. I understand and appreciate it, but my ambition ... is of course to win an Olympic medal."[8]
2017–23; European Championship medals, Tokyo Paralympics
In 2017, Israel won the bronze medal at the European Championship, prevailing in the deciding game 1:2 against the Greek team, with Mahamid scoring both of the team's goals.[8]
Team Israel won the silver medal at the 2019 European Championship, and qualified for the Tokyo Paralympic Games.[4] Mahamid Ruzin then competed with Israel at the 2020 Tokyo Paralympics in 2021 in Japan.[15]
Mahamid Ruzin was named the 2021 Para-Athlete Peace Prize Global Winner by the Religious Freedom & Business Foundation.[4] In January 2023 she received a certificate of appreciation from the Acting Mayor of Hadera, Nir Ben Haim, for competing in the Tokyo Olympics in goalball and winning third place in the World Championship with the Israeli national team in goal ball.[22][23]