Posted on 08/21/2004 10:51:45 AM PDT by Texas2step
August 20, 2004
ATHENS, Greece â The greatest 100-meter dash of these Olympics took 14.14 seconds and a 108 years to complete.
As Robina Muqimyar crossed the finish line in her preliminary heat on Friday, she threw her hands toward the heavens. Her hair flapped in the breeze in a way that still isn't allowed on the streets of her native Afghanistan.
There was the crowd, cheering for her not because of her performance â Muqimyar finished a distant seventh â but because she performed at all; Muqimyar is one of two groundbreaking Afghani women who are representing their country and gender for the first time ever here in Athens. The modern Olympic Games resumed in 1896.
There was Gail Devers, the great American Olympic champ, asking to pose for a picture with her.
And there, appearing on television screens throughout her homeland, was the image of Muqimyar at full speed, broadcast to a proud, astonished generation of older women and inspiring the wide-eyed dreams of a younger one.
"I hope I can open the way for Afghan woman," Muqimyar said through an interpreter.
"I did not have an Afghanistan flag but if I did, I would have run with it around the stadium. I am very proud of my country and my people."
Muqimyar is a slim, pretty 18-year-old who, as a little girl, loved to run when she was allowed to play outside. But as she got older she had to stop. The Taliban's repressive treatment of women included banning them from athletic competition.
But when the regime fell under United States attack 20 months ago, Muqimyar began thinking of running again. Her family moved to Kabul, the capital and the most liberal city in the country.
"I was the first Afghanistan woman to decide to run after the Taliban," she said proudly.
But training wasn't easy. As a woman she is not allowed to run on the street. She has old shoes and must cover all of her skin â she ran here in long stretch pants and a stretch shirt.
She mostly practices inside a locked gymnasium, with no men allowed to enter. When she runs in the outdoor stadium she must wear a burqa over her head.
The facilities are terrible. The gymnasium floor is made of concrete. The soccer stadium in which she occasionally runs is riddled with bullets. The Taliban used it for public beheadings.
But she pressed on and, along with judoist Friba Razayee, through ceremonial qualifying selections by the IOC, became pioneers here.
Her participation in Athens is not universally accepted back home, where she could possibly face repercussions.
"The majority of the people do not like her," said Omid Marzban, a journalist for "Good Morning Afghanistan."
"But I don't think they are so against her. Not so hard that they try to do anything wrong with her.
"There are some women who don't like her but most women are supporting her," he said. "The Afghanistan women are fighting for their rights themselves. The target of Robina attending the Olympic Games is to open the women [door] to world sports."
Regarding this potential backlash, Muqimyar is optimistic, and brave.
"I don't know what will come in my life," she said. "But I think nothing will happen."
She thinks. She doesn't know; she thinks.
But it couldn't stop her. It wouldn't stop her. She has seen war, strife, poverty, oppression, dictatorship and death in her young life.
"Thinks" means nothing.
Muqimyar proudly smiled when her name and nation were announced pre-race on Friday. She climbed into the starting blocks like any other athlete.
At the gun she went as fast as she could, finishing more than three seconds behind the winner but ahead of a woman from Somalia.
By just making it to the finish line, she set an Afghani national Olympic record.
"Even if I were 80 meters back from the others I would have been really, really grateful and very happy because I was attending the Olympic Games," she said. "That was the biggest memorable moment for me in my life.
"At least I was ahead of one person."
Now comes the reaction. This is big news back home. "It was on the air in Afghanistan and everyone was watching," she said with glee.
Now comes the return to Kabul, where some see her as a dangerous cultural sea-change and others a vision of things to come.
Now, she hopes, comes the momentum â little girls who want to run, want to compete, want their long hair to flap in the wind too.
Now, perhaps, there will be equipment and facilities. Because as much as Muqimyar appreciated being a symbol in these games, she is too proud for moral victories.
"If Afghanistan has the opportunity," she said, "Afghanistan will be the best in the world."
Dan Wetzel is Yahoo! Sports' national columnist. Send him a question or comment for potential use in a future column or webcast.
Updated on Friday, Aug 20, 2004 10:35 am EDT
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Here's a follow up to the article posted a couple of days ago about Afghan women athletes. Thought you might want to read it. Heaven knows the lamestream press won't be reporting this...
"I was the first Afghanistan woman to decide to run after the Taliban," she said proudly.
Good for her in a country where the Afghani women had to run from the Taliban for years.
I have not watched a second of these olympics, but I wish I had witnessed this.
I suppose her clan will try to kill me for saying this, but she looks to me like a classy and attractive young lady.
Oh you are right, really COOL story. We get to watch these people accomplish things for the first time in their lives that others take so for granted. It just fills you with joy.
FREEDOM!
Cool!
She's beautiful, as are most of the Afghani women I've seen in pictures.
She needs a supporter like Pamela Anderson who stepped in to help the gymnast who needed financial help. Someone needs to bring this lady to USA and get her into training here so she can compete in 4 years in her country's colors.
click on email to a friend
friend's email address: now@now.org
Add a personal message: Another reason to vote for Bush!
They call that freedom...? wtf, I thought that was finished.
Actually, the San JOse Murky Nudes actually had this story as a pgae one story with a full length twoo column picture of the gal running. It was a nicely written article in that it spoke of this athlete's efforts to compete...Sure it posted her time and it pointed out that she didn't come in last...It also pointed out that many in Afghanistan think she is an awful perrson who should be treated the way any bad Muslim woman should be treated.....But at least one major paper carried it front page
Thank you, President Bush!
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