August 06, 2012|By Bill Plaschke, Tribune Olympic bureau
"If you want the really good shoes, the ones you can use for the Olympics," he says, "I can get those for a hundred bucks."
The Olympian without a country is not without feelings.
Guor Marial has painfully felt the differences while wandering through the first week of these Olympics without any national logo on his sweats, without teammates at his side during training, and without any real buddies except an advisor who serves as his coach, sports committee and roommate.
"It does feel, like, lonely," Marial says. "You're not wearing anything showing your country and people are like, 'Where are you from?' "
That part is easy. Guor Marial has arrived in London from the deepest, most passionate part of the Olympic spirit. He has arrived here from the ideals of a U.S. Olympic official, the passion of a Tribune sportswriter and the doggedness of a fellow runner.
This Olympian may be without country, but he is not without a home.
"The most amazing part, the best part, is just that I'm here," he says. "It feels like the entire world brought me here."
The entire world cut it close. Marial just showed up several days ago. He missed the opening ceremony because he wasn't sure he would be allowed into England. He was only officially entered in the games two weeks ago.
"It was tough, it was last-minute, but this is an example of people rising above the politics and doing what is good for sport," said Brad Poore, Marial's advisor who met him at marathon. "The right thing finally happened."
Marial, 28, was born in what is now the year-old republic of South Sudan. The country is so new, there is no national Olympic committee. When he recorded an official Olympic marathon time last fall, the International Olympic Committee urged him instead to compete for the neighboring nation of Sudan.
One big problem. Marial, lost eight of his 10 siblings during the civil war between south and north Sudan. As a child he was kidnapped and spent one year in Sudan as a laborer and another as an indentured servant. He escaped and was eventually granted refugee status, allowing him to move to New Hampshire with his uncle and cousin. He began running in high school, won a national indoor title at Iowa State, and moved to Flagstaff, Ariz., to train for his Olympic dream, all while vowing to never forget his nightmare.
He would never ever run for a Sudan government that nearly killed him and every member of his family.
Those quotes are from a blog that changed everything.
In mid-July, Marial and Poore had been continually spurned in their year-long attempts to find an Olympic home. The IOC would not budge. Marial could not budge. The duo finally contacted Team USA's ombudsman John Ruger, who couldn't really change anything, but figured he would try.
"I really do believe in the Olympic spirit, and this struck me as something had to be done," Ruger said.
When Tribune veteran Hersh called him on a different matter, Ruger instead told him the story of Marial. After 25 years on the Tribune's Olympic beat, Hersh knew what to do with it.
"I knew this was an Olympic story that needed to be told," Hersh said.
Hersh wrote a lengthy post on chicagotribune.com urging the IOC to allow Marial to compete under the Olympic flag. Within days, other outlets picked up the story and within a week Hersh received an IOC e-mail informing him that Marial had been admitted to the Olympics. Since Marial had no official country, the IOC asked Hersh to give him the news.
He called Poore instead, who relayed to Marial, who hugged Hersh tightly this week when they met for the first time in the Olympic Village.
Said Marial: "He is a big, big reason I am here. It is amazing to finally see him."
Said Hersh: "This feels about as good as anything I've ever done in my 40 years in the business."
Marial missed marching in the opening ceremony with the other three other athletes displaced because of governmental changes in the Netherlands Antilles. He misses the ability to hang a flag from his Village balcony like athletes from other countries. His parents, who live in a South Sudan village with no phone or television, are going to have to travel an hour down the road to watch his race.
His recent best time — 2:12.55 — will not put him among the marathon leaders. When the Games end, he is not sure he will have any money for souvenirs. When he returns to Flagstaff, he will go back to a job working the graveyard shift as an hourly wage caretaker at a home for developmentally disabled adults.
On Sunday he will wear the South Sudan's new rainbow of colors in a beaded bracelet. He will wear the green, yellow and black colors of independent athletes on his singlet. If he reaches the podium, he will salute an Olympic flag that will not belong to him.
Yet the Olympian without a country says he will realize that perhaps nobody belongs here more.
"There are five rings on the Olympic flag," he says. "I feel I am here because of them."
Twitter.com @billplaschke
Newer articles:
- South Sudan enter FIFA rankings - Chicago Tribune - 08/08/2012 06:12
- US Secretary of State Clinton's Africa tour raises tensions with China - World Socialist Web Site - 08/08/2012 00:04
- Lomong adds to his reasons to run - Chicago Tribune - 07/08/2012 20:39
- South Sudan to restart oil wells in September, full output in a year - Reuters - 07/08/2012 19:11
- South Sudan to restart oil wells in September, full output in a year - 07/08/2012 19:09
Older news items
- South Sudan to restart oil wells in September, full output in a year - Chicago Tribune - 07/08/2012 16:12
- Sudan's struggling government offers to go '100 percent Islamic' - Christian Science Monitor - 07/08/2012 13:39
- Fundraiser for a Type 1 Diabetic Refugee from South Sudan - A Sweet Life (blog) - 07/08/2012 13:24
- Sudan, South Sudan close to resolving oil dispute - Globe and Mail - 07/08/2012 13:23
- South Sudan runner's marathon: just getting there - Bend Bulletin - 07/08/2012 13:14
Latest news items (all categories):
- MTN South Sudan Launches eSIM Technology in a National First - 14/01/2025 16:34
- U.A.E : MoFA receives credentials copy from new Ambassador of Republic of South Sudan - 14/01/2025 16:31
- Helping a lost generation: food security and animal health in South Sudan - 14/01/2025 15:20
- ديمقراطية وحرية إستخفاف العقول - 14/01/2025 15:04
- [Audio] South Sudan holdout groups form alliance - 10/01/2025 14:12
Random articles (all categories):
- The first anniversary of independence under a chaotic regime of tribal gangs. - 15/08/2012 22:29
- 20 'killed' as South Sudan army pursues rebels - Africa Review - 21/03/2013 13:11
- UAE contributes $25 million for humanitarian efforts in Sudan - 23/06/2024 17:01
- Two Brothers Killed in North Darfur Robbery Whilst South Darfur Fires Destroy 145 Homes - 27/02/2023 00:10
- South Sudanese bishop laments continued murders, rapes after peace accord - 19/07/2023 06:57
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 61381 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 22303 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 21488 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 19048 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 18755 times