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Fully recovered from her early-career
nightmares, Ethiopia’s Olympic and world 5000m champion
deservedly picked up the 2007 IAAF World Athlete of the Year
after an amazing season. But Defar is also increasingly
developing a strong charitable personality off the track to
match her success on it.
Extract from IAAF 2007 Yearbook
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2007 World
Athlete of the Year Meseret Defar
(Getty Images) |
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Ethiopia’s Olympic and World 5000m champion Meseret Defar
has been through lots of trials and tribulations to make it
to the top, but she admits that the morning before the IAAF
World Athletics Gala in Monaco in November was perhaps one
of the most difficult times of the year for her.
“It was a situation I had no control
over,” she recalls of the anxious moments she spent before
the announcement. “It was a race of a different kind to what
I was used to. I was initially confident of winning the
award, but many people were saying things that [Blanka]
Vlasic or [Carolina] Kluft might win. I was a bit worried
that what I had done throughout the year may not be enough.”
But when the official announcement came
that she had won the Female Athlete of the Year, Defar was
relieved to finally collect the award her outstanding season
thoroughly deserves.
Special dedication
However as the gathering of the athletics
family posed expecting to hear her thoughts about an
outstanding season, Defar instead chose the occasion to
dedicate the award to women in her country who were not
blessed with the opportunities afforded to her.
“I would like to dedicate this award to
women in my country who wake up every morning without
anything to eat and work hard each day through very
difficult conditions in order to survive,” she told the
gathering. “I hope this award proves an inspiration to every
child, sister, mother, and dreamer.”
While many were touched her words and
appreciated her achievements over the course of the year,
Defar, very much like the end to her fruitful year, was
further highlighting a cause she has championed for more
than three years.
“I feel strong about gender issues,” she
says. “I understand that my success is an inspiration to the
young generation and I take every opportunity to help and
guide them.”
Defar also actively supports and caters
for many children and women around the city. She has adopted
two young kids, who are currently living with her in her
home, and pays for the medical expenses of one who is a
victim of a heart disease.
Helping the children
“I can only do this much,” she says. “There are many kids in
the country who suffer from heart diseases and the cost of a
heart operation is very expensive and is not available in
Ethiopia. I want to set an example to show that those of us
who are well off can take on one or two children and save
lives.”
Apart from children’s education, Defar
and her husband Tewodros Hailu also support a running group
called the “Abebe Bikila Project” which has big ambitions of
growing into a proper running club.
“These children run without any proper
equipment and sometimes without food in their stomach,” she
says about young runners enrolled in the project. “Each year
when I travel abroad, I try to collect old and new equipment
to donate to these kids and other runners who come to me
from all over the country. I try to do what I can, but it is
of course difficult to satisfy everyone.”
After a successful season in 2007, the
future holds brighter prospect for Defar. While the Beijing
Olympics and a crack at her own indoor 3000m and outdoor
5000m marks remain the general objectives, Defar says she
also wants to achieve a bigger legacy off the track.
“I hope that I can be an inspiration and
help many people,” she says. “I do not like giving handouts,
but I want to create opportunities for people who do not
have any hope in their life.”
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