FEATURE: Ethiopian Tulu and SA’s Meyer and the ultimate display of fair play at the 1992 Olympics

SA’s Meyer and Ethiopian Tulu’s moment to remember

SA’s Elana Meyer carrying the Peace Torch at the start of the Sanlam Cape Town marathon.
File pic. Cape Town- 2018/09/23- Marathon legend Elana Meyer carrying the Peace Torch at the start of the Sanlam Cape Town marathon. Picture credit: Phando Jikelo/African News Agency/ANA

JOHANNESBURG, June 9 (ANA) – It may have been a bit presumptuous of South Africa’s Elana Meyer who claimed silver to join in on Ethiopian Derartu Tulu’s victory lap after the women’s 10 000m at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, but it turned out to be one of the greatest sporting moments of all-time.

“Running around the track with Derartu Tulu was something that happened spontaneously,” Meyer told World Athletics. “It was the celebration of being back at the Games, winning a medal for myself and for South Africa, for a lot of South Africans who missed for many years a celebration of us white and black to have the opportunity to compete at the highest level.”

“Imagine a black, young African girl in the ocean of humidity and heat and an atmosphere beyond imagination snatching the gold,” said Tulu. “It was an unforgettable situation.

“As for Elana, I had never met her before, but she acted as though we were acquainted and we were former friends. That was a very big surprise for me. Amazingly, we had the best-ever hug. We never forgot we were both from Africa.”

Meyer, an elite South African athlete, grew up during apartheid. The country was banned from Olympic participation since 1964 for their discriminatory politics against their black people. The white minorities dominated the political scene and it took revolutions, international boycotts and a leader like Nelson Mandela to stand against this racial segregation policy. And, just like many generations of South African athletes had done, every four years Meyer would wait to see if her country would take part in the Olympic Games.

Growing up, Meyer would often compete against a track and field legend from her home country, Zola Budd.

“Zola used to beat me by big margins and I was just trying to improve, until 1984 when Zola got the chance to compete for the UK in Los Angeles,” Meyer told the International Olympic Committee in an interview.

Meyer also achieved the qualifying standard for the 1984 Games, but she was unable to compete while the ban on South Africa remained in place. But after watching Budd compete in Los Angeles representing a different country, Meyer was even more determined to achieve her dream of representing South Africa at the Olympics.

Four years later, however, Meyer missed out on the 1988 Seoul Games. Nonetheless, she persevered.

On 11 February 1990, Mandela was released from prison. The news brought hope to Meyer who thought that a real change might happen and it would alter the participation of South African athletes in international sports.

A year later, Meyer ran a world-leading 8:32.00 for 3000m and hoped to compete for the first time outside of her country and maybe represent South Africa at the World Championships in Tokyo. But instead, she had to watch it from the stands.

“That really made me realise for the first time that I should be there, on the track competing against the best athletes,” Meyer told World Athletics. “That last year, I was getting a bit frustrated.”

In 1992, a new South African government saw the light and athletes were finally given the green light to compete at the Olympic Games after a 32-year-ban. Throughout her international competitions leading up to the Barcelona Olympic Games, the media bombarded Meyer with political questions but she refused to be used as a pawn.

“I knew people were not only interested in South African runners; they were also interested in the history of the country and the impact that apartheid had on athletes and individuals,” she said. “I knew it was not only about athletics, but also human rights.”

When Meyer arrived in Barcelona for the Games, she was in disbelief that the wait was over at long last. After missing two Olympic Games, Meyer was finally at the Olympic Stadium and ready to race the best athletes in the world.

“I remember when I walked on the track and when I saw the Olympic flame burning on one side, that’s when you know ‘ok it is reality, we’re actually here, I’m taking part in the Olympic Games’,” Meyer said.

Tulu grew up in the village of Bekoji, the southeast region of the Ethiopian capital, in the highlands that has since become synonymous with distance running legend Kenenisa Bekele.

In her teens, Tulu’s teacher encouraged her to compete over 800m and 1500m. At 16, Tulu finished third at the national cross country championships held in Addis Ababa. During that same decade, Ethiopia had boycotted the 1984 and 1988 Olympic Games.

In 1988, Tulu moved to the Ethiopian capital to join the police and focus solely on running. The move paid off and she went on to win the 10,000m at the 1990 World U20 Championships, then set a world Under- 20 record over the same distance in 1991.

Tulu and Meyer weren’t expected to feature on the podium at the 1992 Barcelona Olympic Games. Tulu had finished eighth at the World Championship in Tokyo in 1991 and Meyer had spent so many years away from international competition that she wasn’t on the radar of many observers.

Before lining up for the 10,000m final at their first Olympics, Meyer and Tulu exchanged a few words and smiles, unaware of the impact their post-race actions would have. – African News Agency (ANA), Editing by Michael Sherman