Sport

Farah — carrying Britain’s hopes

July 4, 2012   ·   9 Comments

Farah launches foundation to help Somalia famine victims

LONDON — Last month when Mo Farah, a British athlete of Somali origin, won the European 5,000m crown, he became the first man in history to successfully defend it. The victory, coming just before the London Olympic Games, would be a confidence-booster for him.

Farah was born in Mogadishu in war-torn Somalia. At the age of eight he moved to a west London suburb along with his father, who was a British citizen. Alan Watkinson, his physical education teacher in school, was the first to spot his talent. At the schools’ cross-country championship in England in 1996, when he was barely 14, he finished second, and that too, after he had started running in the wrong direction. Watkinson immediately realised that he was dealing with someone special.

Fascinated by training

When he took to full time running after leaving school, he moved into a house in Teddington, London, with top Kenyan athletes, including the 5,000m world champion Benjamin Limo. He found the lifestyle and training regimen of the African athletes invigorating. The desire to reach the pinnacle of sporting excellence was kindled.

A successful junior athlete when he won the European junior 5,000m title in 2001, his first success in the senior circuit was in 2006 at the European track and field championships where he won the silver. At the 2007 and 2009 world championships, with African athletes also in the fray, he finished a creditable sixth and seventh respectively.

In full flight

At the European championships in 2010, he won the 10,000m and 5,000m double. His fledgling athletic career was now in full flight. A year and a handful of races later, he became the first Brit to win the world 5,000m title.

Despite being born in a country stricken by poverty and lawlessness, Farah’s is not a rags-to-riches story. By his own admission his early life was a fairly comfortable one.

But for an athlete from Somalia, who landed in London speaking little English, to be regarded as one of Britain’s biggest hopes for success in 2012 Olympics is a great achievement in itself. He has become a symbol of multi-culturalism in a world where tolerance levels towards immigrants are fast approaching zero.

The Hindu

July 04, 2012

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Readers Comments (9)

  1. wanlaweyn says:

    go Farah go also i wish you ran for Somalia because you was born in Mogadishu but hey you will always be Somali no matter wish passport so insha allah you will win.

    • helyey18 says:

      Wanlaweyn you should feed your people before you talk about Olympics, and by the way Mo Farah, he is from Somaliland, not Somalia. He may be born Mogdisho, bacuase his farther was working there only.

  2. khaatumo citizen says:

    I wonder why he airnt running for somalia.. but good luck anyway.

  3. macawista says:

    actually no one is dying in the south now of hunger it is in somali land where people are starving you know.
    mo farah is born in mogadishu amd lives in london how on earth is he somaliland? i smell tribalism

  4. amal says:

    Somalis are unbelievable wallah. Regardless of where he hails from all Somalis are proud of him just like we are all proud of Knaan even though he is a singer. Somalis will always be Somalis.

  5. Abdi Tabit says:

    A joke! He is Somalian!!! For Allah's sake, unite. People are uniting n fighting for economic achievements through cooperation n partnership! You all are arguing about worthless things. Abou a month ago, city reps came to the masjid where mainly Somalis pray. They said most apportions in the State of Washington is being committed by Somalis! That as well as uniting our people should be bigger than this ridiculous tribal and regional bickering we have come to accept and nurture.

  6. Bashir Mohamed says:

    A little while ago, I had a friend of mine ask me

    Why do Somalis treat each other better here then back in your country

  7. weelwall says:

    I am intrigued by 'Mo' a short for 'Mohamed'.
    Why do that?
    Isn't the name too painful for a 'British hero' to carry?
    I discount that he is ashamed of his full name in the rarefied spheres of International Sports.

  8. mr somaliland says:

    Mo fararah is somalilander from gabilay and he loves home. if u so idiot to think our r somalilanders should live beyond somalilandl,let me tell u: if u care about somali , u should clean u mess first and respect somaliland , if u know what u talking about. beside that. Mo farah wa somalilander from gabilay , he is my relative and i am proud of him. long life somaliland and mo farah and others to follow him, i am proud of u mo faarah


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